A Christmas suggestion

Books. Because a scented candle never changed anybody’s life……



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Everything I Have is Blue

I’ve just finished reading the anthology Everything I Have is Blue (helpfully subtitled: Short Fiction by Working-class Men about More-or-less Gay Life). It’s edited by Wendell Ricketts, who also contributes a gripping short story of his own and a final, finely written and thought-provoking essay. With the exception of Wendell himself and one of my favourite writers, Keith Banner, most of these writers are new to me, although I have come across CAConrad on various networking sites and enjoyed what I’ve seen of his work. This doesn’t mean they haven’t published; most of them have rich and varied writing careers, described at the back of the book. It’s more likely to mean that the kind of writing they’re involved in is marginalised. Marginalised initially as gay writing and, subsequently, in class terms as writing that appears to fail to tell us what we want to know: that we’re young, beautiful, rich and infinitely desirable. I’ve been thinking a lot recently about the non-consolatory function that gay writing might perform, mostly in the context of my virtual tour for my own short stories, and so it’s exciting to see how this immensely varied group of writers work with their material to talk about lives that are demonstrably less than perfect, by which I mean recognisable as human.

My favourite pieces in the collection are probably those that work at the interface of gay-straight lives, such as the opening story by C. Bard Cole or Marcel Devons’ tale about Scotty taking his boyfriend home to meet his parents. More than any other, I loved My Special Friend by Christopher Lord, and not only because the reading of it coincided with a dispute about Christmas trees chez moi. I found the final story in the collection, a long piece by James Barr, interesting as a story and even more interesting in a socio-historical sense; for me, at least, it illuminated the background to Brokeback Mountain, which must be the most famous story ever written about working-class gay men, while offering a sort of alternative to that story’s historical hopelessness. It’s the nearest story in the book to what I’ve termed consolatory, but even here the hero’s forced, through one of those timely accidents fiction depends on, to think about, and come to terms with, his sexual and emotional needs.

What’s refreshing about the book as a whole, though, is that it offers not only scenes of deprivation and desperation, but also possibilities of happiness that aren’t shallow, self-defeating or unattainable, and it does this with warmth, intelligence and skill. I’m least happy with the stories in which a sort of poetic take on lives of hardship and squalor seems to glamourise rather than portray those lives, a stance that comes across, to me anyway, as inverted consolation. I’d also say that the sub-culture depicted in, for example, Skins, powerfully evoked though it is, isn’t working-class at all, but sub-proletariat and as ghetto-ized in its way as the flashier world of ‘beach reading’. But what the book does, to its enormous credit, is foreground these issues, and it does so by bringing together some fine and exciting writing. You can click on the link above to order the book, read more work by other great writers and contribute to Wendell’s ongoing project. You won’t regret it.
Posted in gay, short stories, wendell ricketts, work, writing | 2 Comments

Nel mezzo del cammin

Five down, five to go. The latest leg of my Something Rich and Strange tour is posted today on Vanessa Gebbie’s News. I’ve been a fan of Vanessa’s work for as long as I’ve been blogging (and here’s the proof), well before we found ourselves rubbing shoulders in the Salt stables. So it was, as they say, both a privilege and a pleasure to answer her questions on two of the longer stories in the collection. They’re both set on Mediterranean islands, so pack your sunglasses.


Next week, it’s the turn of John Self at Asylum, followed by a well-earned three-week break before dovegreyreader scribbles. So while I prepare myself for their questions, you will have all the time you need to do some Christmas shopping. Vanessa has made some very wise suggestions about possible gifts…
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Lamed vovnik

This comes from a very moving article by David Horovitz, in memory of his daughter, Sarah. 

In Jewish lore there is a legend of the lamed vovniks, the thirty-six just men on whom the existence of the world depends (Sarah would have had something to say about the gender prejudice of that). According to the legend, God had become so disgusted with his creation that he was determined to destroy it. But an angel came to plead with Him and to ask for a reprieve if she could find thirty-six just men in the world. In every generation, so the legend goes, there are always thirty-six just men – the lamed vovniks on whom its continued survival depends. The lamed vovniks are not conscious of who they are. They perform their acts of compassion and love out of the purity of their hearts. And the rest of us owe the world to them.

