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Book Recommendations

"The winter of our discotheque"
Set at the carefree,pre-AIDS dawn of the disco era,Andrew W.M. Beierle's smart,seductive debut novel transports the alluring Tony Alexamenos out of the closet and into the fire as he sheds his grease-stained mechanic's jumpsuit---to take Manhattan by storm.
When you're beautiful,rich,and gay,too much is never enough.....|
 
Felice Picanos 'Men Who Loved Me' was one of my best buys, as was 'Like People In History'. For purely sentimental reasons!
Christopher Isherwood's Berlin stories offer a slight insight into life a few decades ago.
Ursula le Guin has some interesting ideas about gender and sexuality in some of her work.
I've enjoyed and hated Gordon Merrick at the same time.
Hats off to Anne Rice for what she wrote and for when she wrote it.
Can't beat Mr Maupin at any time!!
 
Hey, guys. My new book, Q-FAQ, an X-rated gay scifi satire, is out.

Article about me at Bay Windows

Review in The Guide


Tom Bacchus's Q-FAQ (Haworth Positronic Press; 203 pages, $12.95) is a science fiction, sexual-liberationist novel about a future society in which a U.S. government run by the Puritan Party is pushing an anti-gay, anti-sex agenda across the divided states of America. Into this dystopic mess emerge mercenary Aces Bannon and Afaik, a queer Middle Eastern rebel. They join forces and work with a growing underground of political and sexual rebels. This is standard science fiction with a queer slant -- a sexed-up Ursula Le Guin crossing with all those 1970s erotic comics by Etienne in which men with large dicks trapped in rocket ships or on distant planets fuck their way into cosmic delight.

Bacchus shows total assuredness as a writer even while taking chances with his readers. Q-FAQ is stylistically edgy as well. Blending more traditional narratives with a collage of pamphlets, communiques, posters, and various other "informational" artifacts, Bacchus constructs a quick-moving story that's something of a cross between 1984 and a collection of Italo Calvino stories... Q-FAQ is ... one of the more intriguing and satisfyingly entertaining books of gay fiction to come out in a while.

From Edge Boston

The novel itself is a journal-like account, from Afaik’s point of view, of the bizarre, colorful creatures they encounter, the ludicrous situations they find themselves in, as well as blog and news excerpts from ongoing current events, which attempt to help both the reader and the protagonist determine where the duo are headed and why. The most important clue is an advertisement from a gay.com-like website, appearing over and over, announcing its sponsorship of the grand reopening of a once-famous bathhouse, an event which is expected to attract masses of sexual deviants. Is this gathering of the masses just another gala circuit party-type event, and might it have something to do with why Aces is compelled to race across the country?

While the answers to these questions may be of some interest to the reader, the author clearly paints an even more vivid picture of the relationship (for lack of a better word) that evolves between Afaik and Aces. The two experience sex at its most erotic, hardcore and sadomasochistic - more often than not Aces invites at least a third to join or watch him and Afaik. In any case, because Afaik’s retelling of these events is so matter-of-fact, not only is he portrayed as a willing participant, but enthusiastically so.

The ridiculousness of the circumstances is undeniably hilarious on occasion. Still, the end result is a bit of jumbled mess; and only a creator of science fiction and fantasy could get away with it.

Review excerpt from Bay Windows

Good science fiction, even if it’s set in the future, is always about the present. This rowdy and raunchy account of queer terrorists in a repressive near future is laced with contemporary concerns and political satire. The U.S. of A. is recovering from holy wars and the government takeover by neo-Puritans, who are clamping down on dissidents of all kinds. Being gay is not yet a crime - in fact, the gay demographic is still a plum target for marketers - but queer anarchists see the writing on the wall and are building sanctuaries and preparing for war.
The main character is a small-time hacker who gets swept up in the plots when he falls in lust with a cyborg who turns out to be a key figure in an anti-government conspiracy. After nearly getting killed in (what’s left of) New York City, the duo goes on the lam, taking the reader on a nightmarish road trip across America. The book’s cyberpunk style - jittery, spare, full of jump cuts and little diversions - is like John Brunner’s version of The Handmaid’s Tale, with plenty of sex thrown in for good measure. Here gay sex is an act of defiance, and the characters are defiant enough to make this dystopia a dicktopia. The graphic sex scenes may be too much for the average sci-fi reader, but queers of all kinds should enjoy this wicked thriller.


