Hold onto your hoses! French photographer Fred Goudon, best known for his scintillating Dieux du Stade images of professional rugby players and other male athletes in various states of undress turns his lens on another major subject of gay Franco-fetishism: Firemen. On Fire: The Firefighters of France (Rizzoli. $55. www.fredgoudon.com). This sumptuously produced collection of over 100 images, most in richly printed black and white, assembles Goudon’s favorite work from his shoots for a series of fireman calendars issued between 2016 and this year. In a brief introduction, Goudon says that, even out of uniform, French firefighters have “a body language that allows me to pinpoint them in a crowd…I can tell…even from behind.” Indeed, Goudon’s sharp focus on the behind is in splendid evidence throughout his photos. Likewise tight abs, pumped pecs, broad shoulders, and square jaws. These are posed studio compositions, not documentary shots from emergency scenes, but despite the lack of literal fire, the heat is high. For all of their celebration of male bodies, Goudon’s images are most sensual when they hone in on some of the younger firemen’s shockingly boyish faces; the dewy eyes and pouted lips make you think of Bambi in the blazing forest.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
Loaded with ethical trap doors and secret passages, Zak Salih’s debut novel Let’s Get Back to the Party (Algonquin. $25.95. www.zaksalih.com), is one of the most provocative and nuanced explorations of contemporary gay life to be published in the last few years. Alternately narrated by Sebastian and Oscar, two thirty-somethings who briefly explored their burgeoning homosexuality together as children but have been out of touch for many years, the novel toggles between Oscar’s revulsion at Obergfell-era gay assimilation and Sebastian’s jealousy of the sense of freedom and normalcy that he, a high school teacher, senses in his own queer students. Oscar looks backward as Sebastian looks forward, both full of loneliness and longing. While the counterbalance of these characters feels a bit over-engineered at first, Salih complicates matters by adding two pivotal secondary characters to the mix: A once-celebrated sexagenarian author of thinly fictionalized, sexually charged novels (clearly based on Edmund White) who Oscar aspires to emulate; and a 17-year-old high school senior who Sebastian finds himself ashamed to be falling for. An eerie Hitchcockian sense of suspense builds— without ever quite resolving—throughout the book as the Oscar and Sebastian’s lives begin to criss-cross in the gay enclaves of Washington, D.C. and its suburbs. Salih deftly spins strands of narrative that stretch from the Stonewall riots and Chelsea Piers to the Pulse massacre and hook-up apps, entangling two compelling characters who are lost between these eras.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
A strange, slim, shiver-inducing volume, Yukio Mishima: The Death of a Man (Rizzoli. $55. www.rizzoliusa.com) is a hardbound suicide note that has come to light 50 years after its subject’s demise. In November of 1970, Mishima—the iconic Japanese writer, actor and social provocateur who first rose to fame with the publication of his homoerotic autobiographical 1949 novel Confessions of a Mask—committed ritual suicide, seppuku. It was the bold final act in the life of a self-created character who viewed his own life as a single overarching work of art. During the year leading up to his death, Mishima personally conceived and art-directed the 80 photographs shot by Kishin Shinoyama that are published here: A series of images in which Mishima is costumed as soldier, fencer, fisherman, athlete and other archetypal male figures and posed as if each of these characters are dead. We see him in a leather jacket, sunglasses and helmet sprawled on cracked asphalt, apparently thrown from the motorcycle that lies off to his side. We see him wrapped in barbed wire, pierced with a sword, hanging from a noose, and, most chillingly, gutting himself with a large knife while in traditional samurai garb, as if conducting a dress rehearsal for his actual death. Morbid as these pictures are, they are also suffused with homoeroticism—Mishima’s characters are often fully or partially nude. A head-scratcher and loin-stirrer all at once, this book is as haunting and confounding as Mishima himself. Hopefully it will pique curiousity and lead more gay readers to explore his undeniably brilliant novels and poetry.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
In Mike Nichols: A Life (Penguin Press. $35. www.penguinrandomhouse.com), Mark Harris provides a bracing reminder of Nichols’ remarkable impact on American theater and film over the course of five decades. The behind-the-scenes looks at his projects, from The Graduate to Angels in America, are priceless, and the amazing network of fellow artists he collaborated and clashed with, from Elizabeth Taylor to Whoopi Goldberg is fascinating to trace. Harris is remarkably efficient at leading readers along the tangled paths of Nichols’ interwoven careers as director, performer and producer. His explanations of Nichols’ directorial style—which was rich with psychological insight about both characters and actors—are perhaps the best passages in the book. What’s disappointingly absent is much real revelation or explication