Reviews: Between Boyfriends, The Midnight Hunt, Hot Stuff, Concerning E.M. Forster

{Between} Boyfriends, by Michael Salvatore. Kensington Books, 328 pages, $15 paper.

Tart tongues, caustic commentary, the objectification of less-than-perfect bodies, an overbearing mother, an absent â?? well, dead â?? father, angst about aging, revulsion at the sight of a wee penis, men yearning for love but settling for sex: this saucy soap opera of a novel is a queer-boy bitchfest, stuffed â?? hilariously so â?? with every possible gay male stereotype. Salvatoreâ??s outrageous debut, rather politically incorrect but quite comically adept, serves up at least a grin on every page, if not a giggle; itâ??s the very epitome of a guilty reading pleasure. At 33, Stephen Bartholomew Ferrante remains broken hearted over being abruptly dumped by the man heâ??d planned to live with forever. Drifting from one one-night stand (the penis! the horror!) to another, his spirits are more often than not buoyed by a circle of sassy friends who gather frequently at the neighborhood Starbucks to dish dirt, ogle boys and show off their studs-de-jour. Does Stephen find the one true love for which he longs? Happily, the forever-after (perhaps) ending comes as no surprise.

The Midnight Hunt, by Radclyffe writing as L.L. Raand. Bold Strokes Books, 292 pages, $16.95 paper.

As â??Radclyffeâ? she has written 19 books in three different series and 14 more generic lesbian romances, and has edited or co-edited another dozen erotic and romantic collections. This new series is quite a change of pace. New genre, and thus new credit: â??L.L. Raand.â? Here, the prodigiously prolific author crafts a world where werewolves and vampires, to say nothing of â??Mages, Fae and Psi,â? other shadow-world races destined to make appearances in planned sequels, are coming out of the closet, so to speak, demanding tolerance from and acceptance by the human race. The first of the Midnight Hunters series â?? book two, Blood Hunt, is previewed â?? focuses on Sylvan, the all-powerful Alpha of the Adirondack Timberwolf Pack, charged with negotiating a â??preternatural protection billâ? with human politicians. She connects, climactically, with medic Drake McKennan, soon to transform from human to Were. Character introductions are crammed into a busy book one, leaving scant room for Raand to explore the ramifications of interaction between preternaturals and humans â?? but thatâ??s the sort of meaty exposition that a continuing series can embrace.

Hot Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of American Culture, by Alice Echols. W.W. Norton, 338 pages, $26.95 hardcover.

Though there are some pedantic bramble patches, for the most part Echols, author of a book about Janis Joplin, keeps it breezy in this academia-lite assessment of discoâ??s glitterball years. Her sociological reach is broad, encompassing as it does black masculinity, the early place and later exclusion of women in disco dance clubs, the unexpected impact and prescience of the film Saturday Night Fever, and discoâ??s roots in other musical genres â?? and, equally, its influence on other music. But, deservedly, the role of gay men in crafting the music and shaping the spaces where both Manhattanâ??s social elite and the bridge-and-tunnel crowd played is prominent. In discoâ??s earlier years, says the author, queers were more or less at one with the music and with each other; only with the rise of â??gay machoâ? did racist and sexist attitudes intrude. In a notable personal aside, Echols recalls her younger days spinning music at the Rubaiyat disco in Ann Arbor, where one Madonna Ciccone is said to have danced before abandoning university for New York and eventual stardom.

Concerning E. M. Forster, by Frank Kermode. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 192 pages, $24 hardcover.

Based partly on a talk by the biographer at the annual Clark Lectures at Cambridgeâ??s Trinity College â?? where Forster himself discussed â??Aspects of the Novelâ? in 1927 â?? this is a pithy consideration of a writer honored most queerly for a novel (Maurice) that he hid away for more than 50 years, and which was published only after his death in 1970. Of that book, Kermode has little to say, except to note that Forsterâ??s unromantic homosexuality â?? his longest relationship was with a married man â?? is what blocked his writing. After publishing five novels between 1905 and 1911 (as well as suppressing Maurice), Forsterâ??s creativity stalled until 1924, when he published A Passage to India, his last novel. There followed only essays and reviews. The lecture portion of this intelligently authoritative study dwells on Passage, on Forsterâ??s affinity for classical music, and on his book about writing, Aspects of the Novel. What follows, in a more free-form style, is Kermodeâ??s mostly admiring take on a majestic writerâ??s puzzling failure to realize his full potential.

Featured Excerpt

Operating as private clubs, as many gay discos did, allowed them not only to weed out the â??wrongâ? kind of men but also to exclude women legally. Women had partied at the earlier discos, but at many of the chicest gay clubs they soon discovered they were viewed as a nuisance â?? a relic of the bad old days. When the Sanctuary turned gay in the wake of Stonewall, the owners sacked many of their female employees because they no longer wanted women there. Indeed, during the filming of Klute, actress Jane Fonda got into an argument with the clubâ??s owners because they would not allow lesbians inside.

-from Hot Stuff, by Alice Echols

Footnotes

QUEER AWARD SEASON kicked off April 29 with the presentation of literary honors by The Publishing Triangle, a New York-based organization of publishing professionals. Lori Ostlund won Debut Fiction for her story collection, The Bigness of the World; the Lesbian Nonfiction winner was Rebecca Brown for American Romances: Essays; the Gay Nonfiction winner was James Davidson for The Greeks and Greek Love; and the Lesbian and Gay Poetry winners were Stacie Cassarino for Zero at the Bone and Ronaldo V. Wilson for Poems of the Black Object. Sebastian Stuart, a 60-year-old debut novelist, took the Ferro-Grumley Award for Fiction with The Hour Between… ONE MONTH LATER, the Lambda Literary Foundation presents its awards â?? for the 22nd year â?? at a Manhattan ceremony that also honors novelist, playwright and political gadfly Larry Kramer (Faggots, The Normal Heart) and comedian and social commentator Kate Clinton (What the L, I Told You So) with Pioneer Awards. The â??Lammysâ? will be awarded in 23 categories, with stand-up comedian Eddie Sarfaty (author of the memoir Mental: Funny in the Head) as master of ceremonies. Presenters include Rachel Kramer Bussel (erotica), Linda Villarosa (LGBT nonfiction), and Sarah Schulman (LGBT studies). As always, the two major queer awards donâ??t duplicate each otherâ??s finalists very much: only James Davidson, Stacie Cassarino, and Lori Ostlund, among Publishing Triangle winners, are finalists for a Lammy. Tickets for the ceremony are $100, information at the revamped Lambda Literary online community, lambdaliterary.org.

by Richard Labonte

Richard Labonte has been reading, editing, selling, and writing about queer literature since the mid-â??70s. He can be reached in care of this publication or at BookMarks@qsyndicate.com.

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