In
Alvin Orloff's novel Gutterboys—written in 2004, but set in the punk
fever of the early 1980s—Jeremy Rabinowitz is a shy 19-year-old Jewish
kid desperate to fit in with the gay Manhattan avant-garde....or to just
find a boyfriend who'll love him forever. Unfortunately, the best he
can manage is to sneak into dance clubs with his (regrettably female)
best friend, Lizzie, the lead singer of a New Wave band.
Gutterboys
has all the workings of a standard fish-out-of-water story, but for a
single supernatural element. Watching over him, and constantly
manifesting on his shoulders, are the ghosts of Jeremy's two Jewish
grandmothers: Gramma Bea is a proper Englishwoman. Meanwhile, Nana Leah
is a fiercely traditional Russian Communist babushka. Each has her own
hangups: Leah has issues with Jeremy's budding homosexuality, and Bea
lectures Jeremy on his punk lifestyle: "Your behavior last night was
atrocious. Really, drinking straight out of the bottle!"
Jeremy's
quests prove fruitless almost without exception, but there's an honest
joy in watching him endure them, strengthening his shell and growing as a
person. In the almost-entirely male world of gay Manhattan, Jeremy's
strongest friendships, and his most enduring ones, are with the women in
his life.
- Matthue Roth for Jewniverse
No comments:
Post a Comment