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Song of Myself: A Gay Man's Odyssey of Self-Discovery

Song of Myself: A Gay Man's Odyssey of Self-Discovery is the story of Daniel Dell Blake, a gay man navigating his way through a tumultuous twentieth-century America.

His rites of passage, including embracing his identity, garnering self-respect, and living with irrepressible creativity, will resonate for readers confronting today's culture wars. Daniel’s struggles against societal norms, infused with wit, celebrate human resilience while offering historical insight, punctuated throughout by quotes from Walt Whitman, whose life and writings serve as a touchstone—to the narrator and to the reader—a testament to how truth and pride, and even humble efforts in the midst of monumental events become (in Whitman’s words) “the journey-work of the stars.”

Review:

"Arnie Kantrowitz, who wrote the finest memoir of the early gay liberation movement, Under the Rainbow, has given us in Song of Myself a thoroughly delightful picaresque novel. He presents us with Daniel Dell Blake, a gay boy raised in an apple orchard, who travels to New York City to hobnob with the bohemian elite, lands in a Japanese prison camp during World War II, marries, separates, briefly attends college as a kept boy, works cleaning up in a bordello, is sent to prison on sodomy charges, assists an antiques dealer—episode after episode in classic picaresque style, including à la Tom Jones, the possibility of incest. In so doing the innocent becomes a rascal who never loses his moral or aesthetic sense. On the way we meet dozens of fascinating characters—Chester, the sculptor; Willard, the professor; Edwin, the antiques dealer; Gordon, the doctor; Louie, the hairdresser and prison mate—in travels that take us coast to coast and from the 1930s through the 1990s. Beautifully counterpointed against this tale is Dell’s obsession with Walt Whitman, which brilliantly informs the action. Song of Myself could well have been granted another Whitman title, “Song of the Open Road,” because of its openness of spirit and of form. —David Bergman, Professor Emeritus, Towson University, author of The Violet Hour: The Violet Quill and The Making of Gay Culture.

Medios
Papel
Géneros
Biography & Memoir, LGBTQ+, Poetry
Ofrecido por
Wise Media Group (Editorial)
(User: wisemedia)
Lote
mayo 2024
Ends: 2024-05-28, 06:00 PM EDT
Rebajado
2024-10-01
Countries
USA Only
Enlaces
Información del libroPágina LibraryThing de la obra
25
copias
88
solicitudes