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HEARING US OUT

VOICES FROM THE GAY AND LESBIAN COMMUNITY

Fifteen first-person narratives from Sutton (editor of The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books) cover a number of circumstances encountered by the gay and lesbian communities. Young and old—from teenager to grandmother—give a sharp taste of what it is like to be gay in America, including peer-group pressure to conform when young, coming out, and support groups for the heavily alienated. Life as a gay in the military, or a lesbian in the police force, or a religious gay person, is given real substance by contributors, as are the pleasures of playing in the lesbian softball league. And then there is AIDS and all the social, sexual, political, and educational baggage strewn in the wake of the dreaded virus. Material on the more radical aspects of gay and lesbian life, such as ACT-UP, gets short shrift, but the wealth of contexts is commendable and utterly accessible. Best of all, what emerges here are the notions of gay community, culture, and self- and mutual esteem. (Nonfiction. 12+)

Pub Date: Nov. 1, 1994

ISBN: 0-316-82326-0

Page Count: 127

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 1994

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ABUELA, DON'T FORGET ME

A visceral window into a survivor’s childhood and a testament to the enduring influence of unconditional love.

As palliative for his beloved Abuela's worsening dementia, memoirist Ogle offers her a book of childhood recollections.

Cast in episodic rushes of free verse and paralleling events chronicled in Free Lunch (2019) and Punching Bag (2021), the poems take the author from age 4 until college in a mix of love notes to his devoted, hardworking, Mexican grandmother; gnawing memories of fights and racial and homophobic taunts at school as he gradually becomes aware of his sexuality; and bitter clashes with both his mother, described as a harsh, self-centered deadbeat with seemingly not one ounce of love to give or any other redeeming feature, and the distant White father who threw him out the instant he came out. Though overall the poems are less about the author’s grandmother than about his own angst and issues (with searing blasts of enmity reserved for his birthparents), a picture of a loving intergenerational relationship emerges, offering moments of shared times and supportive exchanges amid the raw tallies of beat downs at home, sudden moves to escape creditors, and screaming quarrels. “My memories of a wonderful woman are written in words and verses and fragments in this book,” he writes in a foreword, “unable to be unwritten. And if it is forgotten, it can always be read again.”

A visceral window into a survivor’s childhood and a testament to the enduring influence of unconditional love. (Verse memoir. 13-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-324-01995-4

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Norton Young Readers

Review Posted Online: June 7, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2022

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EVERYTHING I NEED TO KNOW I LEARNED FROM A LITTLE GOLDEN BOOK

Ephemeral—unlike the art here (some of it, at least) and those fondly remembered little books.

Chicken soup for fans of Golden Books, from the line’s editorial director.

Reasoning that hard times have come to America (“The chickens have come home to roost, and their names are Debt, Depression, and Diabetes”), Muldrow offers this book as palliative. She gathers single illustrations from 61 Little Golden Books and adds pithy captions as anodynes, such as “Don’t panic…” (beneath Tibor Gergely’s 1948 image of a dismayed child holding detached braids) or “Have some pancakes” (Richard Scarry, 1949). Though some of her advice has a modern inflection (“Don’t forget your antioxidants!”), the pictures all come from titles published between 1942 and 1964 and so, despite the great diversity of artistic styles, have a quaint period look. Not to mention quaint period values, from views of apron-wearing housewives and pipe-smoking men (or bears) to, with but two exceptions, an all-white cast of humans. Furthermore, despite the title’s implication, the exhortations don’t always reflect the original story’s lesson or theme; rather than “Make a budget—and stick to it!” the lad in Miriam Young’s 5 Pennies To Spend (illustrated by Corinne Malvern, 1955) actually used his hoard to help others in need.

Ephemeral—unlike the art here (some of it, at least) and those fondly remembered little books. (Picture book. 12 & up)

Pub Date: Sept. 24, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-307-97761-8

Page Count: 96

Publisher: Golden Books/Random

Review Posted Online: Aug. 13, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2013

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