of Nichols’ own psychology and personal relationships beyond the long-lasting residue of his childhood. His crucial relationships with Elaine May and later with fourth wife Diane Sawyer—to whom he was married for 25 years prior to his death in 2014—remain cryptic to the reader. The emotional engine of his relationship with Sawyer, especially, are particularly elusive. Harris, who is married to Tony Kushner, only gingerly touches on Nichols’ sexuality, despite assertions by Richard Avedon, one of his closest friends, that the pair had a longtime love affair, and the often long-distance nature of Nichols’ relationships with his quartet of wives. Its fine to avoid the lurid and salacious, but Harris just doesn’t dig as deeply into what made Nichols tick as readers might hope. Nichols sometimes comes across as a baby and a diva; sometimes generous and sometimes remarkably stingy; he seems obsessed with status as much as art; he displays strokes of genius and wide stripes of misanthropy. All fascinating, but not all tied together with a coherent authorial theory about his overall driving forces, motivations, or Achilles heels. This is a fascinating and well-organized summary of Nichols’ career and tentacular artistic impact, but falls short on reflection and interpretation.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
Bryan Washington’s Memorial (Riverhead. $27. www.brywashing.com), one of the most acclaimed debut novels in recent years, is full of characters we rarely meet in fiction. And when we do meet them, they’re usually not in the same books. Overweight gay men, short order cooks, daycare staffers, sero-mixed couples, and even an alcoholic meteorologist are among the people you’ll meet in these pages. Washington depicts lower-middle-class life in Houston as a lively, unsurprising amalgam of black, white, Asian, and Latinx people. He gives us multiculturalism as naturalism. The book’s plot finds struggling gay couple Mike and Ben physically separating as Mike flies to Japan to spend time with his dying father. Simultaneously, Mike’s mother is arriving in Texas for a long-planned visit, only to discover her son is splitting and leaving her to spend several weeks with his African-American boyfriend, who she’s never met before. Continents apart, communicating through awkward text messages, Mike and Ben test the limits of their couplehood while simultaneously struggling with the awkwardness of their family relationships (Ben’s divorced but stillsquabbling parents also live in Houston). Memorial is not a book of big dramatic moments, but its quietly rendered details build upon each other to form a story that feels revelatory in its mundanity.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
A bold, vulnerable, and thrillingly filthy piece of work, 100 Boyfriends by Oakland punk polymath Brontez Purnell (Farrar, Straus and Giroux. $15. www.brontezpurnellartjock.com) finds humane aches and genuine humor in all manner of raunchy derring-do. Sometimes you’ll belly laugh while reading it; other times you’ll wince while emitting semi-appalled snorts. In this jagged edged mosaic of autobiographical prose pieces, Purnell—who plays guitar in The Younger Lovers, toured nationally as a dancer with queer electro band Gravy Train!!!, and has written zines, children’s books, fiction and poetry—pulls no punches when it comes to sexuality, sex, and race. There are thematic echoes and repeated phrases throughout the text that are worthy of careful literary exegesis, but most readers will focus primarily— and delightedly—on the book’s full-throated (among other holes) yowl of unapologetic but thoughtfully self-critical black male queerness. This is a banger of a book.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
The Queer Advantage: Conversations with LGBTQ+ Leaders on The Power of Identity (Hachette Go. $30. www.andrewgelwicks.com) finds author Andrew Gelwicks asking dozens of queer business people, creatives, and politicos some questions that would likely have never been asked even ten years ago: “How has being queer advantaged you in your career?” “Do you notice this dual masculine and feminine approach helps with your ability to deal with people in business?” “How has being gay been a positive dynamic in your life?” The book, which is aimed at a young adult audience, turns the tables on past iterations of Queer 101 by focusing on LGBTQ+ sexuality not as a challenge, but as an opportunity. Yes, Gelwicks asks his subjects—ranging from Billie Jean King and Barney Frank to Troye Sivan and Adam Rippon—some preliminary questions about bullying, discrimination, and self-denial, but he quickly moves beyond the old standards and his subjects offer a happier tune. “Being gay…helped build my sense of empathy, my willingness to speak up on others’ behalf,” observes Jim Obergfell, lead plaintiff in the Supreme Court cast that legalized gay marriage; “If you don’t get something right the first time, your life isn’t over” says author and columnist Jennifer Finney Boylan, “Being trans made me realize you get a lot of shots in life.” Perhaps the most encouraging empowering words of all for questioning young people come from activist Adam Eli: “I genuinely and wholeheartedly believe that being queer is a superpower…I would not give it up for anything in the world. I didn’t always feel that way, and now with my whole heart I do.”
