A few days ago I finished
Trans-Sister Radio by Chris Bhojalian, a novel about love, NPR, family, small college towns, and a transsexual.
Funny, depressing, frustrating, clever, and enlightening all at the same time.
This morning I started reading, for at least the third time, a book entitled
ANARCHY!, an anthology of articles from Emma Goldman's
Mother Earth magazine from the early 20th century.
I am still working on
The Spirit and the Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture, by Walter L. Williams. I've babbled on about this book quite a bit in the gender thread already, and so I'll spare this particular thread the details. Want more? Go to gender.
I am taking a small break from Leslie Feinberg's heartbreaking novel
Stone Butch Blues, which may actually be more of a veiled autobiography than fiction. It is about Jess Goldberg, an unwanted Jewish lesbian who grows up fast and hard in Buffalo, New York. By 16, she has traded in her family of origin for a more loving community and family of people, the working class butches, femmes, and drag queens of Buffalo. This book makes me feel, among other things, like a pampered wuss.