tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-205047902007-08-06T15:46:10.389-07:00queerthologyBillyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20504790.post-33360484290128657662007-03-06T19:38:00.000-08:002007-03-06T19:41:07.228-08:00Some News about The Full Spectrum<i>The Full Spectrum</i> has been named a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in the Children’s/Young Adult category, was named a New York Public Library Best Book for Teens, and will be a part of the Best Books for the Teen Age list that is circulated to most libraries in the US. Also, in December, <i>The Full Spectrum</i> was named one of the Insight Out Book Club’s books of the year.Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20504790.post-1156811198472192822006-08-28T17:25:00.000-07:002006-11-15T10:55:49.087-08:00TeenReads Review!Thomas Carlyle, the Scottish philosopher and essayist, coined the term "Worship of Silence," referring to the sacred respect for restraint in speech until "thought has silently matured itself,…to hold one's tongue till some meaning lie behind to set it wagging." If Carlyle's assertion that silence is the forge from which anything truly great is born, it seems fitting that one of this year's most powerful anthologies for young adults comes from the pens of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered and questioning writers whose sexuality has often been relegated to quiet, shadowy corridors. And as Carlyle further suggests, it was only a matter of time before the silence came to a stop.<br /><br />THE FULL SPECTRUM is a collection of essays and poems from GLBTQ writers ages 13-23. Compiled by David Levithan (BOY MEETS BOY) and Billy Merrell (TALKING IN THE DARK), these stories offer a keen insight into the minds of contemporary GLBTQ youth. You may think you know each story --- the heartbreak of coming out, the angst of unrequited affection --- but the power of the writing herein overrides any familiarity and allows even readers who've lived through similar circumstances to approach the material with new eyes and new hearts.<br /><br />The young writers break new ground with thoughtful and (sometimes painfully) truthful assessments, not only of the world in which they live but of their own lives. They are not looking to point fingers. They are not asking for pity. They know that any silence, any hiding that has come before, is only a small part of who they were and are, and the voices they speak with now are to be reckoned with. It's these new voices that will shepherd in a better understanding of their places in the world, now more disparate than desperate.<br /><br />The most important message this collection delivers is: there's no turning back. As long as there is fear, there can never be change. With this decisive anthology, we begin to see a chink in the armor, a crack in the wall, and there's a sense that when this many writers can come forward to tell their stories, change can't be far behind. THE FULL SPECTRUM entices, enlightens and envisions a future where the progeny of thoughtful silence is a resounding shout heard across the universe. While the book stands for many ideas and ideals, it offers no agenda, save one.<br /><br />Hear us.<br /><br />-Brian FarreyBillyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20504790.post-1152805655594507192006-07-13T08:43:00.000-07:002006-11-15T10:55:49.006-08:00Catherine Ryan Hyde Recommends The Full Spectrum!Today" asked best-selling authors what they plan to read on vacation. <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13439103/from/ET/">Here are their picks</a>.<br /><br />"I'm having a great time exploring the new young adult genre. It isn’t what young adult fiction used to be." -Catherine Ryan Hyde, recommending <i>The Full Spectrum</i>Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20504790.post-1152470670185721472006-07-09T11:40:00.000-07:002006-11-15T10:55:48.941-08:00Chicago Event: Manifold, July 15thAnyone in the Chicago area should check out the reading / signing at <b>Manifold</b> on July 15th!<br /><br />Date: July 15, 2006<br />Time: 2:00 PM – 3:30 PM<br />Where: Manifold (2850 N Clark St.)<br />Contact: 773-525-2929<br /><br />A portion of Manifold’s proceeds on July 15 will be donated to The Center on Halsted, Chicago’s LGBT community center with a new facility scheduled to open Winter 2007 on N. Halsted at Waveland. For more information about Manifold, visit <a href="http://www.manifoldstore.com">manifoldstore.com</a>.Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20504790.post-1152102370051240282006-07-05T05:20:00.000-07:002006-11-15T10:55:48.874-08:00The Reviews!<b><i>Booklist</i>, Starred!