Edmund White’s A Boy’s Own Story: The Graphic Novel
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
A landmark American novel, hailed by the New York Times as J.D. Salinger crossed with Oscar Wilde, is masterfully reimagined as a timeless graphic novel. A Boy’s Own Story is a now-classic coming-of-age story, but with a twist: the young protagonist is growing up gay during one of the most oppressive periods in American history. Set in the time and place of author Edmund White’s adolescence, the Midwest of the 1950s, the novel became an immediate bestseller and, for many readers, was not merely about gay identity but the pain of being a child in a fractured family while looking for love in an anything-but-stable world. And yet the book quickly contributed to the literature of empowerment that grew out of the Stonewall riots and subsequent gay rights era. Readers are still swept up in the main character’s thoughts and dry humor, and many today remain shocked by the sexually confessional, and bold, nature of his revelations, his humorous observations, the comic situations and scenes the strangely erudite youthful narrator describes, the tenderness of his loneliness, and the vivid aching of his imagination. A Boy’s Own Story is lyrical, witty, unabashed, and authentic. Now, to bring this landmark novel to new life for today’s readers, White is joined by co-writers Brian Alessandro and Michael Carroll and artist Igor Karash for a stunning graphic novel interpretation. The poetic nuances of White’s language float across sumptuously painted panels that evoke 1950s Cincinnati, 1980s Paris, and every dreamlike moment in between. The result is a creative adaptation, in collaboration with Closure Creative, of the original 1982 A Boy’s Own Story with additional personal and historical elements from the authors’ lives.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this successful graphic adaptation, Brian Alessandro (Performer Non Grata) and Michael Carroll (Stella Maris) preserve the lyricism of White's semi-autobiographical 1982 novel, aided by Igor Karash's lush, painterly visuals. White's coming-of-age narrative centers on Edmund's adolescence in 1950s Ohio, with flash-forwards to his adulthood from the '60s through the '80s, foraying to N.Y.C. and Paris. A child of divorce, Edmond navigates fraught relationships with his arrogant, moneyed father, needy mother, and acerbic sister, while slowly coming to grips with his sexuality. He details his early sexual experimentations with other males, one boy in particular: "I'd already imagined Kevin as a sort of husband." At boarding school, teenage Edmund develops a crush on his gym teacher Mr. Pouchet, and in Chicago he falls under the influence of a married queer couple, Marilyn and Fred, who own a bookstore. Through their acquaintance, he decides queerness "wasn't so much about sexuality as it was about the reordering or redefinition of human relationships." Alessandro and Carrol have abridged White's complex, time-shifting tapestry smoothly, while Karash's muted color scheme evokes a rich, bittersweet nostalgia. This artful, heartfelt adaptation illuminates a modern classic for a new generation of readers.