Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
A memoir of gay life in 1970s Long Island by one of the leading proponents of the New Narrative movement.Fascination brings together an early memoir, Bedrooms Have Windows (1989) and a previously unpublished prose work, Bachelors Get Lonely, by the poet and novelist Kevin Killian, one of the founding members of the New Narrative movement. The two together depict the author’s early years struggling to become a writer in the sexed-up, boozy, drug-ridden world of Long Island’s North Shore in the 1970s.It concludes withTriangles in the Sand, a new, previously unpublished memoir of Killian’s brief affair in the 1970s with the composer Arthur Russell.Fascination offers a moving and often funny view of the loneliness and desire that defined gay life of that era-a time in which Richard Nixon’s resignation intersected with David Bowie’s Diamond Dogs-from one of the leading voices in experimental gay writing of the past thirty years. Move along the velvet rope, Killian writes in Bedrooms Have Windows, run your shaky fingers past the lacquered Keith Haring graffito- ‘You did not live in our time! Be Sorry!
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
A memoir of gay life in 1970s Long Island by one of the leading proponents of the New Narrative movement.Fascination brings together an early memoir, Bedrooms Have Windows (1989) and a previously unpublished prose work, Bachelors Get Lonely, by the poet and novelist Kevin Killian, one of the founding members of the New Narrative movement. The two together depict the author’s early years struggling to become a writer in the sexed-up, boozy, drug-ridden world of Long Island’s North Shore in the 1970s.It concludes withTriangles in the Sand, a new, previously unpublished memoir of Killian’s brief affair in the 1970s with the composer Arthur Russell.Fascination offers a moving and often funny view of the loneliness and desire that defined gay life of that era-a time in which Richard Nixon’s resignation intersected with David Bowie’s Diamond Dogs-from one of the leading voices in experimental gay writing of the past thirty years. Move along the velvet rope, Killian writes in Bedrooms Have Windows, run your shaky fingers past the lacquered Keith Haring graffito- ‘You did not live in our time! Be Sorry!