Greetings from Amazon.com Delivers Gay Studies

FEATURED IN THIS E-MAIL:
* "Exile and Pride" by Eli Clare
* "Witness to Revolution" edited by Chris Bull
* "That's Mr. Faggot to You" by Michael Thomas Ford
* "The Kid" by Dan Savage
* "Friends and Family" by Dan Woog
* Amazon.com Presents the Best of the Century


"Exile and Pride: Disability, Queerness, and Liberation"
by Eli Clare
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0896086054/entertainmentsit
At long last, an essay on the politics and poetics of queer
disability. Eli Clare, a poet with cerebral palsy, movingly
describes her attempt to climb Mount Adams--not, she points
out, as a "supercrip," like the boy without hands who bats
.486 on his Little League team, but just as an impaired
person who loves to hike: a story about ableism rather than
disability. Avoiding easy answers and journalistic sunshine,
she recounts the story of the fight for disabled access,
touching on the history of the freak show. She tracks the
origins of her own tenacity and self-knowledge to her rural
Oregon upbringing and the conflicting personality of her
father--who sexually abused her but also taught her how to
frame a house, how to use a chainsaw. "I think of the words
crip, queer, freak, redneck," Clare remarks. "None of these
are easy words. They mark the jagged edge between
self-hatred and pride, the chasm between how the dominant
culture views marginalized peoples and how we view
ourselves, the razor between finding home, finding our
bodies, and living in exile, living on the metaphoric
mountain."


"Witness to Revolution: The Advocate Reports on Gay and
Lesbian Politics, 1967-1999"

edited by Chris Bull
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1555834655/entertainmentsit
Among the radical magazines, news sheets, and bulletins that
surfaced in the heady climate of the late 1960s, none can
compare with the venerable Advocate, rightly described as
"the world's premier chronicle of the lesbian and gay civil
rights movement." In "Witness to Revolution," Washington
correspondent Chris Bull compiles dozens of trenchant and
timely articles on politics from the magazine's first 32
years, ranging from descriptions of bar raids and early,
celebratory coverage of the first openly gay elected
officials to some of the first (woefully belated) articles
on AIDS and, later, the rise of the religious right. Among
the selections: John Weir's acid reflections on a ubiquitous
symbol of queer activism, "The Red Plague: Do Red Ribbons
Really Help in the Fight Against AIDS?" "The ribbon," Weir
contends, "has seeped into the national culture like the
score from 'My Fair Lady.'" He even spotted one suspended in
a glass ball on his mother's Christmas tree, and discovered
that "she had traveled all the way to Greenwich Village to
find it, sifting through sex toys at the Pleasure Chest. Any
charitable gesture that places me at risk of encountering my
mother in a sex shop is one that we as a community ought to
reconsider."


"That's Mr. Faggot to You: Further Trials from My Queer Life"
by Michael Thomas Ford
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1555834965/entertainmentsit
Michael Thomas Ford garnered lots of laughs in 1998 with
"Alec Baldwin Doesn't Love Me and Other Trials of My Queer
Life." The follow-up collection of pieces from his
syndicated column, "That's Mr. Faggot to You," continues
Ford's exploration of contemporary gay life; in the title
essay, reports of a teenager who successfully sued his
school district for failing to prevent physical and mental
abuse by his classmates prompts Ford to recall his own
traumatic high school experiences and lead him to recognize
that, years later, "he is happier, more successful, and a
great deal more attractive" than his classmates. In other
essays, he discusses the you-and-me-against-the-world
relationship Ford has with his black Labrador, proposes a
new line of Christian-friendly action figures (including a
Jonah and the Whale Play Set, "appropriate for bath-time use
or fun in the pool"), and even manages, despite his
uncertainties, to offer an adolescent nephew dating advice
(concluding that "guy problems were guy problems, regardless
of who the person creating the dilemma was or how many holes
she or he had"). "That's Mr. Faggot to You" is a humorous
slice of contemporary gay life that's bound at least to
elicit a smile from any reader.


"The Kid: What Happened After my Boyfriend and I Decided to
Get Pregnant"

by Dan Savage
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0525945253/entertainmentsit
Best known for his syndicated sexual advice column, "Savage
Love," Dan Savage shares his own story in "The Kid," a
hilarious account of his efforts--along with his partner--to
adopt a child. (Whoops, make that his boyfriend; Savage
can't stand the "genderless" p-word: "Straight people and
press organs that want to acknowledge gay relationships
while at the same time pushing the two-penises stuff as far
out of their minds as possible love 'partner.' I hated it.")
Savage doesn't give an inch on the sexuality issue; it's
hard to imagine that a homophobic reader would even pick up
"The Kid," but if it happened, Savage's unapologetic
presentation of his life would quickly scare that reader
off. Which isn't to say that he paints a rosy picture of
homosexual cohabitation--the very first scene finds Dan's
boyfriend, Terry, locking himself in the bathroom after a
fight over the music on the car stereo. The misadventures
continue through each step of the open-adoption process, in
which Dan and Terry get to know their baby's birth mother,
and the first few weeks of parenthood. "The Kid" is a
wonderful, charming account of real "family values" that
proves love knows no limits.


"Friends and Family: True Stories of Gay America's Straight
Allies"

by Dan Woog
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1555834914/entertainmentsit
Dan Woog's inspiring and in some cases astonishing stories
of heterosexual activists will banish for a few hours those
images of homophobes closing in with pitchforks that
television coverage of gay issues so often conjures. Most of
these friendly crusaders have conversion stories, moments
when they were shaken from their complacency or prejudice,
such as 80-year-old Frannie Peabody, who returned from her
grandson's funeral in 1984 and helped found the AIDS Project
of Portland, Maine. Tom Potter, the former chief of police
in Portland, Oregon, announced at his swearing-in ceremony
his commitment to fighting racism, sexism, and homophobia;
his daughter, also a cop, had come out to him shortly
before. Rabbi David Horowitz, whose daughter is a lesbian,
keeps 17 gay-related pamphlets on his desk, just in case
people want to talk about the issue. Described by one gay
activist as "the mother of all moms," Carolyn Wagner sprang
to her son's defense after he was beaten in the street,
eventually suing the school he had attended and forcing
policy changes. Not only have these people helped advance
gay rights and visibility, but their involvement with the
movement has in many instances helped them as well, they
argue, providing a focus--a mission--they may not otherwise
have found.


AMAZON.COM PRESENTS THE BEST OF THE CENTURY
*******************************************
As the century comes to a close, Amazon.com takes a look at
the landmarks in books, music, and video of the past 100
years. Selected by our editors, our lists take you decade by
decade from the turn of the century all the way to the end
of the millennium. But don't just take our word for it; cast
your vote for the best book, video, and CD in our
best-of-the-millennium poll for your chance to win our
customers' 300 favorite music, book, and video titles.
Books of the century

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