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Joan Larkin
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A
Woman Like That : Lesbian and Bisexual Writers Tell Their Coming
Out Stories by
Joan Larkin (Editor)
Although A
Woman Like That is full of brave and often wrenching
coming-out stories, with the expected emphasis on overcoming
social and familial pressure (more than one of these writers
describes involuntary stays in mental hospitals), the combined
effect of these wonderful memoirs is more erotic than
political--and more funny than erotic. In "Picture
This," Cecilia Tan describes her suburban mother snapping up
copies of Penthouse to send to friends and relatives
because it contained Tan's first nationally published fiction. In
"What Comes First," Holly Hughes refers in passing to a
gay-bashing incident at her college cafeteria -- someone threw a
fruit cocktail at her -- and goes on to recount her difficulty at
attracting a lesbian lover. "It had been so easy with
men," she recalls, "All you had to do was bend over at
the bowling alley and something would happen." Judith Katz
remembers a game called "Tom and Tom" that she used to
play with two little boys on her street: "Tom and Tom ...
were human cartoon characters who ran around together and got
their genitalia caught up in all kinds of elastic knots and
snags." For some, Desert Hearts; for others, Road
Runner. --Regina Marler
Cold
River : Poems by
Joan Larkin
Joan Larkin's Lambda Award-winning Cold River
deals in universal obsessions: sex and death, filtered in this
case through memory and social consciousness. Innocence meets
experience early in the book, intertwining in the tercets of
"In the Duchess (Sheridan Square, 1973)," in which the
young speaker watches "the illegal dancing" of
"strong beauty" on the scuffed barroom floor.
Remembering the scene from today, she knows she'll "soon cut
my hair, soon / sharpen cuffs and creases,/ burn bold as the
stone/ butch staring back/ in whose smile my fear/ and wanting
found a mirror." Throughout the book, she tempers her bold
politics with a warm embrace for her friends, as in "Sonnet
Positive," a fine poem wherein the speaker accompanies a
friend on a "slow drive/ to Vermont on back roads--lunch, a
quick look/ at antiques." Concluding when they pull over to
examine some merchandise, she writes:
He's not actually sick yet, he reminds me,
reaching for the next pill. His bag's full
of plastic medicine bottles, his body
of side effects, as he stoops to look at a low
table whose thin, perfect legs perch on snow.
Larkin moves from offhand personal experience to a
wider scope in the smart and plaintive "Inventory,"
which begins as a list of details about individual AIDS victims,
grows into a history of reactions to the disease, then concludes
with an incantatory elegy for what has been lost. Great tragedy
can generate enduring poetry, from Holocaust survivor Paul Celan's
"Todesfuge" to the Black Plague's innocent nursery
rhymes. Joan Larkin responds to the AIDS pandemic with this
obligation and these models in mind. Not only is Cold River
good, it is absolutely necessary. --Edward Skoog
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From contemporarypoetry.com
Excerpt:
Joan Larkin's most recent book of poetry is Cold
River (Painted Leaf Press, 1997). Joan Larkin's
previous collections of poetry are Housework and A Long
Sound. She co-edited the anthologies Amazon Poetry and
Lesbian Poetry with Elly Bulkin and Gay and Lesbian
Poetry in Our Time (winner of a Lambda Literary Award) with
Carl Morse. She is the author of a prize-winning play, The
Living, and co-translator with Jaime Manrique of Sor
Juana's Love Poems. A teacher of writing for many
years, she has served on the faculties of Brooklyn, Sarah
Lawrence, and Goddard colleges. She is the recipient of a
National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship, and
currently lives and writes in New York City...
This site hosts four poems by Larkin:
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By Joan Larkin
This poem is reprinted from A Long Sound
with the author's
permission.
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Names Index:
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