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The Butterfly's Wing [Paperback]

Martin Foreman (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0854492232 978-0854492237 May 1996
How do you react when your lover is kidnapped by terrorists and held hostage for over a year? How do you react when you are the man chained to the wall? In The Butterfly's Wing, Martin Foreman’s moving novel, first published in 1996, Andy McIllray in the Peruvian Andes and Tom Dayton in rural England face that reality every day—each reliving his past and each fearful of the future.

Martin Foreman’s fiction includes two short story collections, A Sense of Loss and First and Fiftieth, and the novel Weekend. He is also well-known for his analyses of the causes and consequences of HIV in the developing world, in particular the ground-breaking AIDS and Men. He currently lives in London. His website is martinforeman.com.
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Tom Dayton, a some-time waiter, and Andy McIllray, a worker for an international aid organization, own a small farm in the English countryside, where they enjoy a quiet life until Andy, while in Peru, is kidnapped by guerrillas of the Shining Path movement. The diary format used here first introduces us to Tom nearly a year after Andy has vanished. Through his entries, we learn of their pasts and his hopes for the future, as well as how he copes with reporters, friends, and his farm. Provided with notebooks, Andy writes of his struggles to convince his captors to free him. The novel is filled with multidimensional characters, emotion, and wonderful descriptions of scenery, and the plot moves smoothly. A minor distraction is the British terminology. Foreman (A Sense of Loss, Gay Men, 1993) has written a powerful piece of fiction. Recommended.?Theodore R. Salvadori, Margaret E. Heggan Free P.L., Hurffville, N.J.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

... a powerful piece of fiction... filled with multidimensional characters, emotion and wonderful descriptions. --Library Journal

This novel beautifully captures the voices of two gay men, lovers who are different from one another in many different ways and whose differences both strengthen and challenge their relationship. --The Lavender Salon Reader

The Butterfly's Wing is written in diary format. The first half of the novel consists of Tom's diary entries, and presents his hopes and worries after being separated from Andy for an entire year. Andy's journal entries made during his captivity comprise the second half of the novel. The contrasts between Andy and Tom, highlighted in their diary entries, as well as the ups and downs of their emotions over time, are what make The Butterfly's Wing unique and memorable. This is a love story, as opposed to an adventure story. The Butterfly's Wing is highly recommended for both academic and public libraries serving a GLBT population or building a GLBT collection. --The GLBT Roundtable of the American Library Association --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 251 pages
  • Publisher: Heretic Books (May 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0854492232
  • ISBN-13: 978-0854492237
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #9,108,042 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not Your Typical Gay Novel, July 25, 2001
This review is from: The Butterfly's Wing (Paperback)
I was at first skeptical of this novel when I read the book jacket, but within the first couple of pages I was completely engrossed in the formation of these beautifully drawn characters. Martin Foreman skillfully develops two very unique and distinctive voices, detailing the day to day lives of the main characters. It is his eye for the little touches that really makes this book work. This is not an action adventure story, as one might presume of a kidnapping story, but an in-depth analysis of the traumas and mundanities of the time spent waiting for the release of a hostage.... With it comes a layman’s understanding of world sociology. A worthy read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Love's Hostages, November 28, 2009
This review is from: The Butterfly's Wing (Paperback)
First published in 1996, The Butterfly's Wing is an affecting and engaging novel about a relationship between two men, and what happens when an act of terrorism forces them apart. Andy, an officer in a world aid organization, is kidnapped and held hostage in Peru, leaving Tom alone in England, not knowing what is happening to his lover or if he will ever see him again.

The power of this story lies in the two voices that are telling it. Tom, who has been alone on their jointly-owned English smallholding for over a year now, tries to relieve his pain by starting a journal, in the form of a long letter to Andy. This device is wisely chosen by the author, for Tom, who has had a hardscrabble life moving from one waitering job to another, lives an existence that is centered on Andy, and the second-person narrative powerfully conveys his need.

Elsewhere in the world, in a miserable cell where he doesn't even have enough food or blankets, Andy at least has pen and paper, so he's writing as well. He's a well educated man and his journal takes a more conventional form, though there is raw emotion there too. All of this means that reading this book is no walk in the park. And yet, if that's a downside to the book, it's also part of the upside. There is nothing inauthentic in these pages. Martin Foreman has done important work in HIV in the developing world, and his grasp of world politics and economics convincingly informs Andy's writing and his arguments with his captors. Just as tellingly, every detail of Tom's life on a struggling farm seems real. To an important degree, this book and these lives have been lived by the author.

Tom and Andy also reflect on their lives as gay men. When Tom came out he was disowned by his family, while Andy met with only grudging acceptance from his parents. The two men are, in their own ways, amazed by the love they have found for each other. But there is nothing private in their world, and when the media "break" the news that Andy is gay and has a lover waiting for him at home, the new angle to their story has the potential to harm them both. Will Tom's sexuality gain him ill favor among those who would otherwise help him? Will Andy's captors kill or torture him because he is gay?

The well-read Andy is familiar with the work of Joseph Conrad and Graham Greene, and invokes those names in his journal. I would add Malcolm Lowry to the short list of fiction writers who have painstakingly explored the intersection of the political and the personal, seeking out those profound moments when something as slight as the stir of a butterfly's wing changes lives on the opposite side of the world. Oh, and add Martin Foreman's name, too: he has earned it.
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