First Amazon.com user review (excerpt)

Afaik is a handsome Arab American living in Manhat (one of many slang terms invented by the author) and getting by as a low level, but still criminal techno-hacker. The Puritans are determined to frame Afaik as a homo-terrorist and he barely escapes capture when they raid and destroy his humble squat.

Seeking refuge in a dingy bar, Afaik meets Aces Bannon, a big tough bionic stud willing to provide sanctuary for the night. Back at Aces' flat Afaik is not repulsed by Aces' metal hand and leg, and he more than welcomes the hot sex Aces offers.

Falling hard for the big guy, Afaik agrees to accompany Aces on a cross country business trek, a trek Afaik soon realizes is associated with Q-Faction, a gay revolutionary group Aces belongs to. Q-Faction's goal is to protect what's left of gay rights and gay history, by fighting back against the diabolical Puritans.

Buy it on Amazon.com

You can also enjoy my witty X-rated posts at tombacchus.blogspot.com/
 
I've read a number of gay novels in the last few months:

At Swim, Two Boys by Jamie O'Neal - the story of two boys who fall in love in Ireland in the year before the Easter Uprising in 1916. Very sweet, and hard to put down.

Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin - set in Paris in the 50's, about an American falling into a love triangle with his American fiance and an Italian waiter.

Maurice by E.M. Forster - a classic. Set in the early 20th century in English high society.

The Bell by Iris Murdoch - not a gay novel, but deals with gay characters Pre-Stonewall.

Now reading The amazing adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon, which again isn't a gay novel, but has a gay main character in it.

I find a lot of good books on this page: http://jclarkmedia.com/gaybooks/recommended.html
 
P.S. Your Cat Is Dead

Weirdest book I've ever read. But I loved it.
 
'Holding The Man' - Of all the books I've read this is simply the best .
http://www.amazon.com/Holding-Man-T...bs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1197838626&sr=1-1

Only released in the US this year, Australians have had access to this book since 1995.
An Award winner and voted one of Australias 100 favourite reads.

The term "holding the man" comes from Australian Rules Football - it is a transgression that incurs a penalty.http://www.afl.com.au/

My partner bought me this book, and I began reading it one afternoon, and so began a profound journey. I found my self getting back to it at 3am, I had to see how the story unfolded. I could not put it down.
It is a true life love story that causes one to experience the full range of emotions from euphoria to to complete sadness.

It is an autobiographical work on the real life relationship of two Aussie boys from Melbourne who fall in love in a catholic high school (they are voted the senior years most popular couple). John is captain of the football team and Tim (the author) an aspiring actor. This story follows their life and due to the way it is written I felt like I knew these guys as best friends.
Guaranteed to leave a lasting impression. You will not forget this book, which sits on my bookshelf reminding me of the powerful emotions it made me feel and as a reminder of what is really important in my life.
 
Hey guys....

Here is one from an author you might not expect. It's called The Immortals By Tracy Hickman.

Tracy is most well known as the co-author of the Dragonlance Chronicles, but this is one of his finest and most controversial books. It is also a bit of a tear jerker.... but well worth the read.

He has recently done a podcast of the book. Here is a link to it. You can download each chapter in masterfully done audio, full with music and sound effects.

The Immortals

I highly recommend this book. You can get it from both the link above or from I-tunes, for free!!

Joshua


Hey guys I just found out that this book is being republished in print!! It had been out of print for several years.

So if you must read instead of listen here is a link to the pre-order.

Here is a blurb on this book:

"It's 2010, and an attempted cure for AIDS has mutated into a deadlier disease, V-CIDS. The U.S., under martial law, has set up "quarantine centers" in the Southwest. Searching for his gay son, Jon, media mogul Michael Barris smuggles himself into one of centers only to discover that it and the other centers are actually extermination camps. With a strange assortment of allies, including the leader of the camp's gay barracks, an army officer and a local cowboy, Barris precipitates an inmates' rebellion that promises the unraveling of the death-camp system and the overthrow of the government that established it."

