Review by New York Times Review
A ARON HARTZLER and Rafe Goldberg grow up mostly as polar opposites. Aaron comes from a fundamentalist Christian Kansas City family; Rafe is a child of modern-hippie Boulder, Colo., (stereo)types. Aaron, the main character in the memoir "Rapture Practice," is real; Rafe, the protagonist in Bill Konigsberg's novel "Openly Straight," is made up. But both wrestle, over several hundred pages, with their identities. And both share a secret: They're liars. If I were growing up in the Hartzler household, I'd want to lie too. The devoutly Baptist Hartzlers rear their children in eager anticipation of Jesus' second coming. Movies are banned. He-Man action figures too. For his 16th birthday, Aaron's parents give him a purity ring, his mom agush about "when you'll be able to slip this ring off your finger and give it to your new bride - the best wedding gift of all: your virginity." Hartzler paints a compellingly unlikable portrait of his preacher dad - Jerry Falwell meets Kim Il-sung, religiously ultraconservative and determined to protect the hermit kingdom of his home from evil. Temptation is everywhere. One stirring passage describes a battle over whether Aaron must wear socks with his Top-Siders to church. (Aaron says no: "It's dorky.") Aaron: "It's just socks." Aaron's father: "Aaron, it isn't just socks. It's rebellion." Despite Aaron's repetitive rebellion, cover-up attempts and exposure, "Rapture Practice" is often effervescent and moving, evocative and tender. Aaron's as-yet-inexplicable romantic feelings are described in a particularly affecting, authentically adolescent way. One day, while working at the local skating rink, he meets a cute boy on the ice. "We shake," Hartzler recalls, "but when I try to drop his hand, he holds on to mine.... I'm short of breath, but I haven't been skating hard." Sweet. But like its protagonist, "Rapture Practice" struggles with identity issues not atypical for the genre. The book is cast as a young adult memoir, and the author's note, which includes a parenthetical that says, "Be warned: There is kissing" affirms that skew. But how many teenagers today would get certain unexplained cultural references - Peter Cetera? Wilson Phillips? - that suggest Hartzler really wanted to write for people who remember Peter Cetera and Wilson Phillips? Hartzler wants to inspire, but he overreaches. He attempts to cover his whole childhood, examine his diminishing faith, poke at his super-religious upbringing, map his evolving sexuality and play it all for laughs (and a few tears). Sometimes he feels like memoirist-as-Anne-Hathaway. He's talented, but you never forget he's performing - and trying so hard. "Openly Straight" suffers no such identity crisis. It chronicles Rafe Goldberg's first semester at an all-boys boarding school in Massachusetts. Back in Boulder, he'd come out in eighth grade, prompting his mom to become president of the local chapter of Pflag. At his new school, he tells nobody he's gay. "I was silently saying goodbye to a part of myself: my label. That word that defined me as only one thing to everyone." Characters have worn masks and wrestled with the consequences, in works as similar but divergent as "Twelfth Night" and "There's Something About Mary." "Openly Straight" is a thoughtful, modern spin on that venerable device, and it works because of Rafe. While some secondary characters are thinly drawn - especially his parents and his best friend from home, Claire Olivia, who flits to another, more flamboyant gay boy once Rafe heads east - Rafe feels real. He's convincingly teenage. He's smart but never too articulate. He's searching but not always finding what he thinks he's looking for. That's especially true as his friendship blossoms with his taciturn, totally crush-worthy classmate Ben. Konigsberg depicts teenhood's somersaults especially adroitly through Rate's journal. In one entry, Rafe writes about his embarrassing dad: "I'm pretty chill, I'm pretty comfortable, but there's a difference between normal comfortable and being 40-something and shaking your backside to a bad hip-hop song in an Illinois restaurant full of strangers." "Normal" is, in some sense, what "Openly Straight" is all about. If Rafe passes for straight, will he be considered normal? What does that feel like? What does that even mean? We all grow up. That makes the coming-of-age tale so tough to tell well. At some point, each of us will compare, consciously or not, the story with our own. Thanks to Konigsberg's artful engineering, we travel deep into Rafe's world, and through his longing and his angst, the flutters of young love and the strains of seeking to be understood, we also revisit the same but different stations from our own journeys. Being openly gay may not be a curse, but it's exhausting, Rafe writes in his journal. "Always wondering what people are seeing, and feeling separated from so much of the world, that's hard." For many of us, that's also life, whether you're gay or straight. Konigsberg's lovely novel invites us to walk with Rafe through his season of assumed identity and his costly emergence into honesty. It's beautiful. It's a story of salvation. Jeff Chu, an editor at large for Fast Company, is the author of "Does Jesus Really Love Me?: A Gay Christian's Pilgrimage in Search of God in America."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 2, 2013]
Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Now a junior in high school, Rafe, who has been out since he was 14, is thoroughly sick of being labeled the gay kid. So he does something bold: he leaves his Colorado school to enroll in a private boys' academy in New England, where no one knows he's gay and he can be a label-free, openly straight part of a group of guys. Does this mean he goes back into the closet? No, he tells himself, not exactly: It was more like I was in the doorway. But is he fooling himself? Can you put a major part of yourself on hold, and what happens when you then find yourself falling in love with your new (straight) best friend? Lambda Literary Award winner Konigsberg (Out of the Pocket, 2008) has written an exceptionally intelligent, thought-provoking coming-of-age novel about the labels people apply to us and that we, perversely, apply to ourselves. A sometimes painful story of self-discovery, it is also a beautifully written, absolutely captivating romance between two boys, Rafe and Ben, who are both wonderfully sympathetic characters. With its capacity to invite both thought and deeply felt emotion, Openly Straight is altogether one of the best gay-themed novels of the last 10 years.--Cart, Michael Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Konigsberg (Out of the Pocket) raises compelling questions about stereotyping and self-actualization through the story of openly gay high school junior Rafe Goldberg. Though Rafe has a supportive family and community in progressive Boulder, Co., he still feels stifled by being known as "the gay kid." In order to try to live a "label-free life," Rafe transfers to an East Coast boarding school with the intention of keeping his sexuality a secret ("The only way I would actually lie was if I were asked directly, `Are you gay?' "). At school, Rafe is quickly befriended by a group of jocks, and even kissed by a girl at a party, but he begins to question his experiment when his feelings for a friend develop into something more. Introspective essays Rafe composes about his life for a writing seminar seem overly scripted, and the plot becomes predictable long before Rafe faces a crisis of conscience. Even so, Rafe's story about seeking a different kind of acceptance should spur readers to rethink sexual identity and what it means to be "out." Ages 14-up. Agent: Linda Epstein, Jennifer DeChiara Literary Agency. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up-Rafe is gay, but he hopes no one will notice at his new all-boys high school in New England. He's not in the closet exactly. Back home in Boulder, his stereotypically progressive and understanding parents championed his coming out in the eighth grade. Since then, Rafe has been unable to escape being the poster boy for Gay Pride. Tired of labels and limitations, he hides his true self in order to fit in and be just one of the guys. For a while it works, and he plays football, pals around with the jocks, and blends in with the straight guys. His best friend back home is furious with him for changing, and things really get complicated when he falls in love with Ben, the intellectual, brooding jock with whom he experiments one night. In the end, he just can't keep up the charade, and coming out of the closet for a second time results in the creation of some new friendships, but also the loss of some others. The book is peppered with Rafe's journal entries for a class, the only place where he's honest about his sexuality. His teacher's responses, while encouraging, don't add much to the plot. The book tackles issues of sexuality and coming out from an interesting angle, but at times the central message (honesty is the best policy) is a bit heavy-handed. Recommend this one to fans of Brent Hartinger's Geography Club (HarperCollins, 2003), Michael Harmon's The Last Exit to Normal (Knopf, 2008), and Julie Anne Peters's Define "Normal" (Little, Brown, 2000).-Nora G. Murphy, Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy, LaCanada-Flintridge, CA (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review
Rafe is sick of being the poster child for all things gay at his uber-liberal Colorado high school: no matter how accepting everyone is, it feels like they only see one part of him. When he gets into a Massachusetts boarding school for his junior year, he decides to reboot himself as "openly straight." By refraining from volunteering any information about his sexuality, he reasons, he will be able to live a "label-free life." Soon he's on the soccer team, increasingly torn between worlds as he enjoys the boys'-club camaraderie he finds on the team but also bonds with his prickly misfit roommate Albie, whose best friend is gay. Most complicated of all, Rafe's growing friendship with sensitive, thoughtful teammate Ben turns into a profound crush. Rafe is an effective blend of earnest, perceptive, and flawed, and the deepening hole of deception he digs for himself infuses the plot -- a well-constructed web of interpersonal dramas -- with almost unbearable tension. Konigsberg eviscerates the "don't ask, don't tell" philosophy, slyly demonstrating just how thoroughly assumptions of straightness are embedded in everyday interactions. For a thought-provoking, creative, twenty-first-century take on the coming-out story, look no further. claire e. gross (c) Copyright 2013. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Going back into the closet isn't as easy as it seems. Coloradan Rafe Goldberg has always been the token gay kid. He's been out since eighth grade. His parents and community are totally supportive, and his mom is president of his Boulder-area chapter of Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays. On the outside, Rafe seems fine, but on the inside, he's looking for change, which comes with the opportunity to reinvent himself at the prestigious Natick Academy in Massachusetts. There for his junior year, Rafe cloaks his gayness in order to be just like one of the other guys. He hangs out with the jocks, playing soccer and football, and gets exactly what he wants--until he starts to fall for one of his new best straight friends. Konigsberg's latest (Out Of the Pocket, 2008) might sound like fluff, but it actually works as a complicated, poignant story of a teenage boy trying on a new skin. Rafe's exploration happens in reverse of the traditional coming-out story, and his motives, observations and feelings are captured in mini-essays he pens for his creative-writing professor, who then provides him with life-coachlike feedback on both his decisions and his writing skills. These snippets feel prescriptive, but the rest moves swiftly as Rafe tries to cover his feelings and fit in with his new friends. An eye-opening story of wish fulfillment. (Fiction. 13 up)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review
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Review by Horn Book Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review