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
While its title quotes from Romeo and Juliet, These Violent Delights (Harper. $27.99. www.micahnemerever.com) centers on a doomed adolescent romance more evocative of Herman Hesse than William Shakespeare. Like Hesse’s Demian and Steppenwolf, this is a book in which navel gazing begets staring into the void. Debut author Micah Nemerever steeps readers in the simultaneously rebellious and self-flagellating mindsets of working-class Paul and wealthy Julian, two Pittsburgh college students in the early 1970s who fall into a dangerous state of codependence while trying to cope with family trauma. Paul’s father, a police office, has committed suicide shortly before novel begins and Julian, we gradually learn, along with Paul, comes from a massively wealthy and monstrously manipulative clan. Along with the mutually sadomasochistic sex that fuels the boys’ attachment to each other and disassociation from their daily lives, they bond over a mind-game in which they imagine methods of murder and try to choose ideal victims for their perfect crime. While the main pair’s twisted relationship and philosophical conversations dominate the book, Nemerever embroiders the edges of this darkness with a finely wrought portrait of Paul’s grieving mother, simultaneously worried by her son’s nihilism and homosexuality, yet grateful that he has formed a close friendship. Nemerever’s ability to precisely dissect such complex states of mind makes him an author worth watching.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
You May Also Enjoy
25 Independent Bookstores That Are Open On Line
The post Best Books For April 2021: The Savvy Traveler’s Choices appeared first on Passport Magazine.
Best Books For April 2021: The Savvy Traveler’s Choices
Hold onto your hoses! French photographer Fred Goudon, best known for his scintillating Dieux du Stade images of professional rugby players and other male athletes in various states of undress turns his lens on another major subject of gay Franco-fetishism: Firemen. On Fire: The Firefighters of France (Rizzoli. $55. www.fredgoudon.com). This sumptuously produced collection of over 100 images, most in richly printed black and white, assembles Goudon’s favorite work from his shoots for a series of fireman calendars issued between 2016 and this year. In a brief introduction, Goudon says that, even out of uniform, French firefighters have “a body language that allows me to pinpoint them in a crowd…I can tell…even from behind.” Indeed, Goudon’s sharp focus on the behind is in splendid evidence throughout his photos. Likewise tight abs, pumped pecs, broad shoulders, and square jaws. These are posed studio compositions, not documentary shots from emergency scenes, but despite the lack of literal fire, the heat is high. For all of their celebration of male bodies, Goudon’s images are most sensual when they hone in on some of the younger firemen’s shockingly boyish faces; the dewy eyes and pouted lips make you think of Bambi in the blazing forest.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
Loaded with ethical trap doors and secret passages, Zak Salih’s debut novel Let’s Get Back to the Party (Algonquin. $25.95. www.zaksalih.com), is one of the most provocative and nuanced explorations of contemporary gay life to be published in the last few years. Alternately narrated by Sebastian and Oscar, two thirty-somethings who briefly explored their burgeoning homosexuality together as children but have been out of touch for many years, the novel toggles between Oscar’s revulsion at Obergfell-era gay assimilation and Sebastian’s jealousy of the sense of freedom and normalcy that he, a high school teacher, senses in his own queer students. Oscar looks backward as Sebastian looks forward, both full of loneliness and longing. While the counterbalance of these characters feels a bit over-engineered at first, Salih complicates matters by adding two pivotal secondary characters to the mix: A once-celebrated sexagenarian author of thinly fictionalized, sexually charged novels (clearly based on Edmund White) who Oscar aspires to emulate; and a 17-year-old high school senior who Sebastian finds himself ashamed to be falling for. An eerie Hitchcockian sense of suspense builds— without ever quite resolving—throughout the book as the Oscar and Sebastian’s lives begin to criss-cross in the gay enclaves of Washington, D.C. and its suburbs. Salih deftly spins strands of narrative that stretch from the Stonewall riots and Chelsea Piers to the Pulse massacre and hook-up apps, entangling two compelling characters who are lost between these eras.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
