A Queer and Pleasant Danger: The
True Story of a Nice Jewish Boy Who Joins the Church of Scientology and Leaves
Twelve Years Later to Become the Lovely Lady She Is Today, by Kate Bornstein.
Beacon Press, 258 pages, $24.95 hardcover.
Back before she was Kate, a
well-deserved genderqueer celebrity, he was oft-married Al. For more than a
decade, through the 1970s, Bornstein – still seen as a handsome man by the
world, but struggling with the woman within – was a committed Scientologist,
first a crewman aboard founder L. Ron Hubbard’s Sea Organization flagship
vessel and then a top salesman of the church’s cultish offerings. The author’s
account of her Scientology years is both sobering and chilling, even more so
when she reveals that she hasn’t been in touch with her daughter – now a
high-level Sea Org official – for years, nor has she ever seen two
grandchildren, also Scientologists. Post-church, and "first a girl" at 38,
Bornstein writes about feminist and lesbian activism and her performance
career, about integrating gender desire with real life, about bouts of anorexia
and "orgasmic" self-cutting and, with beguiling matter-of-factness, about a
passion for S&M. This memoir manages to be both wrenchingly transformative
and luminously wondrous, a sumptuous literary combination.
David Hockney, The Biography,
1937-1975: A Rake’s Progress, by Christopher Simon Sykes. Doubleday, 364
pages, $35 hardcover.
Kudos to this first volume about
famed British artist Hockney: the biography never shies away from addressing
and assessing how central being queer is to both his assuredly flamboyant life
and his often-vividly homocentric art. How queer? Hockney’s cheeky 1962 work,
"Life Painting for a Diploma," featured a beefcake model drawn from the muscle
mag Physique Pictorial. Sykes’ breezy take on the artist’s life is an
engaging blend of chatty artist-as-a-young(ish)-man anecdotes and cogent
analysis of several of his career-making paintings, among them 1967’s "A Bigger Splash" and 1968’s "Christopher
Isherwood and Don Bachardy." The author’s overview of the artist’s art
satisfies a need for critical (but never stuffy) analysis; his account of
Hockney’s often-unsettled love life – particularly of his first real
relationship with artist Peter Schlesinger, 18 when he enrolled in a UCLA class
that Hockney, a decade his elder, was teaching – satisfies the standard of
candor for a well-wrought biography. Vol. 1 is an expansive, entertaining and
illuminating (and lavishly illustrated) half-a-life, heralding what is likely
to be an equally authoritative Vol. 2.
Purgatory: A Novel of the Civil
War, by Jeff Mann. Lethe Press, 286 pages, $18 paper.
Larry Townsend, Jack Fritscher and
John Preston, S&M literary masters (and Masters) of yore, have a worthy
heir. First with Fog and now with this Civil War-set second novel, Mann – a
prolific contributor to erotica anthologies as well as a profoundly sensuous
poet and an elegantly personal essayist – merges deliciously erotic and
decidedly literary writing with whiplash precision. The premise: young
Confederate soldier Ian Campbell, slight but wiry and hiding a hankering for
man-love, is tasked by his spiteful squad-commanding uncle with guarding
captured Yankee Drew Conrad, a Herculean hunk whose tortured fate – after he’s
been bound, gagged, whipped, bloodied and near-starved for Rebel soldier
amusement – is to die. That the two young soldiers fall in love is a given. But
the majesty of Mann’s masterful storytelling is that he depicts their
transformation – from dominant captor and submissive captive to a couple
determined to realize their romantic destiny – with a sublime blend of
accomplished research and intense S&M action. Elegant historical fiction
meets orgasmic queer prose in this nuanced (if predictably-ending) novel.
Fugitives of Love, by Lisa
Girolami. Bold Strokes Books, 228 pages, $14.94 paper.
When a romance’s story arc is
preordained – lesbian one and lesbian two, despite impediments, are destined to
be together – the reason to read the story stems from twists in its plot and a
distinctive setting. Girolami’s fifth novel attains both those goals nicely.
Lesbian one is art gallery owner Brenna Wright, once-bitten by love and now
relationship-shy, committed to her gallery’s success to the exclusion of
anything like a personal life. Lesbian two is Sinclair Grady, a reclusive
creator of sea-polished-glass art eschewing the possibility of love while
shielding a horrific past. When Brenna spots one of Sinclair’s pieces hanging
in a Manhattan window, she’s determined to track her down for a show. But when
gallerist meets artist, more than art appreciation ensues; both women get past
their romantic inhibitions and, for a while, revel in uninhibited sex, until
Sinclair’s past intrudes. Cue a truth-telling reveal, a loutish stepbrother,
and a pushy but effective attorney, and, hey, the impediment to true love is
vanquished in this slight but seductive tale.
Featured
Excerpt
Ever since he had arrived in LA,
Hockney had been planning to pay a visit to the offices of AMG, the Athletic
Model Guild, the publisher of Physique Pictorial. He was intrigued by the
fact that though many of the storylines were set indoors, in a bathroom for
example, there was often the strong shadow of a palm tree across the bath,
suggesting that the pictures were in fact shot outside. He both wanted to see
where this happened and to buy some of the photographs, so he took Kasmin to
the studios, on downtown 11th Street in a house which the founder of AMG,
photographer Bob Mizer, shared with his mother. The city jail, situated close
by, provided quite a few of the models...
-from David Hockney, by
Christopher Simon Sykes
Footnotes
FIVE BOOKS TO WATCH OUT FOR:
Novelist Scott Heim (Mysterious Skin, We Disappear, In Awe), has met his
Kickstarter goal of raising $12,000 for a five-volume e-book project, The
First Time I Heard, to which dozens of musicians (and a few authors, including
Dave King, Tara Ison, Elizabeth Searle, Sheri Joseph, Mark
Gluth, Sylvia Sellers-Garcia, and James Greer) have contributed essays
recalling the first time they heard an iconic band. "For those people who only know me through my
novels, the details of this might come as an oddity, but for those who follow
my music posts and know my music-nerdiness, this won't be all that surprising,"
Heim wrote in a blog entry announcing the series. Musicians discussed
are David Bowie (Vol. 1), Cocteau Twins (Vol. 2), The Smiths (Vol. 3), Kate
Bush (Vol. 4), and Joy Division/New Order (Vol. 5); contributors include
members of such bands as Throwing Muses, Mercury Rev, Lamb,
Electrelane, Swervedriver, Lush, Shudder To Think, The Wedding Present, Gang
Gang Dance, Curve, Stereolab, Babes In Toyland, Laika, Antony & the
Johnsons, Catherine Wheel, Clan of Xymox, The Teardrop Explodes, Pylon and
Guided By Voices. If the series finds an audience, Heim hopes to continue the
series with the likes of The Pixies, Roxy Music, Public Enemy, Abba, Kraftwerk,
REM, My Bloody Valentine and Leonard Cohen – and to eventually find a publisher
to release the books in print form. Information: http://facebook.com/TheFirstTimeIHeard .
Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-‘70s.