Immagine dell'autore.

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11 opere 197 membri 4 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: Elisa

Serie

Opere di Keith Hale

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
YYYY-06-03
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di nascita
Arkansas, USA
Luogo di residenza
Arkansas, USA
Austin, Texas, USA
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Guam, USA Possessions
Platteville, Wisconsin, USA
Attività lavorative
novelist
essayist
editor
professor
Organizzazioni
University of Wisconsin, Platteville, Wisconsin, USA
Breve biografia
Keith Hale succeeded where many had failed when he convinced the Rupert Brooke Trust to allow him to edit a collection of the poet's letters that had been sealed for eighty years due to their homosexual themes. That edition, Friends and Apostles, was published by Yale University Press. Hale's first two books also were groundbreaking: His novel Clicking Beat on the Brink of Nada, first published in the Netherlands and immediately banned in the United Kingdom during Margaret Thatcher's Operation Tiger, remains unique in its treatment of teen homosexuality, socialism, and existentialism. Hale also published the first and only account of gay life in the Balkans before the walls of Communism crumbled in his travelogue In the Land of Alexander. A fourth book, Torn Allegiances, deals with gays in the military. Hale also has published essays on Dickens, Rumi, Sa'di, Hafiz, David Garnett, and gay Philippine literature. Hale is currently (06/03/2014) Associate Professor at University of Wisconsin, Platteville, with specialization in English education, gay studies, young adult literature, the teaching of composition, modern British and American literature, and Filipino literature. Hale is a native of Arkansas and also has made his home in Austin, Amsterdam, and Guam. Reference the "Reviews and Ramblings: Keith Hale" link above.

Utenti

Recensioni

After the great Clicking Beat, I was expecting another good book from the author. Letters to a Shooting Star felt like an aimless novel. I could not even get myself to like the main leads. There was nothing much to like. In fact, the story on Ben was messy, jumping here and there when the author was trying to portray his childhood. There was nothing much on Ben and Ethan. What a waste of my time and money.
 
Segnalato
starlight70 | Sep 27, 2013 |
Clicking Beat on the Brick of Nada is a cleverly written novel, contained some intense dialogues about ideologies, religions and theories. These were discussed between Trotsky and his male crush, Cody, as well as some sharing from Trotsky's mother, an Economics professor. I would have appreciated them if I was prepared for them. I was not because I thought I was sitting down to read about the coming of age experience of a teen guy, falling for his straight friend. I was ready to read about the hardship, silly crushes and infatuation of Trotsky and not some adult conversation.

Somewhere halfway through the novel I was asking myself where this book was heading to. I had no interest in the side activities the characters - Trotsky, Cody, Christian, Flipping, Sarah, Freddy (Trotsky's brother) and Mark were doing. I did not even feel the significance of the involvement of Christian, Flipping and Sarah in the storyline. However, this was redeemed by the few chapters at the end of the book. Somehow, the story-telling picked up the pace when Trotsky's mother was sacked from her university and Cody began to explore further his interest in Trotsky.

If only somewhere in the beginning where it was hinted clearly that Cody was straight (instead of the insistence that there should be no label on sexual orientation), perhaps I could understand the story better, as to why there was hardly any sexual tension when the two boys were together.

Would I recommend this book to others? Well, only if they have gone through the other gay themed novels and are looking for more, or looking for something different. This is a good book, but not exactly what I had in mind when I first bought the book.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
starlight70 | 1 altra recensione | Feb 22, 2012 |
Cody, or as its author wanted to title it, and as he did in the reprint edition, Clicking Beat on the Brink of Nada, is at the same time one of the most easy and most difficult novel I have read. Easy because you fall in love for all the characters, Trotsky, Cody, Mark, Freddy, Christian, Flipping, Sarah, all of them so real and simple that they can be your high school mate, your neighbour, your brother; easy because, despite being written in an almost immaculate style (if not perfect at all), it’s not boring or pedantic, and it calls both to young adult than adult readers. Difficult because it’s one of the saddest novel I have ever read, but it’s a strange type of “sad”, I’m not crying, as often do when I’m moved by a novel, it’s more like clamp around the heart, a feeling I think will remain long after I put down this book.

I knew this was not an happily ever after novel, I was not expecting it, but the range of reviews run from nice to awesome, so I had to read it. And really I’m happy, it was worth the experience; plus for most of the book, even if knowing, I had not the feeling of imminent drama, the mood was really in line with the story, they were teenagers we were talking about, and as teenagers they behaved. In some point slightly funny, in some other very romantic and sometime even a little bit sexy, I really forgot that I was supposed to wait for a tragedy to strike.

Trotsky is in love with Cody, but Cody is straight. This is not an unrequited love, since even if Trotsky is not able to realize his love for Cody, they nevertheless build a strong relationship, something that is for sure more than friendship. Plus Cody is really the epitome of best friend, someone that will be always there when you need you most, and that will arrive to do everything to bring you comfort. Something that I like of Cody is that I think he was confident of his sexuality, and so not “threatened” by the fact that someone could be gay; even before Trotsky, Cody had a bond with Christian, who is openly gay, and he doesn’t question him or Flipping, Christian’s friend and maybe lover. The bond between Trotsky and Cody is strong, a bond probably stronger than love.

Trotsky will find love in the arms of Mark, his little brother’s best friend. Mark is 14 years old against Trotsky 17, but he is way more experienced on a sexual level. It’s Mark that seduces Trotsky, and it’s at the same time an healing and learning sex. Healing because it allows Trotsky to balance his relationship with Cody, learning because it gives him a piece of him that was essential for his growing, something he would not be able to find with Cody. Both Cody than Mark are essential to Trotsky’s development into a man and I agree with another reviewer who was hoping for Keith Hale to write a novel about an adult Trotsky; sadly I don’t think it’s in the stars and to whom wants to know what happened to Trotsky, I think the only way is to imagine, he is maybe a poet, he is maybe a teacher, he is maybe an activist… in a way or the other I think he made his own all the teachings he received from Christian, Mark, Freddy, Cody and all the wonderful soul he met the year when he was seventeen.

http://www.amazon.com/dp/141965991X/?tag=elimyrevandra-20
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
elisa.rolle | 1 altra recensione | Nov 8, 2011 |
Fascinating collection if interested in the personal and privileged lives of the early 20th century intelligentsia. The referenced names are all recognizable, though knowing so much about the private lives of Rupert Brooke and James Strachey feels a bit voyeuristic. However, the book is enlightening enough as regards to historical and social settings of the time.
 
Segnalato
furius | Aug 25, 2009 |

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Statistiche

Opere
11
Utenti
197
Popolarità
#111,410
Voto
½ 3.4
Recensioni
4
ISBN
25

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