A strange, slim, shiver-inducing volume, Yukio Mishima: The Death of a Man (Rizzoli. $55. www.rizzoliusa.com) is a hardbound suicide note that has come to light 50 years after its subject’s demise. In November of 1970, Mishima—the iconic Japanese writer, actor and social provocateur who first rose to fame with the publication of his homoerotic autobiographical 1949 novel Confessions of a Mask—committed ritual suicide, seppuku. It was the bold final act in the life of a self-created character who viewed his own life as a single overarching work of art. During the year leading up to his death, Mishima personally conceived and art-directed the 80 photographs shot by Kishin Shinoyama that are published here: A series of images in which Mishima is costumed as soldier, fencer, fisherman, athlete and other archetypal male figures and posed as if each of these characters are dead. We see him in a leather jacket, sunglasses and helmet sprawled on cracked asphalt, apparently thrown from the motorcycle that lies off to his side. We see him wrapped in barbed wire, pierced with a sword, hanging from a noose, and, most chillingly, gutting himself with a large knife while in traditional samurai garb, as if conducting a dress rehearsal for his actual death. Morbid as these pictures are, they are also suffused with homoeroticism—Mishima’s characters are often fully or partially nude. A head-scratcher and loin-stirrer all at once, this book is as haunting and confounding as Mishima himself. Hopefully it will pique curiousity and lead more gay readers to explore his undeniably brilliant novels and poetry.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
In Mike Nichols: A Life (Penguin Press. $35. www.penguinrandomhouse.com), Mark Harris provides a bracing reminder of Nichols’ remarkable impact on American theater and film over the course of five decades. The behind-the-scenes looks at his projects, from The Graduate to Angels in America, are priceless, and the amazing network of fellow artists he collaborated and clashed with, from Elizabeth Taylor to Whoopi Goldberg is fascinating to trace. Harris is remarkably efficient at leading readers along the tangled paths of Nichols’ interwoven careers as director, performer and producer. His explanations of Nichols’ directorial style—which was rich with psychological insight about both characters and actors—are perhaps the best passages in the book. What’s disappointingly absent is much real revelation or explication of Nichols’ own psychology and personal relationships beyond the long-lasting residue of his childhood. His crucial relationships with Elaine May and later with fourth wife Diane Sawyer—to whom he was married for 25 years prior to his death in 2014—remain cryptic to the reader. The emotional engine of his relationship with Sawyer, especially, are particularly elusive. Harris, who is married to Tony Kushner, only gingerly touches on Nichols’ sexuality, despite assertions by Richard Avedon, one of his closest friends, that the pair had a longtime love affair, and the often long-distance nature of Nichols’ relationships with his quartet of wives. Its fine to avoid the lurid and salacious, but Harris just doesn’t dig as deeply into what made Nichols tick as readers might hope. Nichols sometimes comes across as a baby and a diva; sometimes generous and sometimes remarkably stingy; he seems obsessed with status as much as art; he displays strokes of genius and wide stripes of misanthropy. All fascinating, but not all tied together with a coherent authorial theory about his overall driving forces, motivations, or Achilles heels. This is a fascinating and well-organized summary of Nichols’ career and tentacular artistic impact, but falls short on reflection and interpretation.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
Bryan Washington’s Memorial (Riverhead. $27. www.brywashing.com), one of the most acclaimed debut novels in recent years, is full of characters we rarely meet in fiction. And when we do meet them, they’re usually not in the same books. Overweight gay men, short order cooks, daycare staffers, sero-mixed couples, and even an alcoholic meteorologist are among the people you’ll meet in these pages. Washington depicts lower-middle-class life in Houston as a lively, unsurprising amalgam of black, white, Asian, and Latinx people. He gives us multiculturalism as naturalism. The book’s plot finds struggling gay couple Mike and Ben physically separating as Mike flies to Japan to spend time with his dying father. Simultaneously, Mike’s mother is arriving in Texas for a long-planned visit, only to discover her son is splitting and leaving her to spend several weeks with his African-American boyfriend, who she’s never met before. Continents apart, communicating through awkward text messages, Mike and Ben test the limits of their couplehood while simultaneously struggling with the awkwardness of their family relationships (Ben’s divorced but stillsquabbling parents also live in Houston). Memorial is not a book of big dramatic moments, but its quietly rendered details build upon each other to form a story that feels revelatory in its mundanity.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
