Monday, January 15, 2024

Some not-so-secret gay D.C. history

Later this year, we'll discuss James Kirchick's Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington. On Dec. 26, Kirchick published an op-ed in the Washington Post that was ostensibly about an eight-second video showing two men (one a U.S. Senate staffer who was immediately fired) having anal sex in a Hart Building hearing room. But that tawdry story was just a convenient hook to market his book. That's his right, of course, but I found his article's thesis less than persuasive: 


"Aside from a handful of far-right outlets, Washington's chattering class has shrugged its shoulders at the scandal's gay aspect, and one gathers that the city would be just as titillated if the copulating couple were straight. Fortunately, the denizens of Gay Washington no longer live in secret, and our exhibitionist former Senate staffer is being judged not from whom he loved, but for how he behaved." Seriously? 


New Year's reading resolutions

If you're anything like me, each January you chide yourself for not reading more books (and better ones) last year, and aspire to do better. This YouGov article should make us BookMen members feel much better about our starting point: "Of 1,500 Americans surveyed, a less-than-ideal 46% finished zero books last year, and 5% read just one." Analyst David Montgomery goes on to parse the findings in terms of literary genres and other variables. (You may also be interested in this Washington Post "Department of Data" article about bookstores around the country; scroll down for that section.)

Reading a mere two books a year puts us in the top half of Americans, but it's still a pretty low bar, admittedly. So how can we up our game? This July 2022 Washington Post Book World article offers 14 tips for getting out of a reading slump, some more helpful than others: "Reread an old favorite. Switch genres. Change formats. Set goals. Start small. Browse the children's shelf. Let luck guide you. Seek professional help (not what you think!). Join a book club (done!). Abandon books that don't spark joy (see the next paragraph). Do something completely different. Think about what you want to get out of a book. Force it. Have faith."

James Joyce reportedly observed, "Life is too short to read bad books." So how do you decide when to cut your losses and move on to something better? This Jan. 2 Washington Post Book World article is all over the map in terms of strategies, ranging from giving a book 50 pages to wow you (or, if you're older than that, subtracting your age from 100 to set the limit) to this: "Whenever I get bored or annoyed by an authorial tic, I immediately stop." For what it's worth, I say: Whatever your own approach, own it. And remember: You can always return to a book later in life, when it might just be perfect for you.

Happy MLK Day!

On this Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, which falls precisely on what would have been his 95th birthday, I want to share a few quotes connected to this great American that I find resonate particularly strongly with the LGBTQ community.

In his 1963 "Letter from a Birmingham Jail," Dr. King famously declared: "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice anywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one, affects all indirectly. Never again can we afford to live with the narrow, provincial 'outside agitator' idea. Anyone who lives inside the United States can never be considered an outsider anywhere within its bounds."

From The Deviant's War: The Homosexual vs. the United States of America, Eric Cervini's biography of Frank Kameny--which we'll begin discussing this Wednesday--comes this quote: In June 1963, "the men's magazine Nugget published an entire profile, "The Gay Crusader," on Randolfe Wicker and his crusade against the 'corporate image' of the homophile movement. 'All embattled minority groups must eventually have a spokesman; the Negroes have Martin Luther King. Now, at long last, the homosexuals have Randolfe Wicker.'"

Finally, as I noted in an October 2023 posting here, we read John D'Emilio's Lost Prophet: The Life and Times of Bayard Rustin back in 2006. I had not yet seen "Rustin," the biopic starring Colman Domingo in the title role, directed by George Wolfe, but I have since streamed it on Netflix and highly recommend it. Rustin's relationship with Dr. King (portrayed by Aml Ameen) is a highlight, which a Jan. 8 Washington Post op-ed explores in depth.

Rest in power, Martin.

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Two Queer tidbits

I am most grateful to Lee Levine for informing me that William S. Burroughs' 1985 novel Queer, which we discussed on Jan. 3, has been filmed and is now in post-production. None other than Daniel Craig (yes, the former James Bond) plays Lee, and Drew Starkey plays Allerton; Luka Guadagnino (who directed "Call Me by Your Name") directs. Leslie Manville, Jason Schwartzman and Henry Zaga are also in the cast. No word yet on a release date, but hopefully soon!


During that same discussion, Denton Welch's name came up as a major influence on Burroughs. Robert Muir kindly shares the following bio of the author, courtesy of Wikipedia:


"William S. Burroughs cited Welch as the writer who most influenced his own work, and dedicated his 1983 novel The Place of Dead Roads to him. In 1951 the English composer Howard Ferguson set five of Welch's poems (included in A Last Sheaf) as a song-cycle for voice and piano, titled "Discovery." Others who have named Welch as an influence include filmmaker John Waters, artist Barbara Hanrahan and the writers Beryl Bainbridge and Barbara Pym."


Prayers in Cold Blood

Nearly a decade ago now, we discussed Truman Capote's controversial final book, Answered Prayers. It turns out that there may be a connection between that and his earlier success, In Cold Blood, which we'll discuss later this year. A December 2012 Vanity Fair article that was recently revisited in the magazine's "Cocktail Hour" newsletter for subscribers, "Capote's Swan Dive," explores that link in the course of documenting the fallout from "La Cote Basque 1965," the notorious story in the November 1975 Esquire that would later appear as a chapter in Answered Prayers. It cost Capote nearly all his social contacts, effectively ended his career and--writer Sam Kashner posits--drove him ever deeper into addiction to the drugs and alcohol that would cut his life short less than a decade later. 

Kashner says: "His impoverished past, Truman later confided, was borrowed from the life story of Perry Smith, the dark-haired, dark-eyed murderer Truman came to know intimately while writing In Cold Blood. In a sense, P.B. Jones [the literary hustler and bisexual prostitute who attends a scandalous society luncheon in "La Cote Basque 1965"] is both Truman and Perry, a figure who haunted Truman's last decade and whose execution by hanging--which Truman witnessed--would devastate him emotionally." 

You may not find Kashner's framing persuasive, but his profile of Capote is fascinating in its own right.