Andrew Holleran
Autor von Tänzer der Nacht
Über den Autor
Hinweis zur Begriffsklärung:
(eng) Please do not combine this author page with that of the writer on gay history and science fiction. Although they share a legal name, none of the books on Garber's author page were written by Holleran. Thank you.
Bildnachweis: Arkansas Literary Festival 2007, photo by David W. Quinn
Werke von Andrew Holleran
Ties {short story} 1 Exemplar
A House Divided {short story} 1 Exemplar
Sunday Morning: Key West {short story} 1 Exemplar
EL DANZARIN Y LA DANZA. 1 Exemplar
Zugehörige Werke
Wrestling with the Angel: Faith and Religion in the Lives of Gay Men (1995) — Mitwirkender — 246 Exemplare
The Violet Quill Reader: The Emergence of Gay Writing After Stonewall (1994) — Mitwirkender — 229 Exemplare
Friends and Lovers: Gay Men Write About the Families They Create (1995) — Mitwirkender — 123 Exemplare
In Search of Stonewall: The Riots at 50, The Gay and Lesbian Review at 25, Best Essays 1994-2018 (2019) — Mitwirkender — 75 Exemplare
Obsessed: A Flesh and the Word Collection of Gay Erotic Memoirs (1999) — Mitwirkender — 56 Exemplare
Getagged
Wissenswertes
- Gebräuchlichste Namensform
- Holleran, Andrew
- Rechtmäßiger Name
- Garber, Eric
- Geburtstag
- 1944
- Geschlecht
- male
- Nationalität
- USA
- Ausbildung
- Harvard University
- Berufe
- Lecturer in Creative Writing, American University, Washington DC, USA
- Preise und Auszeichnungen
- Publishing Triangle (Bill Whitehead Award for Lifetime Achievement, 2007)
- Hinweis zur Identitätsklärung
- Please do not combine this author page with that of the writer on gay history and science fiction. Although they share a legal name, none of the books on Garber's author page were written by Holleran. Thank you.
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- Matthew 7:24-27
It’s universally recognized that building on sand, literal or metaphorical, is not a good idea, and here Holleran seems to suggest that he or his protagonist, depending on how much of this book is memoir, has regrettably discovered that he has done just that (while living in sandy Florida, widely recognized itself as “not a good idea”).
The protagonist of this linked collection of stories is someone who seems to have built his personal foundation on things that tend to fall away with the passage of time: youth, sex appeal, one’s parents. Bereft of them he feels lonely and isolated, carrying on living in his parents’ house in Florida surrounded by their belongings (usually a bad idea, isn’t it?). He’s afraid of approaching death, and of dying alone. He’d like to find relief from his anxieties in sex with attractive younger people, but that doesn’t often work out anymore.
Those are the themes; in structure the book is not entirely convincingly linked stories, reflections and ruminations largely, that read an awful lot like memoir. Some passages are repeated among them which creates a feeling that this wasn’t too well edited when it was assembled together. The prose is a sort of well written stream of consciousness light on plot. Sometimes funny, intentionally or not - “I can see the glow of blue and green lights, the two most satisfying Christmas colors, no doubt because they are so melancholy” he writes, which I’m not sure is supposed to be funny but struck me as, and is a fine example of the book’s tone.… (mehr)