A bold, vulnerable, and thrillingly filthy piece of work, 100 Boyfriends by Oakland punk polymath Brontez Purnell (Farrar, Straus and Giroux. $15. www.brontezpurnellartjock.com) finds humane aches and genuine humor in all manner of raunchy derring-do. Sometimes you’ll belly laugh while reading it; other times you’ll wince while emitting semi-appalled snorts. In this jagged edged mosaic of autobiographical prose pieces, Purnell—who plays guitar in The Younger Lovers, toured nationally as a dancer with queer electro band Gravy Train!!!, and has written zines, children’s books, fiction and poetry—pulls no punches when it comes to sexuality, sex, and race. There are thematic echoes and repeated phrases throughout the text that are worthy of careful literary exegesis, but most readers will focus primarily— and delightedly—on the book’s full-throated (among other holes) yowl of unapologetic but thoughtfully self-critical black male queerness. This is a banger of a book.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
The Queer Advantage: Conversations with LGBTQ+ Leaders on The Power of Identity (Hachette Go. $30. www.andrewgelwicks.com) finds author Andrew Gelwicks asking dozens of queer business people, creatives, and politicos some questions that would likely have never been asked even ten years ago: “How has being queer advantaged you in your career?” “Do you notice this dual masculine and feminine approach helps with your ability to deal with people in business?” “How has being gay been a positive dynamic in your life?” The book, which is aimed at a young adult audience, turns the tables on past iterations of Queer 101 by focusing on LGBTQ+ sexuality not as a challenge, but as an opportunity. Yes, Gelwicks asks his subjects—ranging from Billie Jean King and Barney Frank to Troye Sivan and Adam Rippon—some preliminary questions about bullying, discrimination, and self-denial, but he quickly moves beyond the old standards and his subjects offer a happier tune. “Being gay…helped build my sense of empathy, my willingness to speak up on others’ behalf,” observes Jim Obergfell, lead plaintiff in the Supreme Court cast that legalized gay marriage; “If you don’t get something right the first time, your life isn’t over” says author and columnist Jennifer Finney Boylan, “Being trans made me realize you get a lot of shots in life.” Perhaps the most encouraging empowering words of all for questioning young people come from activist Adam Eli: “I genuinely and wholeheartedly believe that being queer is a superpower…I would not give it up for anything in the world. I didn’t always feel that way, and now with my whole heart I do.”
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
While its title quotes from Romeo and Juliet, These Violent Delights (Harper. $27.99. www.micahnemerever.com) centers on a doomed adolescent romance more evocative of Herman Hesse than William Shakespeare. Like Hesse’s Demian and Steppenwolf, this is a book in which navel gazing begets staring into the void. Debut author Micah Nemerever steeps readers in the simultaneously rebellious and self-flagellating mindsets of working-class Paul and wealthy Julian, two Pittsburgh college students in the early 1970s who fall into a dangerous state of codependence while trying to cope with family trauma. Paul’s father, a police office, has committed suicide shortly before novel begins and Julian, we gradually learn, along with Paul, comes from a massively wealthy and monstrously manipulative clan. Along with the mutually sadomasochistic sex that fuels the boys’ attachment to each other and disassociation from their daily lives, they bond over a mind-game in which they imagine methods of murder and try to choose ideal victims for their perfect crime. While the main pair’s twisted relationship and philosophical conversations dominate the book, Nemerever embroiders the edges of this darkness with a finely wrought portrait of Paul’s grieving mother, simultaneously worried by her son’s nihilism and homosexuality, yet grateful that he has formed a close friendship. Nemerever’s ability to precisely dissect such complex states of mind makes him an author worth watching.
BUY BOOK When you purchase a book from our curated Bookshop.org shop we earn an affiliate commission. The books are independently reviewed by our book editor and the potential commission does not influence the review in any way.
You May Also Enjoy
25 Independent Bookstores That Are Open On Line
The post Best Books For April 2021: The Savvy Traveler’s Choices appeared first on Passport Magazine.
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