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TWILIGHT MAN by Liz Brown

TWILIGHT MAN

Love and Ruin in the Shadows of Hollywood and the Clark Empire

by Liz Brown

Pub Date: May 18th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-14-313290-5
Publisher: Penguin

Queer lives in Gilded Age America.

In 2003, while visiting San Francisco to celebrate her late grandmother’s life, Brown discovered, among her grandmother’s belongings, a photograph of a young, handsome man. She knew nothing about him at the time, but her discovery of Harrison Post sparked this absorbing debut book, a history of power, corruption, greed, and betrayal: her family’s saga. Her grandmother’s aunt had been the wife of millionaire tycoon and philanthropist William Andrews Clark Jr., who founded and supported the Los Angeles Philharmonic and established the monumental Clark Library at UCLA, where Clark housed his precious collection of Oscar Wilde letters. The son of a ruthless copper baron, half brother to the infamous recluse Huguette Clark, he was—like Brown—gay; Post was his lover. Aiming “to recuperate a lost gay history as a way to assert my own queer lineage,” the author uncovered a complicated tale: “a tangled, bewildering conspiracy about a man who’d been swept into one of the greatest fortunes in America only to be cast to the margins, a man taken captive in bizarre and gothic circumstances by his own family,” a man who survived imprisonment during World War II—and a man who proved to be a master of reinvention. Albert Weis Harrison met Clark Jr., a widower, when he was a salesman in Los Angeles. By then, Harrison had taken the surname Post, and soon he was traveling in Clark’s entourage as his secretary, living in his mansion as his ward, and benefiting from Clark’s considerable largesse. Drawing on archival material, Brown recounts the eventful trajectory of the men’s lives, the charges that they managed to avoid through bribery or subterfuge, and the shady business dealings that maintained Clark’s wealth. The author is forthright in portraying the Clark family’s ruthlessness—especially wielded by William Clark Sr.—as well as Gilded Age society’s relentless persecution of homosexuals.

Thorough research informs an often sordid, entertaining history.