</b><br /><br />*The 40 contributions to this invaluable collection about personal identity have two things in common: all are nonfiction and all are by writers under the age of 23. Beyond that, diversity is the order of the day, and the result is a vivid demonstration of how extraordinarily broad the spectrum of sexual identity is among today’s gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and questioning youth. That said, some of the topics addressed in these essays and poems are familiar (the agony of coming out, the heartbreak of religious opprobrium). What is new and encouraging, however, is the fact that so many young people have felt free enough to share the truth about themselves in print and under their own names; as coeditor Levithan notes in his introduction, “One way to effect change is to share truths. To tell our stories.” Insightful, extraordinarily well written, and emotionally mature, the selections offer compelling, dramatic evidence that what is important is not what we are but who we are. <i>—Michael Cart</i><br /><br />from <b><i>Kirkus</i>, Starred!</b><br /><br />*"This emotionally spicy collection will inspire identification, compassion<br />and hope in readers queer or not."<br /><br /><b><i>School Library Journal</i></b><br /><br />Using works submitted anonymously through the Web site the authors created in conjunction with the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), Levithan and Merrell have selected 40 essays, mini-autobiographies, poems, and photographs that chronicle the lives of 21st-century young people, ages 13 to 23. The handsomely dense package includes real-life stories about coming out, falling in and out of love, mistaken identities, families and friends, misplaced affection, confronting homophobia, and more. A female-to-male transsexual teen describes a first trip into the men's restroom. A young man recalls his close relationship with a trash-talking, pot-smoking, horror-movie-loving burnout, illustrating the blurry lines that exist between romance and friendship. While nearly half of the installments tell the stories of young gay men, a sizable chunk is devoted to lesbians, and more than half a dozen pieces are about transgendered youth. While many of the stories recall memories of isolation, others delve into a young person's awareness and involvement in a queer community. As a whole, the collection is comprehensive, complex, and the perfect title to put into the hands of teens who approach the information desk asking for real stories about coming out and coming to terms with anything remotely GLBTQ.<i>- Hillias J. Martin, New York Public Library</i><br /><br /><b><i>Horn Book</i></b><br /><br />Queer identity and sexuality are boldly expressed in this provocative collection of poems, essays, and personal narratives by forty writers under the age of twenty-three. Their stories provide a fresh perspective on the nature of sexual identity and how it is shaped by political, cultural, and social institutions, including church, family, school, and government. The pieces are infused with a raw, emotional honesty, which is frequently humorous but at times heart-wrenching. With its focus on contemporary youth, this compilation offers a sharp contrast to earlier testimonies, such as those in Ann Heron's seminal One Teenager in Ten: Testimony by Gay and Lesbian Youth (1983). The cultural shift from a traditional gay/lesbian identity to a queer identity can be seen in Gabe Bloomfield's "A Gay Grammar," which does not include "a helpless teenager...sexual repression...rape...[or] suicide." The collection's central message is political: "we're not going away. We're here for the fight." This important anthology provides readers of all orientations with an intimate glimpse into the lives of an "up and coming queer generation" and -- to paraphrase John Donovan -- is well worth the trip. - <i>Philip Charles Crawford</i><br /><br /><b><i>VOYA</i></b><br /><br />Forty people contributed to this collection, presenting the experiences of a new generation of young adults. The talent herein is as obvious as the pain, the sadness is as real as the relief, and the ugliness is as true as the beauty. The diversity in these stories seems amazing and logical as each person is unique from the others. Although a few entries get lost in ramblings and memories, the reader quickly realizes how it would be inappropriate to silence their voices yet again. Other stories are so<br />skillfully crafted that the reader will become part of the experience and will wish that the story is one chapter in a full novel available now. This reviewer missed the interesting author biographies that one finds in other anthologies. The styles vary, with some stories told in straight narrative, and others in verse or letters. These last became favorites. "Queer: Five<br />Letters" contains letters written to people whom Kat Wilson had