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"Ashton, Mississippi, provides the deceptively sterile, conforming, and blindly respectable background in The Welcome, a novel written by Hubert Creekmore in 1948. The Welcome tells of the dramatic relationship between Don Mason and Jim Furlow that subverts the traditional conventions of marriage plots in novels of the time. After moving to New York following Jim's wedding, Don returns home, routed by the Depression of the 1930s. He finds Jim stuck in an unhappy marriage, and his arrival intensifies Jim's misery. As Jim sinks into alcoholism, Don connects with a new love interest, and their…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Ashton, Mississippi, provides the deceptively sterile, conforming, and blindly respectable background in The Welcome, a novel written by Hubert Creekmore in 1948. The Welcome tells of the dramatic relationship between Don Mason and Jim Furlow that subverts the traditional conventions of marriage plots in novels of the time. After moving to New York following Jim's wedding, Don returns home, routed by the Depression of the 1930s. He finds Jim stuck in an unhappy marriage, and his arrival intensifies Jim's misery. As Jim sinks into alcoholism, Don connects with a new love interest, and their mutual friends persistently try to unlock the secrets between Don and Jim. Ahead of its time in the depiction of same sex relationships, the novel caused a scandal upon release. As Phillip "Pip" Gordon says in the new introduction written for this edition, "the majority of gay fiction prior to The Welcome structured tragedy as a natural outcome for being gay. Creekmore aimed higher and sought a narrative that does not show the same-sex lovers as flawed for their desires; rather, the problem is context." Creekmore was a prolific writer, literary critic, editor, translator, photographer, and librettist, and was good friends with famed Mississippi author Eudora Welty. However, Creekmore never had the success of his peers, and his work has been forgotten, most of it falling out of print. This new edition recovers a significant addition to the canon of LGBTQ southern literature and a forgotten Mississippi author for a generation of new readers and scholars"--
Autorenporträt
Hubert Creekmore (1907-1966) was an American poet and author from Water Valley, Mississippi. He is author of Personal Sun: The Early Poems of Hubert Creekmore; The Stone Ants; The Fingers of Night; The Long Reprieve and Other Poems from New Caledonia; Formula; The Chain in the Heart; Lyrics of the Middle Ages; and Daffodils Are Dangerous: The Poisonous Plants in Your Garden, among other publications.