|
“Finally! A
gay story collection 100% free from scenes of Jeremy and Chad having
tiffs by the Fire Island hot tub. Gay fiction needs books like Wendell
Ricketts’ Everything I Have is Blue--and it needs them bad.
Strapped to myths of upward mobility and disposable income, gay men are
desperately short on books addressing working-class experiences. Thankfully
this book steps up to the plate, serving up feisty, sharp stories that
stretch and challenge stagnant notions of class, masculinity, and gay
identity.” (D. Travers Scott, author of Execution, Texas
and One of These Things is Not Like the Other.)
“This book gives us what
no contemporary TV program, movie, or magazine has even come close
to—the tender, angry, funny emotional innards of the embattled
daily life of working-class gay men. These could be the stories of the guys
on the corner in my neighborhood—or yours! Get the book and see what
they're saying.” (Minnie Bruce Pratt, author of S/He, Walking Back Up Depot
Street, and Rebellion)
“A very large percentage of gay
literature produced in the United States is written by middle-class
white men for middle-class white readers. There is a homogeneity to gay
writing that reflects how, in our supposedly classless, multicultural
society, issues of class and color are seldom worthy subject matter. If gays
are “The Other” in our predominantly heterosexist society, blue
collar people and racial minorities (often one and the same) are “The
Others” within the gay community--a margin within the margin. These
edgy, surprising stories are a tonic: they make an important contribution in
terms of bringing to our attention characters and themes we seldom see explored
in gay contemporary fiction.” (Jaime Manrique, author of Besame
Mucho: New Gay Latino Fiction and Eminent Maricones:
Arenas, Lorca, Puig, and Me)
|
|