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  • Format: ePub

Philip Gambone's long-awaited second book of short stories takes off from where his highly acclaimed first collection ended, carrying us now into the lives of older gay men, their adventures and challenges, heartaches and joys. Set largely in Boston, these sixteen, loosely interconnected new stories are about men who have experienced and witnessed a lot: marriages and break-ups; old loves rekindled and new romances set in motion; the search for sex in an online era; the loss of familiar gay culture; the death of loved ones due to old age, sickness and AIDS; and always the adventure of living…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
Philip Gambone's long-awaited second book of short stories takes off from where his highly acclaimed first collection ended, carrying us now into the lives of older gay men, their adventures and challenges, heartaches and joys. Set largely in Boston, these sixteen, loosely interconnected new stories are about men who have experienced and witnessed a lot: marriages and break-ups; old loves rekindled and new romances set in motion; the search for sex in an online era; the loss of familiar gay culture; the death of loved ones due to old age, sickness and AIDS; and always the adventure of living in a world where they have to make up the rules as they go along.

Gambone takes us to a radical faerie wedding, a closeted French teacher's cultural outing with his favorite student; the weekly café gathering of a group of older gay bohemians, one of whom has adopted a child; a randy eighty-year-old portrait painter who insists his clients pose in the nude; a gay man who discovers his brother is HIV positive; a man in a wheelchair who hires a straight, 23-year-old companion; another who periodically hooks up with a married man half his age; and a long-married gay coupleone a bookish type, the other a soccer fanwhose weekly visit to a sports café in Boston's Italian neighborhood presents a delicious and dangerous temptation.

Some of these men fight the urge to live nostalgically in the past; others embrace the new opportunities that come with deeper insight and age. Whatever the case, in each story, Gambone explores how, as older gay men, each of his characters ultimately arrives at a place of greater equanimity, self-acceptance, wisdom, and even spiritual growth.

George Stambolian said of his first collection, "Philip Gambone he has done something extraordinaryhe has written with honesty, humor, and compassion about the lives of ordinary gay men. His characters speak to us in voices that are almost hypnotically real. They charm us with their words only to catch us with startling revelations of truth."

Now these "ordinary gay men" have reached a new, more complex stage in their lives, where the pull of multiple responsibilities, conflicting desires, and cross-generational connections both enriches and tests the identities they've built up over the years. Exhilarating, heart-warming, sexy, and very realthese stories zigzag through the twists and turns of each character's life toward place where gratitude, peace, clarity and joy radiantly triumph.


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Autorenporträt
Philip Gambone is a writer of fiction and nonfiction. His first collection of short stories, The Language We Use Up Here, and his novel, Beijing, each garnered enthusiastic critical praise.Phil's book of interviews, Something Inside: Conversation with Gay Fiction Writers, was named one of the "Best Books of 1999" by Pride magazine. His Travels in a Gay Nation: Portraits of LGBTQ Americans was nominated for an American Library Association Award. His memoir, As Far As I Can Tell: Finding My Father in World War II, was named one of the Best Books of 2020 by The Boston Globe. He is also the editor of Breaking the Rules: The Intimate Diary of Ross Terrill.Phil has contributed important essays, reviews, features pieces, and scholarly articles to numerous journals including The New York Times Book Review, The Boston Globe, Provincetown Arts, Italian Americana, The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide, The Harvard Crimson, and American National Biography. His longer essays have appeared in a number of anthologies, including Hometowns, Sister and Brother, Wrestling with the Angel, Inside Out, Boys Like Us, Wonderlands, and Big Trips.He is a recipient of fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, the Helene Wurlitzer Foundation, the Massachusetts Arts Council, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Massachusetts Historical Society. Phil taught high school English for over forty years and college-level writing at the University of Massachusetts, Boston College, and, for over twenty-five years, in the Department of Continuing Education at Harvard, where his courses in expository and fiction writing earned him several awards.Currently, Phil writes a weekly column, "The Writer in Mexico," for the online magazine Lokkal in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.