You can find the article here.
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Lovely things

And talking of Christmas shopping, if you’re in Rome next weekend and would like to buy something rather special, come along to Vicolo dell’Atleta 5 (Trastevere) after 5 pm, and take a look at what’s on offer. I’ll see you there!

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Money

Well, it’s good to be reminded once again who really runs Italy. When it emerged that the Treasury was planning to reduce the amount of funding provided by the Italian state to catholic schools, it took no more than a few hours for a papal hissy fit to change their minds. According to Ratzy, the church’s right to our money is ‘inalienable’. Well, I’d have preferred the word ‘indefensible’, but there you go. You don’t argue with the boss.

(Seen here, preparing a primal gift for Christmas.)
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Witchcraft

Thank you, Jesus’ General, for this.

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How not to approach an interview situation

The beard is definitely not a good idea.


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Questionnaire

  • What do you think caused your heterosexuality?
  • When and how did you decide you were a heterosexual?
  • Is it possible that your heterosexuality is just a phase you may grow out of?
  • Is it possible that your heterosexuality stems from a neurotic fear of others of the same sex?
  • Do your parents know that you are straight? Do your friends and/or roommate(s) know? How did they react?
  • Why do you insist on flaunting your heterosexuality? Can’t you just be who you are and keep it quiet?
  • Why do heterosexuals feel compelled to seduce others into their lifestyles?
  • A disproportionate majority of child molesters are heterosexual. So you consider it safe to expose children to heterosexual teachers?
  • With all the societal support marriage receives, the divorce rate is spiraling. Why are there so few stable relationships among heterosexuals?
  • Statistics show that lesbians have the lowest incidence of sexually transmitted diseases. Is it really safe for a woman to maintain a heterosexual lifestyle and run the risk of disease and pregnancy?
  • Considering the menace of overpopulation, how could the human race survive if everyone were heterosexual?
  • Would you want your child to be heterosexual, knowing the problems that s/he would face?

If you’d like to know more about this questionnaire, click here. From Joe.My.God. 
Posted in gay | 2 Comments

Remember: no Salt, no flavour

Dithering about what to buy people for Christmas? I know times are hard, but, let’s face it, what are friends and family worth? Something between a fiver and £14.99, with a 33% discount? I guessed as much.


So all you need to do is click here and buy your loved ones, and their loved ones, one or – why not? – two or three of the fabulous books produced by Salt. I’m assuming you’ve got a copy of The Scent of Cinnamon. What do you mean, you haven’t! Shame! Order one this minute! You’ll be doing yourself a favour. More to the point, you’ll be helping one of the bravest, most adventurous presses around at the moment, in the UK or anywhere else, to continue to produce books that don’t just look good, very good, but actually do you good. (I have a medical certificate to prove this.)

I won’t make any recommendations, but these are just some of the Salt books I’ve read – and loved – this year, in no particular order:

Simon Barraclough: Los Alamos Mon Amour (shortlisted for the Forward Prize)
Katy Evans-Bush: Me and the Dead
John Wilkinson: Down to Earth
Isobel Dixon: A Fold in the Map
Douglas Oliver: Arrondissements
David Gaffney: Aromabingo
Tania Hershman: The White Road

And just to show that I’ve put my money where my mouth is, I’ve ordered and can’t wait to receive:

Jay Merill: Astral Bodies (I read with Jay earlier this year and she was wonderful!)
Matthew Licht: The Moose Show (I’m intrigued, and slightly turned on, by his podcast)
Andrew Duncan: Origins of the Underground (I’m in the introduction to this, by the way, and Andrew didn’t even tell me! This is your chance to explain yourself, Andrew…)
Posted in christmas, reading, salt, the scent of cinnamon | Leave a comment