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Paperback Rebel Yell: Stories by Contemporary Southern Gay Authors Book

ISBN: 1560231610

ISBN13: 9781560231615

Rebel Yell: Stories by Contemporary Southern Gay Authors

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Book Overview

Fiction. Gay/Lesbian Studies. New to SPD. REBEL YELL continues the tradition of Southern literature with the work of contemporary gay men. Includes work by such contemporary Southern gay authors as... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Whistling Dixie

Quinn, Jay. "Rebel Yell: Stories by Contemporary Southern Gay Authors", The Haworth Press, 2001. Whistling Dixie Amos Lassen and Literary Pride I came across this collection of Southern short stores by chance. A friend of mine was cleaning out his library and thought it would appeal to me and it did. "Rebel Yell" is diverse and dark and so typically Southern. There are 14 stories some of which are only fair but there are a few that are very good. Almost all of the authors write about why the South is different and then point out that Southern gay men are unique. Being a Southern gay man myself, I take issue with that stereotype. I have lived all over the world and being unique s not really a quality I find in gay men. No matter where you go in the world, gay bars and bathhouse and their patrons are basically the same. The authors in this volume claim that Southern gays place emphasis on family and that there is more prejudice against difference in the South. He also says that Southern gays identify with masculine men and are more prone to stay in the closet and lead double lives. I have to totally disagree with all of these generalizations. Putting that aside, the best story in the volume is by the editor himself, Jay Quinn. His story "465 Acres" deals with Steve who recently lost his wife to cancer and now lives with his two children with his mother. He once loved a guy named Robin whom he has not seen in 22 years. There is also "The Preacher's Son" which is a sad look on how much a religious family will do to protect their name even if it involves letting the man who murdered their gay son go free. Another good story follows the idea of "you can't go home again". "Hometown" is a love story that reminds us that once away from home, it is hard to return if not impossible. I am not sure that this is a book of stories, It reads more like memoirs and essays and almost all of the stories deal with the teenage years of the authors. Therefore there seems to be a lot of repetition and the book basically is an evocation of a time and place now gone. The gay man is the outsider. Herein lies the problem with the book. What is here is well written but what is missing is variety. It is a thoughtful and well conceived project which is honest and real--so real that it reads like biography. The plus of the book is we get to hear about the southern rural experience in gay literature.

A moving look at the Southern gay experience.

I highly recommend this book of short stories. I'm currently reading it. I was particularly moved by "Happy Birthday" by Daniel M. Jaffe. It really addresses the "otherness" of growing up gay in the South.

A real winner!!!

Thoughtful, literary and well conceived, this anthology of southern gay men's stories is real, honest and accurate, without being pretentious or boring. This is strong writing from real men. Those looking for run-of-the-mill gay porn would be well advised not to look for it here. You might note these are stories of "contemporary" southern gay men not rehashed or recycled jerk-off stories from a dreary past.

"The Southern Gay Experience"

Jay Quinn, who authored that wonderful book, "The Mentor", has given us a wonderful new collection of 14 stories by different southern gay writers. It's not too often (if this is not a first) that we get to hear about the southern rural experience in gay literature. I'm a northern boy so it's interesting to learn how southern boys live and learn & experience the world from their gay perspective. Fascinating stories here, some very unusual in there depictions of horror as well as tenderness. This is the southern heritage at its' finest.I especially enjoyed "Pump Jockey" & "465 Acres." These are not erotic stories, although some come close. They are heartfelt confessions of what it is to be gay and from the south. I enjoyed everyone of these stories, and hope Jay puts out another collection soon. I look forward to his new unusual coming-of-age novel, "Metes and Bound." This book gets my recommendation, of course.
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