Posted on 06/28/2010 7:40:39 PM PDT by narses
At his Kentucky elementary school, kids taunted Brent on the playground about being gay, whatever that was.
By eighth grade, he realized what they meant and came out to a friend and vice versa.
She was an avid writer, he a voracious reader. They headed to their school library in search of stories that spoke to their lives: gay, gay in the South, gay and fearing stereotypes like disgusting and worthless.
There were tons of books about gangs and drugs and teen pregnancy and there were no LGBT books, says Brent, now 15 and heading into his sophomore year of senior high. I asked the librarian about it and she was like, This is middle school. I can only have appropriate books here.
So they went to their public library, where they discovered plenty of romantic gay steam for adults.
Turning next to bookstores, they finally found what theyd been looking for a recent explosion in the publishing world of books that speak to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning teens.
First came a gem, a book for young people that made them cry: Martin Wilsons 2008 debut, What They Always Tell Us, set in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
The story about a troubled year for two brothers, one of whom finds solace in a relationship with a boy, made him feel less like an alien on your own planet, Brent says.
A world of books followed. Brent read his way through Tom Dolby, Robin Reardon, Julie Ann Peters and David Levithan.
He soon realized there were lots of coming out stories but he also craved romance, fantasy and paranormal books with characters that just happened to be gay, like Damien in the House of Night vampire series he loves, by the mother-daughter team P.C. and Kristin Cast.
I see the characters trickling into the mainstream genres. I really like that, says Brent, who asked that his last name and hometown not be used.
It makes being gay feel natural, which it is, of course. Books give you hope.
Books that speak to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning teens have traveled light years since John Donovans Ill Get There. It Better be Worth the Trip led the way in 1969.
Long since out of print, the story of the confused world of 13-year-old Davy and the jock he kisses will be reissued in September by Flux, an imprint of Llewellyn Worldwide.
This book made Harper & Row (now HarperCollins) very nervous, says Brian Farrey, editor of the new edition. They werent sure how people were going to take to it.
It was the one that said it can be done for teens, and there wont be people with pitchforks and torches waiting for you at the door. It opened the closet to teens and said you are not alone.
Long before gay characters began popping up in the mainstream on TV and at the movies, librarians embraced Ill Get There, says Kathleen T. Horning, director of the Cooperative Childrens Book Center of the School of Education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Another important forerunner was Nancy Gardens 1982 Annie on My Mind and its unabashedly happy ending for two 17-year-old girls who fall in love.
Previous to that, there would be some awful car accident or one of the gay characters would die, Horning says, acknowledging that thread in Ill Get There.
There was a sense that the gay character had to be punished somehow. They were kind of depressing.
Still, until now few LGBT titles became blockbusters. That changed with two boys named Will Grayson and a very large, very Glee-ful linebacker named Tiny.
Will Grayson, Will Grayson, by Levithan and John Green, debuted on the New York Times childrens best-seller list and stayed there for three weeks after its April release. That was a first for a young adult novel with major gay themes.
It has delighted hungry teen readers fanboys and fangirls who were the likely reason the book became a trending topic on Twitter. Penguin has 60,000 copies in print.
In alternating chapters, Green and Levithan write of two 16-year-old boys with little in common, living in separate Chicago suburbs.
Ones depressed and struggling to come out and the other is straight with a flamboyantly gay friend in Tiny Cooper, a football star on the hunt for love and stardom in musical theater.
I am Tiny, sassy 20-year-old Andrew Casasanta, an English major at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va.
Its still very frustrating, he says. I dont think that theres many characters out there that I can personally relate to, and theyre generally more stereotypes. Its important that this book, while having gay themes front and center, was written well.
It helps that Levithan is a prolific rock star in gay lit for young people, with an acclaimed winner 2003s Boy Meets Boy.
It also helps that Green is revered as a writer for teens, including his Paper Towns in 2008, and by fans of the adrenaline-infused videos he regularly posts online.
Landing as high on the New York Times list as we did with Will Grayson, Will Grayson made a big statement to the childrens publishing world that gay characters are not a commercial liability, Green says. This is an important statement to make.
As gay-straight alliances spread in schools and kids reared by gay parents have kids of their own, books remain important survival tools for all young people trying to figure out who they are, says Lynn Evarts, a high school librarian in the farm country of Sauk Prairie, Wis.
Kids have for the most part become Will and Grace-ified, she says. Oftentimes Ill hand them a book that has a gay main character and tell them how funny it is, and they take it and like it.
These are kids who wouldnt normally touch anything like that. I live in the land of rednecks, but they like it because its funny and good.
But what about readers like Brent who dont have inclusive libraries, deep pockets or technology to download ebooks?
Recent research in Texas, for instance, indicated a strong I dont serve those teens attitude among librarians.
Its the argument that drives me crazy, says Teri Lesesne, who teaches young adult lit in the Department of Library Science at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas.
Its like, Yeah, you do, she says. They might not be coming in and saying, Hi, Im gay or Im bi or Im transgender or Im questioning my own identity, because theyre afraid.
But theyre there and...
I grew up reading my father’s books he read as a child; he was born in 1915. I wish I could remember all the authors. Thornton Burgess books are great for kids too, Amazon has reprints.
I read a bunch of “Boy Scouts in the...etc” series - I loved them. Howard Pyle’s King Arthur books - I so much wanted to live in that world, not the one I was stuck in.
If You Give A Gere A Gerbil...
Why Johnny Can’t Fart
By the way, Tom Dolby the gay writer is not Thomas Dolby the Eighties synth pop guy. Tom Dolby is the son of Ray Dolby of Dolby Labs. Thomas Morgan Robertson was nicknamed “Dolby” after the labs, because he was always playing with a tape recorder when he was a kid.
Barack Obama sits on his hands. Kevin Jennings prefers other men’s hands.
“Such fiends need the death penalty.”
Yup. Murderers, too.
As John Wayne said, “It’ll give’em to know we’re serious.”
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