This book is FANTASTIC!!

Joshua
 
Dennis Cooper's cycle of novels about his teenage love George Miles. Frisk is the real American Psycho.

Edmund White's autobiographical quartet - A Boy's Own Story, The Beautiful Room Is Empty, Farewell Symphony and the touching The Married Man.

Augusten Burroughs' Dry - the best account of an addiction since Burroughs' Junky / Queer.

Mark Doty's lovely memoir Firebird.

Jim Grimsley's gorgeous tale of romance during adolescense Dream Boy.

And for entertaining witty erotica - Phil Andros' ( Samuel Steward)'s Boys in Blue.
 
Recent titles I have read are:

Brendan Wolf by Brian Malloy

Shakespeare Sonnets by Samuel Park

Call Me by Your Name by Andre Aciman

Just a Boy by Rob Clinger

Blind Faith by Christopher Rice
 
Just finished the Maximum Ride series by James Patterson. The firs three were really good, while the fourth was a bit lacking...

mikey
 
I would recommend a new author by the name of John Simpson who writes gay romance/erotica action stories. He has been called the "Tom Clancy" of gay novels.

Murder most gay
Condor One

these are the two I have read. Got em on Amazon.com
 
Sanchez's debut novel chronicles the senior year of three gay teens struggling with issues ranging from coming out to first love to an HIV scare.
 
Ok it's not that I was unaware of gayfic/lit existing.. I guess I was unaware of where to find it.

There's a lot of commercial not... trash.. but like only so few choices at the small "Gay Interest" sections of Borders and Barnes and Noble, and many don't have that section.

I really need to get into the know, thanks thread for giving me a wakeup call. I love fiction and the gay theme is always a bonus. Its like getting a "fix" or reinforcement that was lacking for us in commercial literature. Everything is about "boy meets girl" and that never struck a cord in me for obvious reasons.




So to throw my hat in with a few suggestions.

From Boys to Men- Edited by Ted Gideonse and Rob Williams: while it is a collection of gay men growing up, it differs because it isn't the classic "first time, or coming out" tales. Just normal anecdotes about living with the added element that they are all gay- which every gay man will tell you- the world is a bit askew to us.

A Spot of Bother- Mark Haddon: probably heard of his "Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" but this is far better I believe. While not really "gayfic" the son Jamie is gay and his part in the story is really what kept me hooked.
 
Well I just finished The World of Normal Boys by K.M. Soehnlein. I really enjoyed this book definately one
I would recomend. I couldn't put it down and ended up reading all 282 pages in one day.

I am currently reading Strings Attached by Nick Nolan, it seems promising but ill have to let ya know soon.

My favorite ever gay themed book would still have to be Ann Arbor South '96 by Skot Harris. I wrote a post about this book a while ago and I still love it.
 
Christopher Rice has 4 books out; Tge Snow Garden is n excellent read, as is A density of Souls-my personal fav; Blind Fall is also good; His latest id Light before Day
, i found it at the library
 
Don't overlook the Donald Stachey mystery series by Stevenson.

Strachey is a private detective in Albany, NY.

Four of the novels have already been filmed with out actor Chad Allen playing the title role. Two have been released on DVD and the third (and some say best) film will be available in February - On the Other Hand, Death.

The fourth film, Ice Blues will no doubt be available later.

Allen has signed to do several of the books. They have been fairly well done on film, so far.

Marion Zimmer Bradley, the late sci/fi-fantasy author wrote a book about two trapeze artists called The Catch Trap which was also a very good read. One or more of her Darkover series of novels deals with same sex relationships.
 
Worth anyone's time are Mercedes Lackey's Valdemar series.

The trilogy - The Last Herald Mage deals with the coming of age of a young man who is different but doesn't realize just how different. The three novels in the trilogy, Magic's Pawn, Magic's Promise, and Magic's Price, are extremely well done.

Other books in the series deal with same sex relationships but not as extensively as those just mentioned.
 
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