Review by Booklist Review
An excerpt from this little novel was one of the best things in the first Men on Men anthology [BKL N 15 86]. The whole recounts the sexual awakening of Mickey McGinnis, a white Iowa youth--athletic, no sissy--who upon graduating high school, circa 1960, heads down the Mississippi to a black male lover in New Orleans. The relationship founders when Mickey yields to another man's advances, after which he heads to Hollywood, where he sleeps around and tries to break into the movies. That doesn't pan out, so he goes home and starts college. And, the reader is quite convinced, develops into Michael Grumley (a conviction encouraged by novelist Edmund White's introductory characterization of the novel as autobiographical). The book shimmers with the truth of sexual realization despite rather delicately avoiding explicit details about body parts and couplings. What it lacks that Grumley might have added had he not died of AIDS in 1988 is some recognition of the ambiguities, fears, and social abrasions Mickey must feel but which are bypassed in favor of sweet sensuality and wonder-filled self-discovery. ~--Ray Olson
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Born to a middle-class Midwest family in 1941, Mickey, the narrator of this homosexual odyssey, has a comfortable but uncertain childhood: ``Sexual confusion crept in at an early age.'' Fueled by an excess of Old Crow at 17, this latter-day Huck Finn sets off down the Mississippi to find the world, but discovers instead an 18-year-old black man--``it seemed the world was written all over him, and he fairly glowed with it.'' Their blissful New Orleans affair ends with Mickey's infidelity. After a failed attempt at reconciliation he gives up--a bit too easily, it seems--and follows the fabled Rte. 66 to ``the soft green lap'' of California. In that 1960 sexual wonderland, he leads a life of ``determined profligacy'' that includes a disastrous brush with acting. The early, atmospheric passages of this Life are replete with dreamy, lyrical descriptions and details that deftly flesh out a slim tale. Unfortunately, as the narrative progresses, so does the author's overwriting. Later scenes are marred by unlikely events and florid descriptions; the ending seems both excessive and abrupt. Though ultimately there may be insufficient material here for a novel, lush passages and a strong romantic sensibility are evidence of a talent cut tragically short--Grumley died of AIDS in March, 1988. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Grumley, who died of AIDS in 1988, was best known for several nonfiction works published in the 1970s. The first of these was a joint effort with Robert Ferro, author of Second Son ( LJ 3/1/88), etc., who became his lifelong companion. As Ferro's career took off in the 1980s, Grumley's went on hold, but he never ceased writing. This was his first and unfortunately last major attempt at fiction. It is the story of an 18-year-old boy who, in the late 1950s, embarks on a voyage of self-discovery that takes him from small-town Iowa to the sultry streets of New Orleans, the fast-paced and somewhat seamy underbelly of Hollywood, and back home again. Along the way he learns something of life's joys, sorrows, and limits, the power of sex, the nature of love. What sets this coming-of-age story apart is that Mikey's chief love interest is another boy who happens to be black. What makes it worth purchasing is its lyrical, not lurid, tone, its honest approach to a sensitive subject. There is sex, yes, but it is never sensationalized. This novel transcends the sobriquet ``gay fiction,'' and as such belongs in most public and academic libraries.-- David W. Henderson, Eckerd Coll. Lib., St. Petersburg, Fla. (c) Copyright 2010. 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 Kirkus Book Review
Grumley's last book--a short coming-of-age novel sandwiched between an introduction by Edmund White and an afterword by George Stambolian--is a modern homosexual updating of Huck Finn. Here, a midwestern boy discovers his sexual orientation and glories in it. A gift for language redeems the book's episodic nature and predictable development. Instead of Huck, we have Mikey, who listens to swing, shakes the hand of Herbert Hoover, works as a caddy, goes out for sports, joins the Cub Scouts--and then finds ``the potency of unspoken sexuality.'' After he spends a night with another boy, things are never the same. Instead of Jim, we have the black card-player James; Mikey floats down the Mississippi with him on a barge, and eventually joins his lover in New Orleans, about which Grumley is passionately evocative: ``New Orleans in early summer, with the sun shining through the balconies of the French Quarter, creating blocks of swirling Arabic letters on the brick and stucco walls behind them, mixing chirping patois and languid Gullah with the broad flat vowels of Texarkana, confounding the eye and ear at every corner--New Orleans in June is a sweet chunk of marzipan one could chew all one's days.'' After such an interlude with James, Mikey, overcome by subtropical passion and New Orleans jazz, engages in an affair, whereupon James leaves him and Mikey lights out for California. There, among other things, he works as a whore (``sexual capitalism was an entertaining step for any young man to take'') and makes his way on the sleazy streets before returning to the Midwest and finding James again. The informative afterword puts the novel in the context of Grumley's career and ``marriage'' to the writer Robert Ferro, both AIDS victims. Altogether, it's a worthy lushly-lyrical fictional reminiscence and gay road-novel, valuable for its New Orleans sections.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Library Journal Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review