Monthly Archives: February 2024

French Quarter Nights & Other Stories – JR (Library of Homosexual Congress/Rebel Satori Press)

Buy From:

Rebel Satori Press

With the repeal of censorship laws in the 1960s, magazines such as Mandate, Honcho, and Blueboy began to appear on newsstands in the 1970s, displaying photos of full frontal male nudity (followed by Advocate Men, Torso, Inches, et al. in the 1980s). Taking their cue from Playboy, these magazines included articles of interest to the growing out Gay community, reviews, perhaps a celebrity interview or two, and erotic fiction, often illustrated by non-photographic art. French Quarter Nights & Other Stories by JR collects ten such stories from the 1980s, with an introduction by Matthew Rettenmund and an afterword by the author. (Although there is no indication of where/when these stories were first published–an omission I find regrettable–the presence of condoms, as well as conversations between the characters about safe sex, presume a mid-to-late 1980s publication date at the earliest.)

The danger of a volume of erotic fiction (especially a collection by a single author, or of an anthology organized around a theme) is that after reading a few of the stories, they often become indistinct and meld into one another. JR alludes to this in his afterword, when he discusses the “formula” he expected from a well-written porn story: a clear setting, characters, and circumstances; a minor or near-sex scene at the beginning to “hook” the reader; and finally the climax should be obvious and presented in detail. Fortunately, the scenarios are varied enough that JR is able to avoid this pitfall; he can even write an arousing story that doesn’t end in intercourse (“Punk Rock Cock” is essentially about a single blow job). Moreover, many of his stories have a cinematic quality to them, relaying several sex scenes, instead of just describing a single encounter.

Of especial interest in this volume are the stories that depict 1980s Gay nightlife in New Orleans (the title story), Fire Island (“Fire Island Threesome”), and two of the three set in New York City (“Kerouac at the Everard,” and “The Anvil”). “The Anvil” reads almost like an entry in an oral history, as does the title story; “Kerouac at the Everard” does even better, where the contemporary protagonist overlays his bathhouse encounter with a fantasy of Kerouac at the same bathhouse nearly thirty years earlier. Like the best of historical fiction, JR makes me want to learn more about these (now mostly closed) places of 1980s Gay nightlife (one does not expect porn to arouse scholarly as well as carnal interest, but there you go.)

As interesting as the stories are, of equal value are the introduction and afterword. The former, titled “The Rise and Fall of Gay Porn Magazines,” provides a context for the milieu of JR’s stories, and explains what led to its eventual demise (the advent of home video in the 1980s, and later, the Internet); most of these magazines would cease publication by 2009. The latter, “Life in a Porn Magazine Office,” offers a dishy, behind-the-scenes look at the office of Mavety Media, where JR worked as an Associate Editor for Mandate and other erotic magazines (both Gay and otherwise) for twelve years. Both of these additions increase the historical value of the original volume.

Originally published in 1996 by Masquerade Books, French Quarter Nights is the second title to be reissued by The Library of Homosexual Congress imprint of Rebel Satori Press. Curated by Tom Cardamone and Sven Davisson, this imprint is devoted to rescuing forgotten queer classics from obscurity, specifically “preserving and promoting provocative works” of Gay literature, focussing in particular on the AIDS crisis and political action. (As an aside, I also highly recommend the first such reissue, Invisible History: The Collected Poems of Walta Borawski, edited by Philip Clark and Michael Bronski.) However one may feel about a volume of Gay erotica initially published in stroke mags from the 1980s, it cannot be denied that it is provocative, and furthermore preserves a snapshot of a (nearly) forgotten era.

Reviewed by Keith John Glaeske

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

The Line of Dissent: Gay Outsiders and the Shaping of History – Martin Duberman, edited by Richard Schneider Jr. (G&LR Books)

Buy from:

Amazon

Since outsiders dwell on the borders of society–either by choice or by nature–who is better situated to shape its history? And LGBTQI+ individuals have been dwelling on those borders for hundreds of years, quietly (and sometimes not so quietly., G&LR editor Richard Schneider Jr. has collected twelve fascinating essays by distinguished gay historian Martin Duberman profiling influential and interesting gay men and women, spanning twenty years from the pages of G&LR in a wide swath of fields and occupations, all with a hand in advancing queer welfare.

Beginning with the oldest essay, appearing in 1997, about Edward Sagarin, founder of the Homophile Movement and author of The Homosexual in America (under the name Donald Webster Cory), and ending with a profile of lesbian champion speedboat racer Joe Carstairs, the depth and breadth of professions explored in this collection is astounding. The obvious touchstones–Sylvia Rivera, Alfred Kinsey, Barbara Deming, and Andrea Dworkin–are all here but Duberman digs a bit deeper into them than other essayists I’ve read, never losing sight of their essential humanity and personal reasons they had for pushing their corners of the envelope.

My favorites here were the three-part series on ballet impresario Lincoln Kirstein, Black activist Essex Hemphill, and a very interesting portrait of the relationship between W.H. Auden and Chester Kallman, which I knew of but not about. I also enjoyed “The Two Eds,” which profiles furniture designer Edward Wormley and his lover Edward Crouse. But I have a special place in my heart for Duberman’s look at Joe Carstairs, including her affairs with Tallulah Bankhead and Marlene Dietrich.

Far from being dry and self-consciously intellectual, Duberman’s work is interesting and accessible, concentrating not only on his subjects but putting them into a larger context as well. This collection is truly a treat and will not disappoint those looking for a lesson from those brave men and women who came before us.

JW

© 2024 Jerry L. Wheeler

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

New Releases for February

From Blazing Heart Publishing:

Mystery Dance – Richard Natale

Buy/Preorder

From Rebel Satori Press:

The Simple Magick of Wild Things – Dave Gaddy

Preorder/Buy

The Shaman of Heaven and Hell – Chris Kim

Preorder/Buy

From Bella Books:

Season of Eclipse – Terry Wolverton

Preorder/Buy

From Bold Strokes Books:

You Had Me at Merlot – Melissa Brayden

Preorder/Buy

When Tomorrow Comes – D. Jackson Leigh

Preorder/Buy

Guide Us Home – Jesse J. Thoma & CF Frizzell

Preorder/Buy

Lost Harbor – Kimberly Cooper Griffin

Preorder/Buy

Never a Bridesmaid – Spencer Greene

Preorder/Buy

Turning Point – Cathy Dunnell

Preorder/Buy

Blood Rage – Ileandra Young

Preorder/Buy

Ghost Town – R.E. Ward

Preorder/Buy

The Rewind – Nicole Stiling

Preorder/Buy

Good Christian Girls – Elizabeth Bradshaw

Preorder/Buy

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized