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Original Youth: The Real Story of Edmund White's Boyhood
 
 
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Original Youth: The Real Story of Edmund White's Boyhood [Paperback]

Keith Fleming (Author)

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Book Description

November 15, 2006
It isn't often that a memoirist gets the biographic treatment, but the story of Edmund White's youth was too dramatic to resist. In this bracing true-life tale, Keith Fleming, White's nephew whom he adopted, captures a particularly unusual childhood. Forced to be a confidante to his unhinged mother, terrified and attracted to his imperious father, the teenage White became a Buddhist, a cruiser of hustlers and married men, and an FBI drug informant on his way to ultimate fame as a leading gay literary figure. Drawing on personal knowledge, letters, photographs, and extensive interviews with those closest to "Eddie," Fleming neither exploits his subject nor sugar-coats him. Original Youth is a rich portrait of a complex subject and a "wild child" who managed to survive and flourish against all odds.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this biography, the nephew of seminal gay writer Edmund White presents the "real" version of the coming-of-age experience already portrayed in White's novel A Boy's Own Story, in which White purportedly altered the truth to make his story more "universal." Fleming (The Boy with the Thorn in His Side) aims to "bring to light intriguing aspects of White's actual boyhood that have never been written about...." Fleming relies on extensive interviews with White; his sister, Margaret (Fleming's mother); and childhood friends to flesh out the story of his uncle's unhappy upbringing. Fleming takes great pains to insist that White's was no ordinary childhood. After his parents' divorce, White had to grow up very fast, becoming the little man in an extremely dysfunctional household. His mother is cartoonishly portrayed here as painfully unstable, relying on her son as a pseudo-lover, even inviting him to sleep in her bed on occasion. Visits to his unemotional and selfish father provide no relief. Fleming frequently takes on the role of amateur psychologist in an attempt to determine the origins of what he sees as White's most salient personality traits-lying, phoniness and a propensity for betrayal chief among them-but rarely does he come to any illuminating conclusions. Ironically, it is only when Fleming quotes A Boy's Own Story, which he does frequently, that White's childhood transcends repetitive biographical details and comes alive on the page. Perhaps for fans of White, the real story truly is the boy's own story after all.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Inquiring minds long have wanted to know how autobiographical Edmund White's novel A Boy's Own Story (1982) is, but White, the dean of American gay novelists, has never publicly obliged them. Now Fleming, his nephew, does, arguing that White was a strikingly resourceful kid, especially in successfully pursuing sexual experience despite the lack of gay role models during his 1950s adolescence. The novel was very autobiographical, but not as sensational as it could have been. White saved some of his early exploits for later stories with collegiate protagonists because he thought readers wouldn't believe a boy as young as he had been would do them. Sex wasn't White's only arena of precocity. He wrote plays when a young child and novels--autobiographical and homosexual--in prep school, and when sexual desire emerged at puberty, he became, overnight, charmingly, sympathetically sociable (to this day, he maintains a crowded social schedule). Fleming draws generously on his uncle's good prose in telling the "real story," and his own writing is wonderfully fluent and engaging, too. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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First Sentence:
Like so many of Edmund White's reactions to the events of his extraordinary childhood and adolescence, his first reaction at age seven to his parents' decision to divorce is initially startling yet makes perfect sense once understood. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
demonstration nursery school, special camper, homosexual fate, belt whipping
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Boy's Own Story, Dark Currents, Walloon Lake, Beech Lane, Edmund White, Evanston High, George Newman, Three Musketeers, Camp Towering Pines, Mother White, Sheridan Square, Mullet Lake, Steve Turner, Helen White, Merry Widow, Bob Hamilton, Cottage Cheese, Georgian Hotel, New York, Rachel Scott, The Beautiful Room Is Empty, Butch Dastic, Cinnamon Skin, Culver Military Academy, Kay Beard
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