From Publishers Weekly
Modern gay history?the mores and etiquette of dating, sex, coupledom and love from the late 1970s to the present?is covered in this compelling, heartfelt first novel from Currier (Dancing on the Moon: Short Stories About AIDS). Robbie Taylor, 19 and gay, arrives in New York City in 1978. Dazzled by his new cultural and sexual opportunities, Robbie, in his explorations of Manhattan and Fire Island, nevertheless longs for a permanent relationship?"two men bonded by a passion and fidelity and trust for one another." Robbie finds much of what he is looking for in Nathan Solloway, and the two men establish a close circle of friends and a home together just as the grim death toll of the AIDS pandemic begins. Robbie is a long-winded narrator, and Currier would have done well to replace some of the novel's exposition with pithy dialogue and pointed anecdotes. In addition, the recurring rainbow motif is forced. Nevertheless, Currier tells a moving tale in which, in the face of devastating losses, Robbie and his "stitched-together" family, now in Los Angeles, are able to emerge from grief strengthened by the stories they carry. Currier has created a powerful monument honoring a generation of gay men lost to AIDS and their wounded, resilient survivors. Author tour.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Robbie Taylor, 20 in 1978, is a gay refugee from a small southern town and his strict, religious father. His tale of adventure in New York, of finding himself and building a life, proves to be more than a coming-of-age novel, as it spans the crucial decade and a half when AIDS first became known and then proceeded to wreak havoc. Robbie romantically yearns for love but dances 'til dawn, does poppers, and sleeps around during the hedonistic late '70s. Surely readers know that his will be a short-lived idyll. After less than five years and 150 pages, he reads the first accounts of a "gay cancer," and the book turns inexorably into an account of friends sickening and dying and of the struggle that came to define so many lives. "Ya gotta have friends" becomes the novel's theme, and it resonates, thanks to Currier's smoothly flowing, emotionally charged writing, evoking a time now sufficiently far past to elicit a kind of nostalgia. This is strong work on a powerful subject.
Whitney Scott
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.