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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting, but no Midnight in the Garden...., March 15, 2004
I loved Edward Ball's first literary efforts, Slaves in the Family and The Sweet Hell Inside. They both touched my heart in a way that few books have managed. So I ordered Peninsula of Lies: A Story of Mysterious Birth and Taboo Love before it was even published, anticipating great things. I must admit that I was rather disappointed. Ball follows the life of Gordon Hall, who claimed his gender was misidentified at birth. Gordon (Dawn) ends up in the 1960's living in Charleston, SC, and the book traces his sex change operation, his marriage to a black man, and the birth of a daughter. Ball sets out to answer some troubling questions including: Was Gordon/Dawn really misidentified as a male at birth? What exactly did her surgery entail? Was her daughter really her biological daughter? And if not, where did she come from? Ball conducted lots of research including interviews with family members, friends, and even some of Dawn's doctors. As a result of this research, Ball gives us a crash course on sexual deviations including the difference between homosexuals, transsexuals, transvestites and hermaphrodites. He also recounts the history of sex reassignments (sex change operations) in the 20th century. And in the process, he unravels the mystery about the controversial figure. Before Peninsula of Lies was even published, it was touted as Charleston's answer to John Berendt's bestseller, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. Unfortunately, Berendt fans will be greatly disappointed. Midnight has increased overnight tourism in Savannah by tens of millions of visitors, as readers flock to the city to see the various sites mentioned in the book (especially the Mercer House). Peninsula of Lies will have a fraction of that impact on Charleston, if any. I can't envision Peninsula of Lies tour buses roaming the streets of Charleston. The only site I'd make an effort to see is Dawn's Society Street house. Still, the story is quirky and interesting. Dawn was a published author, and wrote a number of books including biographies of Princess Margaret and Lady Bird Johnson. She also inherited a fortune from Isabel Whitney, but ended up spending it all rather quickly. There are a good many photographs and drawings that are quite good including photos from her wedding, of her daughter, her Charleston house, and her pets. However, this book did not live up to expectations, and it is definitely not another Midnight. It also doesn't come close to Ball's first two efforts.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Fear and loathing in Charleston, September 22, 2004
Fame eluded Gordon Langley Hall as a writer, even though he was a prolific scribbler of memoirs and novels. When he became one of the first people to undergo sex change surgery in America, Hall's local notoriety in Charleston, South Carolina, was unpleasantly mixed with malicious gossip.Edward Ball's new book, Peninsula of Lies: A True Story of Mysterious Birth and Taboo Love, may give Hall, now dead, the recognition that eluded him in life. Ball (author of the National Book Award winner Slaves in the Family) set out to settle two mysteries that have circled one of Charleston's most celebrated-and outrageous-personalities for decades. Was Hall, as he claimed, a hermaphrodite who was misidentified as a male at birth? And did Hall, as he also claimed, conceive and give birth to a daughter, Natasha?
Ball's quest to resolve these burning issues takes him from Charleston to England where, as a child of the servant class, Hall had few opportunities for economic and social mobility. Then the biographer tracks his subject to New York where Hall became the protege and, at least in some sense, the lover of Isabel Whitney, an heir to the cotton gin fortune. His liaison with Whitney, perhaps more than his subsequent sex change, altered Hall's life forever. When she died, his mistress made him a millionaire.
As a Charleston transplant, Hall charmed local society with his English accent. Charlestonians, Ball indicates, didn't pick up on the cockney overtones that would have made Ball's attempts to penetrate the upper classes a wash back in England.
Then, perversely, Hall throws away his tenuous new foothold in the Charleston party circuit by changing his gender from male to female and re-emerging as "Dawn." As painted by Ball, Charleston's high society was far too prudish and inflexible to get over that one. Then, having forever trespassed on good taste, Hall takes his adventure one or two steps further. He marries an African-American man and appears to bear his new husband a child.
Ball first gets a clue that Hall might be inventing fictions about himself when it turns out that Hall forged a document shaving 15 years off his age. From there, Ball is the relentless sleuth, separating fantasy from fact until he has the real story on Gordon Hall, alias Dawn Simmons. He interviews dozens of eccentric characters who knew Hall, and the tale of each informant is a story unto itself.
Echoing the formula of John Berendt's best-selling Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, Ball's Peninsula of Lies is a must-read for people who enjoy well-crafted Southern storytelling.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Intriguing, May 21, 2008
Gordon/Dawn was a fascinating character and this book is intriguing reading. Just who was Dawn? How much of her story was true and how much fiction? What is sex? What is gender? Like Middlesex this book is mind-expanding.
The other reviews have explained the book itself, so I won't try to do so.
But for those readers who'd like to find out more about Dawn, read "Me Pappoose Sitter" written by Dawn as Gordon, then read "She Crab Stew" written as Dawn. Both are absolutely hilarious, especially "She Crab Stew" which is unlike anything else I have ever read! Through these 2 books, I think that we can see more about Gordon/Dawn's inner self and life outlook in her own novels, than in this book.
(Me Pappoose Sitter is semi-autobiographical, and She Crab Stew is a comic novel with a main character that seems to me to be Dawn's alter-ego.)
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