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GLBT - Homos Libros
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Recent Reads
It's an exciting time for GLBT-themed publishing. More and more books reflecting the strength, experience and vision of GLBT people appear on the shelves of book stores and libraries.
- Zookeeper: A Novel by Alex MacLennan. 2006
An enjoyable first novel from a writer I hope to read more of. Sam Metcalfe, a Zookeeper, is a 40ish, single man whose life is dictated by the needs of others, his sister and her bright, but rebelling son, his best friend, who is having a hard time juggling her restaurant business with needs of her Alzheimer- inflicted mother and Dean the super-model local news personality boyfriend on the fast track to celebrity. Added to this is his job at the National Zoo, where he often ponders life, what it might have been, where it is going.
While on an exploratory trip to the rainforest, to study his beloved Howler Monkeys, Sam begins to question his circumstances. When he returns home he discovers that putting his needs first is no crime and that is in fact a necessary move to make if he wants to participate fully in life.
--Reviewed by Rich D.
- Wide Awake by David Levithan. 2006 (Teen)
"I can't believe there's going to be a gay Jewish president." So begins Wide Awake, the latest novel by the prolific David Levithan. Set in the near-future United States, Wide Awake presents a vision of a post 9/11 country, rocked by the Greater Depression, Denial Education, the Opus Dei Trials, Prada Riots, and Reign of Fear. For 16-year-old Duncan, his boyfriend Jimmy, and their idealistic coterie, the election results are more than a ray of hope. The victory of President Abraham Stein and running mate Alice Martinez hails the return of sanity, love, and community. Could it be this easy?
Alas, no. Enter Kansas, and its Decent Party governor, who contests the results. With the election and all it stands for threatened, Duncan and friends travel to Kansas to take a stand. Throughout Wide Awake, Levithan juxtaposes the macrocosm of national identity with the microcosm of Duncan's world, effectively exploring concepts of relationship, duty, patriotism, and love. Readers are treated not only to the author's trademark charm, idealism, and eloquence, but also to enjoyable lessons on the United States Constitution, political history, Judeo-Christian religions, and social responsibility.
The one misstep in this otherwise enjoyable and provocative story is Levithan's stereotypical portrayal of the Kansas governor. In a novel that ceaselessly explores the complexity of its subject matter and characters, the contrived behavior of this individual seems out of place.
--Reviewed by Cathy J.
- Geography Club by Brent Hartinger. 2003 (Teen)
In Brent Hartinger's enjoyable first novel Russel Middlebrook is a fun and funny high schooler with a problem. He's gay, closeted and tired of trying to navigate the minefield of high school alone. In his first tentative attempts to find a community, he discovers a few other gay, lesbian and bisexual students at his school. They really need a safe space to meet and talk, so they get the idea to create a school Geography Club. It seems like a great idea. After all, no one will want to join a Geography Club. Will they?
Russel finds a boyfriend and experiences some popularity by being on the baseball team. Life's far from perfect for him but Russel's starting to feel pretty good. Then fissures begin to appear between the members of the Geography Club. Next, rumor turns Russel's life upside down. The resulting events cause him to examine the costs of popularity, the complexities of love, and the true nature of inclusion.
--Reviewed by Shawn F.
- The Order of the Poison Oak by Brent Hartinger. 2005 (Teen)
This is the second novel to focus on Russel Middlebrook from Geography Club. This time he and his two best friends are working at summer camp. Russel just wants to get away for the summer to someplace where he's not known as "the gay kid," and have a fun problem-free summer. Of course, things are never that simple.
He and one of his best friends fall for the same guy, and his attempts to help his other best friend find a girlfriend seem to be doing more harm than good. Then there are the kids. Russel finds his campers more challenging than he could have imagined, but through his relationships with them and the other people at the camp he both learns and teaches about betrayal and forgiveness, the nature of real beauty and the complex relationship between joy and pain.
--Reviewed by Shawn F.
Favorite Books
We on the Pima County Public Library's GLBT Services Committee are proud to offer our favorite recent books that are by and about gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people. We hope this offering inspires you to read one or more of these marvelous books.
