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How I learned to snap : a small-town coming-out and coming-of-age story

جلد کتاب How I learned to snap : a small-town coming-out and coming-of-age story

معرفی کتاب «How I learned to snap : a small-town coming-out and coming-of-age story» نوشتهٔ Read, Kirk، منتشرشده توسط نشر Hill Street Press;Penguin در سال 2003. این کتاب در فرمت epub، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

In His Salty, Laugh-out-Loud Memoir, gay and precocious Kirk Read will show you how it's done. Read comes of age in Pat Robertson's hometown as the youngest son in a large military family. Even at his most rebellious, he keeps both his tart sense of humor and dignity intact while embracing sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll. How I Learned to Snap is as much a hilarious call to action as it is a touching call to acceptance. Read more... Abstract: In His Salty, Laugh-out-Loud Memoir, gay and precocious Kirk Read will show you how it's done. Read comes of age in Pat Robertson's hometown as the youngest son in a large military family. Even at his most rebellious, he keeps both his tart sense of humor and dignity intact while embracing sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll. How I Learned to Snap is as much a hilarious call to action as it is a touching call to acceptance Kirk Read's youth in the Shenandoah Valley had the outward signs of a comfortable adolescence in the Reagan-era South. Dad: career military. Mom: a homemaker. Son: Little League/soccer player, Baptist youth group member, a straight-jawed boy from a long line of VMI men. One would expect that a young gay man growing up in such a way would lead a tortured teen life. But early Read began to show the surety and openness that has marked his later life and career as a young, queer journalist. Passing through the tough terrain of Bible Belt guilt and culturally ingrained sexual hypocrisy, Read acknowledged his difference first to those closest to him--with with expected doses of fag-baiting--and with acceptance from surprising corners. Read's skewed and skewered version of the holy trinity of American adolescence--sex, drugs, and rock and roll--is described in his unique voice: he became sexually active at a time when we were only just learning that sex can kill, began saying yes to drugs when Nancy Reagan were just saying no; and when underground music was still buried. It is a story of bold strokes (premiering a play about coming-out in high school while still in high school) and ironic misfires (he expected to ignite a firestorm by demanding that he take his same-sex date to the senior prom; instead his request was calmly okayed). Read's story is neither victim-based nor intended as a survival guide. It is not a radical call to action but a call to acceptance, with a Southern accent: "So much of gay Southern memoir has been so veiled in the shroud of first fiction that's its lost its sense of urgency. Or its been so literary that the queer content has been erased or relegated to the back in service to Gothic, poetically indirect costuming of hard realities," Read says. Ultimately, Read's is finally the story of every coming-of-age--heartbreaking, comic, tragic, and redemptive--and will be appreciated by everyone who, to quote Paul Goodman, grew up absurd in the 1980s. Content: Talent -- Camp -- Class of '95 -- Yellow sweater -- Hiding places -- Arcade -- Black balloon -- Meet the press -- Keys -- Pat -- Blind -- Rich -- Flip side -- Total theater -- How I learned to snap -- New villager -- ... Ahem ... -- Shelley -- Eve -- Sex on a school night -- Vivisection -- Shalewa -- Culture -- Tuesday -- Houseguests -- Pornography -- Hurricane territory -- Audience -- Fullbacks -- Cute -- River -- Convincing death -- Talk -- Militerry -- Cure -- Vibrate -- Surrender -- Permission -- Action figures -- Reckless -- Admissions -- Greener -- Decline of western (Virginia) civilization -- Hands -- Backstage -- Blood -- Enchantment -- Therapy -- Indestructible -- Authentic -- Home -- Epilogue -- Acknowledgments.

With bold Southern humor, journalist and performer Kirk Read takes readers on a guided tour of his precocious and courageous adolescence. Recalling his years as an openly gay high school student, Read describes how he navigated the hallways with his sense of humor and dignity intact. He fondly recalls his initiations into sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll, as well as his "shy as neon" acts of rabble rousing during high school. How I Learned to Snap is a refreshingly victim-free story in which queer teenagers are creative, resilient, and ultimately heroic.

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