Unnatural, by Michael Griffo. Kensington Books, 498 pages,
$9.95 paper.
Pallid boys, beautiful boys, jealous boys, closeted boys,
boys who suck every which way: volume one of this young-adult trilogy tacks
vampire lust onto the hoary theme of hormones running wild at a private boy’s school
– and, as a vampire’s bite is wont to do, brings the sexy-school concept back
from the dead. Nebraskan boy-next-door Michael, now the ward of his estranged
British father after his American mother’s dearth, lands at Britain’s somewhat
spooky Archangel Academy. He quickly befriends his dorky new dorm mate, Ciaron,
but then falls hard for Ciaron’s big-man-on-campus older brother, Ronan, whose
secret is not just that he’s a vampire, but that he’s born of a hybrid minority
hated by your average, sun-wary vampire – a clever reinvention of the genre
that invigorates the author’s take on a queer Twilight world. Griffo’s plot
unfolds at a leisurely pace, as a large cast of characters is revealed, so
readers ought to be patient – this book foreshadows epic battles (and anguished
romance) in the sequels, Unafraid in September and Unwelcome in March 2012.
Parties in Congress, by Colette Moody. Bold Strokes Books,
264 pages, $16.95 paper.
What’s loyal Republican lesbian Bijal Rao to do? She’s both
a sexual and a racial minority when she signs on to work for a
middle-of-the-road GOP woman, is dismayed but goes along with it for far too
long when her candidate lurches to the homophobic right, and meanwhile is
falling in love with the fiercely Democratic and defiantly dyke incumbent.
That’s the essence of Moody’s sometimes giddy (in a romance-unfolding way),
sometimes insightful (in a politically instructive way), and somewhat
implausible – what is it with Republican-identified queers who see no evil,
hear no evil, and take forever to speak out about the evil at the heart of
contemporary right-wing Republicanism? – way. As the book’s subtitle says,
politics do make for strange bedfellows, and it’s a testament to Moody’s
buoyant style that she’s able to render Rao’s irritating sense of
campaign-staffer subservience tolerable while the real fun of the novel – her
covert lust affair with Congresswoman Colleen O’Bannon – unfolds.
True Stories: Portraits from My Past, by Felice Picano.
Chelsea Station Editions, 228 pages, $16 paper.
If you’ve read all of Picano’s nonfiction, and there’s a
lot, portions of these "portraits from my past" will seem familiar – some
essays are expanded from shorter versions that appeared in previous books,
restoring text excised, most likely, by page-count restrictions or editorial
decisions. No matter. Picano is such a vibrant memoirist that every extra word
is welcome. As a lithe youth he charmed "British auntie" W.H. Auden and an
intimidating Diana Freeland, was physically aroused at the Continental Baths by
Bette Midler crooning for near-naked boys at the dawn of her career, and later
crossed paths with Tennessee Williams and revived the literary career of
Charles Henri Ford – appealing anecdotes all. But the best essays reveal a less
celebrity-centered side: Picano besting a boyhood bully; Picano reconnecting
with his curmudgeonly father; Picano explicating with wrenching honesty his
complex relationship with publishing partner Terry Helbing; and, most
poignantly, Picano remembering men he played with, partied with and forged
friendships with, men who died in the early days of AIDS, when it was a death
sentence, and whose shortened lives Picano honors.
The Temperamentals, by Jon Marans. Chelsea Station
Editions, 136 pages, $16 paper; Crossing and Other Plays, by C.E. Gatchalian.
Lethe Press, 108 pages, $13 paper.
Old-school theatrical storytelling meets gay liberation
history in Marans’ off-Broadway play, based with emotional veracity, campy
humor and provocative sexiness on the lives of the Mattachine pioneers who
founded the first gay-rights organization in pre-Stonewall America.
Introductions by political activist David Mixner and actor Michael Urie (of
Ugly Betty fame) – he plays fashion designer Rudi Gernreich – provide
cultural and theatrical context. Not every play translates well to the printed
page, but Temperamentals – code for homosexual in the 1950s, it seems – reads
like a good short story. The same ease of transition can’t be said for
Gatchalian’s more challenging short plays; reading the three collected here is
more tantalizing than satisfying, demanding an opportunity to see text brought
to life on the stage. "Crossing," the longest, lays bare a teen boy’s tormented
relationship with his mother; "Diamond" is a multifaceted dissection of one
woman’s life told through many voices; "Ticks" is a fierce monologue from a
diseased messiah. None promise easy entertainment; all are a shock to the
senses, a subversion of the norm.
Featured Excerpt
The floor-show began – at last – and I found a place up
front amidst the crowd of men naked but for towels. Jerry must have pointed me
out to Bette (Midler) because in the middle of one number, she came over to me,
pulled me to my feet, leaned me against the piano and used me as a prop for a
love song, pretending to feel me up, until I was too obviously excited, at
which point she stopped and said, "You’re disgusting! Sit down!" to great
hilarity before she went on with her number. Her attention, however, got me sex
directly after the show..."
-from True Stories, by Felice Picano
Footnotes
PRIDE & JOY, THE Northampton, Mass. queer book and gift
store that opened in 1992 may close unless new buyers can take over from a trio
of owners who themselves bought the community institution – sight unseen – just
two years ago. Jeffrey Wheelock, Kelly Wagoner and Melissa Borchardt all lived
in Florida and were employed by supermarkets when they decided they wanted to
work in a more gay-friendly environment; online research led them to the store.
But "hard economic times and business and personal transitions have taken their
toll," the three said. "We’ve put our hearts and souls into this business, and
we will miss it on many levels"... GLAD DAY BOOKSHOP, a Toronto institution
since 1970, was on the verge of closing last fall – but community support has
kept its doors open. "We’re 40! And we’re trying to stay alive to see 41!" says
the bookstore’s Facebook page, while a lively Twitter account (@GDBooks) posts
updates about new arrivals: "Welcome to My World by #Johnny Weir. Any olympic
athlete who wants to pose for his book cover in meggings and 6" heels is ok by
us," reads one recent tweet. Glad Day was Canada’s first gay bookstore, and is
now the world’s oldest... OUTWRITE BOOKSTORE & Coffeehouse owner Philip
Rafshoon – "the unofficial mayor" of Atlanta’s gay Midtown neighborhood,
according to Georgia Voice – is the first openly gay winner of the Alumni
Legacy Award from Georgia Tech, from which Rafshoon graduated in 1983.
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-’70s.