known while growing up, including a fifth grade teacher, a chosen teenage role model, mother and father, the mother of a girl she tutored, and a family friend who died of AIDS. These brief letters weave together a survival story. Another person's story is told in "The Most Important Letter of Our Life," written by JoSelle Vanderhooft at twenty-three to her sixteen-year-old self, warning and encouraging her teen self not to give up. <i>- C. J. Bott</i><br /><br /><b><i>Edge</i></b><br /><br />What the <a href="http://www.edgeprovidence.com/index.php?ci=106&ch=entertainment&sc=books&sc2=reviews&sc3=fiction&id=4695&PHPSESSID=afdc16b4f4ecd287c8803c26cb81cb32"><i>Edge</i></a> writer Chris Verleger thinks of <i>The Full Spectrum</i>:<br /><br />With <i>The Full Spectrum</i>, editors David Levithan and Billy Merrell provide an open forum for GLBTQ teenagers and early twenty-somethings with an assortment of personal stories, essays, and poems. The works range in theme from self-acceptance and first-time experiences to the coming-out process and future obstacles, both personally and politically. The collection is refreshing, harrowing, glib and thought-provoking, a catalogue of first-person accounts told in a variety of formats including email exchanges, diary entries, and letters to loved ones, as well as traditional prose. <br /><br />"We must continue to tell our stories in hopes that others are listening," taken from Travis Stanton’s entry, "A Fairy’s Tale," perhaps best describes what <i>The Full Spectrum</i> sets out to accomplish. Some of the entries sound almost child-like, whereas others are remarkably well-written, considering the age limit for inclusion was 23. Regardless, each story, poem, or rant makes for compelling reading, and the collection, as a whole, reminds the reader, and each of the authors, that while their stories are unique, they are not alone. <br /><br />Nonetheless, loneliness and isolation are recurring themes throughout the collection. In "Crying Wolfe," Jack Lienke tells the story of a high school acquaintance, Wolfe Reed, who shares his fondness for slasher flicks but acknowledges their friendship only in private. "Genuine connection, after all, isn’t suspenseful," says Jack, attempting to help both the reader and himself better understand his relationship with Wolfe. "It’s isolation that creates tension." Tyrell Pough, author of one of the shorter but arguably more disturbing entries, "Continuation of the Life," shares details of abuse at the hand of his foster mother and the subsequent bullying he endures at three different group homes. In spite of his past experiences, Tyrell has a surprisingly positive outlook. "For those who are in the struggle," he says, "hang in there and just believe." <br /><br />Given the obstacles these individuals have had to overcome, and at so young an age, each story still ends either on a high note or with the assumption that the worst is over. With titles as varied and self-explanatory as "When You’re a Gay Boy in America" (which explores a young man’s first encounter with internet dating), "A Boy in the Girls’ Bathroom" (portraying a sixteen-year-old’s struggle with gender identity), and "A Quietly Queer Revolution" (which chronicles a bisexual woman’s relationship with religion and her church), the outcome is always resoundingly positive and life-affirming. JoSelle Vanderhooft perhaps best conveys this sentiment with her entry, "The Most Important Letter of Our Life," where she writes a letter, in present day, to herself as a teenager ten years ago. "I want to tell you every day of your life that sexual abuse, your father, the fact that you broke your toe on a chair once, whatever," she proclaims, "has nothing to do with your sexual orientation." JoSelle knows she can’t change the past and that her younger self is long gone, but it helps to serve as a reminder of the person she is now. <br /><br /><i>The Full Spectrum</i> provides a wonderful outlet for GLBTQ youngsters, writers and readers alike. While the quality and content of some stories and entries is perhaps questionable, the editors are likely to generate a loyal following and continued interest in this writing genre.Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20504790.post-1151342837456937012006-06-26T10:25:00.000-07:002006-11-15T10:55:48.803-08:00A Fascinating Review in The Huntsville Times<a href="http://www.al.com/living/huntsvilletimes/index.ssf?/base/living/1151054133126220.xml&coll=1"><i>The Huntsville Times</i></a>:<br />"I picked up the book only to pass along to a friend who's interested in these issues. I was not going to read it. I thought I had nothing more to learn on the subject. I was wrong..."<br /><br />"... it is not a book about sex, but about defining yourself in a hostile world."Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20504790.post-1148571950441529522006-05-25T08:11:00.000-07:002006-11-15T10:55:48.354-08:00A Minnesota Blogger Gets Behind THE FULL SPECTRUMBrian, the mind behind the fun and literary blog <a href="http://emohawk.blogspot.com/2006/05/full-spectrum-free-stuff.html" target=_blank>Dispatches from an MFA-seeking writer</a>, had such a strong and personal response to <i>The Full Spectrum</i> that he's decided to put his money where his mouth is, promising a free $5 Giftcard to Starbucks for the first five of his readers who purchase the anthology and donate it to a local school, library, or GLBTQ center.<br /><br />"I was blown away by this collection," Brian's post explained May 24, 2006. "You’d be hard pressed to open to any essay or poem at random and not come away with some insight into the hearts and minds of contemporary gay youth. I believe so firmly in the messages that this book conveys that I recently purchased three copies. One I’m donating to a local high school here in the Cities, one I’m donating to a local GLBT community center, and one I’m donating to my high school back in Wisconsin (which, I’m told, now has a Gay Straight Alliance, a fact that has left me speechless)."<br /><br />He goes on to challenge not only the regular readers of his blog, but anyone who stumbles across it, to "go out, get a copy, read it, then donate it to a local school or GLBT group." The first five people who e-mail him to say that they’ve done so will receive a $5 Starbucks Giftcard in return.<br /><br />Because the book retails for $9.95, donating the copy is similar to getting a 50% rebate, the author explains. "For five bucks and the time it takes to drop the book off at your local middle or high school, you can be slamming down a caramel macchiato and beaming to yourself that you’ve done something really, really great."<br /><br />Because GLBTQ youth groups, especially those in America's high schools, most often do not have much or any funding, it takes the generosity of readers like Brian to ensure that young people have access to the books they need.<br /><br />"I’m a student and not made of money," Brian reminds his readers. He's simply a passionate person who was believes in something. If a fraction of our readers have the same response that he did, there's a good change that <i>The Full Spectrum</i> is going to get into the hands of those young people who will benefit from its stories.<br /><br /><b>If anyone you know is doing something similar to help the GLBTQ youth in your community, please let us know. We would love to hear about it.</b>Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20504790.post-1136853104148659702006-01-09T16:03:00.000-08:002006-11-15T10:55:48.101-08:00What's Already Been Said about The Full Spectrum!“This book is a cause for celebration! Not only is it loaded with talent, humor, soul, courage, and truth, it gives hope for the future. As one of these writers puts it, ‘I am part of the up-and-coming queer generation and standing on the front lines of the battle.’ <i>The Full Spectrum</i> is indeed a battle cry from the heart. Read it as I did and be touched by the lives these stories reveal. Then cheer for what another writer calls the ‘quietly queer revolution’ taking place in these pages and in the world they will change for the better.”<br /><br />—<b>James Howe</b>, author of <i>The Misfits</i> and <i>Totally Joe</i><br /><br />“In voices provocative and tender, funny and insightful, powerful and profound, these extraordinary young writers express with fierce honesty their intimate revelations of uncertainty, hope, love, joy, courage, insecurity, and fear of coming out and coming in to self. These stories will haunt you, move you, and change your perceptions about the queer culture. An exciting and vital contribution, <i>The Full Spectrum</i> demonstrates how far we’ve come and how far we’ve yet to go in understanding, acceptance, and celebration of divergent thought and human experience.”<br /><br />—<b>Julie Anne Peters</b>, author of <i>Keeping You a Secret</i> and <i>Luna</i><br /><br /><br />“Damn, I’m in trouble—once these fine young writers start publishing novels, I’ll be out of a job! But on the plus side, I predict everyone who loves GLBT lit will be reading some of these folks for years to come.”<br /><br />—<b>Brent Hartinger</b>, author of <i>Geography Club</i> and <i>The Order of the Poison Oak</i><br /><br /><br />“In <i>The Full Spectrum</i> a generation of new voices boldly tells its stories—sometimes hilarious, other times heart-wrenching, but always ringing with truth.”<br /><br />—<b>Alex Sanchez</b>, author of <i>Rainbow Boys</i> and <i>So Hard to Say</i>Billyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10655989332150881637noreply@blogger.com