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SOME DANCE TO REMEMBER has been reviewed as "the gay GONE WITH THE
WIND." But such popular praise does not do literary justice to this
eyewitness classic of the 1970s, that "first golden decade after
Stonewall." This best-selling epic of San Francisco's Castro and
Folsom streets seethes with sex, drugs, panic, and passionate
characters: a gay writer, a drop-dead gorgeous bodybuilder, a
cabaret singer, a Vietnam vet, a Hollywood bitch, and a rough-trade
porn mogul. Narrator Magnus Bishop channels Ryan O'Hara, a writer
pioneering a tell-all voice in the emerging subculture of gay
magazines. When Ryan meets Quentin Crisp's "perfect man" in Kick
Sorenson, lust and politics collide. Steroids rule Castro Street.
Gender fascism divides queens versus clones into gay civil war over
correct queer identity. White assassinates Milk. Gay rioters burn
City Hall. Ryan, romancing the morphing trickster Kick, cruises
through nightclubs, ecstatic sex, and leather rituals in legendary
bathhouses. Sprung from Isherwood's CABARET, 1970s San Francisco
mirrored 1930s Berlin: decadent, dazzling, diverse, doomed. It's
all here. A city. A murder. A plague. A lost civilization. A love
story. SOME DANCE TO REMEMBER is dedicated to Jack Fritscher's
1970s bicoastal lover, Robert Mapplethorpe. "My God, what a book
It's all there, done with Fritscher's usual elan and verve. I
wouldn't be surprised if he has written what will be looked on as
that period's Great American Gay Novel. What lovely stuff -Sam
Steward (Phil Andros) "Jack Fritscher didn't invent the Castro. He
just made it mythical. HEADY, EROTIC, COMIC....A comprehensive
fictional chronicle of the best of times....If one can learn
American history via the novels of Gore Vidal, one can learn gay
American history through SOME DANCE." - THE ADVOCATE, David Perry
"Cinematic intensity....A brilliant record of gay life before
AIDS....An astonishing spectrum of queer lives....This sprawling
saga...has not lost a whit of its muscular passion, punchy
immediacy, or transformative literary impact." - BOOKS TO WATCH OUT
FOR, Richard Labonte "STAGGERINGLY ORIGINAL and completely
absorbing....Here is San Francisco's gay male scene in the 1970s
and 1980s as never told, or documented, before." - Michael Bronski,
Author of CULTURE CLASH: THE MAKING OF GAY SENSIBILITY
In his 16th book, eyewitness gay activist Jack Fritscher, the lover
and biographer of Robert Mapplethorpe, breaks the trance of
received gay history in this fact-rich memoir of how "The Boys in
the Band Played On" from the Titanic 1970s to 1999. Built on all
new information recently unearthed, this stylishly written and
illustrated "timeline archive" of art, sex, obscenity, gender,
culture wars, homophobia, pop culture, and the gay mafia, will get
21st-century readers and researchers up to speed fast on the
serious fun of who did what to whom when and why. Fritscher was a
founding member of the American Pop Culture Association in 1968,
and in 1969, as academia met popular culture, he immediately knew
what to do to preserve and chronicle Stonewall and the gay culture
that ensued. Back in the heyday of the First Decade of Gay
Liberation, university professor and longtime "Drummer" editor
Fritscher added erotic realism to the magical thinking of "Drummer"
readers wanting a magazine that made newly self-inventing sex seem
possible and accessible. Attention must be paid: With an average
press run of 42,000 copies for each of the 208 issues over
twenty-four years, millions more people read international
'Drummer' than have read, perhaps, any GLBT book. Fact-based on
internal evidence in "Drummer," and in journals, diaries, letters,
photos, interviews of dozens of eyewitnesses, recordings, and
newspapers, Fritscher's ultimate insider's guide to the "Rise and
Fall of Castro and Folsom Streets" is a brisk ride that brings back
what an physical and intellectual thrill it was to pick up one's
first issue of "Drummer." Professor Fritscher's "frisson" anchors
San Francisco's otherwise wild Gay Lib history on the clear
chronology of the issues of the legendary monthly "Drummer." This
is the most complete document of the "GLBT Magazine Publishing
Movement." Fritscher is the Ken Burns of "Drummer" magazine. Justin
Spring, author, "Sam Steward: A Biography" "Fritscher has done all
the research work most academics won't do-thus ensuring that
historians, critics, and anthropologists will cut and paste with
delight in years to come." Author & Book Credentials "San
Francisco Chronicle" "Fritscher reads gloriously " Marilyn Jaye
Lewis, EAA Authors Association, ..".an essential document of the
20th-century 'Gay Enlightenment' culled from the pages of
'Drummer.' Fritscher empowers the Truth of those revolutionary
times by enabling history to tell itself." Mark Thompson, "The
Advocate," editor emeritus: "Utterly unique, an invaluable
testament...historically useful for decades to come." The Kinsey
Institute, Catherine Johnson-Roehr, Curator: "Fritscher has a
remarkable memory for the people, places, and pivotal events that
he has witnessed over his lifetime. His long association with
'Drummer' in San Francisco placed him at the center of the
revolution, and 'Gay San Francisco' is filled with significant
details from those years." Brown University, Samuel Streit,
Director Special Collections: "'Gay San Francisco' is remarkable
history of a remarkable time in a remarkable place, proving its
points by combining contemporary documents, photographs, drawings,
and reportage with a first-hand and first-rate memoir that brings
an unforgettable era back to life." Chicago Public Library, Jim
Stewart, Department Head emeritus, Social Sciences & History
Department: "Jack Fritscher as 'eyewitness' in 'Gay San Francisco'
is kin to Christopher Isherwood as 'camera' in his 'Berlin
Stories.' This written 'oral history' should be in every library's
GLBT collection." University of Sussex, Niall Richardson,
Film-Media Studies: ..".chronicles an exciting and formative era
from a new and original perspective no one has ever done before."
University of California, David Van Leer, professor, GLBT Studies:
"Fritscher is a key player in the gender of masculinity in
homosexuality."
CHASING DANNY BOY: POWERFUL STORIES OF GAY CELTIC EROS Featuring
NEIL JORDAN, Oscar Winner: The Crying Game and JACK FRITSCHER,
Winner, Best Fiction. New voices dare to break the ancient silence.
DUBLIN. New Storytellers reveal the erotic sizzle under the Irish
skin. BOSTON. Wherever in the wide diaspora of the world the Irish
are, the millions of them are in your culture, your music, and,
likely, in your genes. CHICAGO. This dazzling collection of new
stories tears down the lace curtains of sentiment and stereotype.
NEW YORK. Brilliant, fresh young writers shout out the hidden
homoerotic literature of Irishmen everywhere in the world: ancient
romantic warriors to mythic Dublin punk/boyz. LONDON. "Style rules
in this entertaining, funny, often experimental, always bright and
brilliant new writing " Gay storytelling is, at heart the truly
hidden literature of Irish Culture. After The Crying Game, the
Irish homosexual deserves the UnZipped Prose of these Independent
Original Stories that reinvent Irish iconography and sexuality: no
shamrocks, no mercy. This anthology cuts to the inclusive quick of
Irish Roots. Celts? Druids? Punks? New Age? Hollywood and most
everyone fantasizes about the life, music, and sensuality of the
Emerald Isle Everyone's a wee bit Irish, so kiss your multicultural
roots hello, because the Gay Gene Itself may be Irish
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