“For us in the South,” he has written, “the family is a field where craziness grows like weeds.” Strange plants that offer fodder for art, he soon realized. His father, who worked in refrigeration and air conditioning, was a “violent alcoholic,” he says, and his mother owned and managed a cemetery. Grimsley was born in rural Grifton, North Carolina.
Before I met him, I read his books with the sense that the knowledge therein was making me more free.” “His work holds a particular place in Southern and queer literature,” says Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Jericho Brown.
Grimsley has been blazing trails with snappy rainbow flags throughout a prolific career in which he’s produced 13 books in different genres and 30 plays, with work collected in more than 20 anthologies - racking up Stonewall and Lambda literary prizes along the way. “But 20 years later, his writing is even more emotionally open, and he’s allowed himself the risk of optimism and clarity.” “Jim’s ‘Dream Boy’ won him a passionate following for providing some of these very things,” Levine continues. “As someone who grew up gay in the 1970s, I cannot express what it would have meant to me to have a book like this, a book with a gay protagonist who is so true, real and vulnerable a plot that gives readers a transporting, exceptionally sexy romance and an ending that offers genuine hope. His editor, Arthur Levine, echoes those sentiments. It was in high school that I needed to read about relationships between boys.” I searched out books like John Rechy’s ‘City of Night’ and Gore Vidal’s ‘The City and the Pillar’ in my 20s, and they were amazing. Then I read James Baldwin and was swept away by it. “The Mary Renault books that I read were a big help. “A book like this one would have made life much easier when I was a teenager,” he says. With it, Grimsley has written the kind of book that might have eased his fraught coming-of-age as a gay man from the rural South. No spoilers, but suffice it to say “Dove” has a happy ending, for a change. One function of creating your own world in a novel is that you can save yourself. like, hard to believe how much sex was happening.īut, don't take my word for it! Let's hear from Glenn.“It’s written for the YA market, but I hope older readers of all backgrounds will respond to the storytelling and recognize those heady feelings of first love,” Grimsley says in a phone interview from his home in Goldsboro, North Carolina.
There was tonnes of cruising that happened inside Drake's, but there was also a LOT that happened on the streets surrounding the business. At this point he was too young to go to the clubs, but too horny to stay home, and so he found himself gravitating towards the gay bookshop Drake's. It was post-Stonewall, so there was a new kind of hope and enthusiasm, and it was pre-AIDs and HIV, which meant there was less shame attached to sex.Īnd, it was at the tail end of the 70s that this week's guest, the award winning filmmaker Glenn Gaylord first moved to LA from Ohio. No one has quite pinpointed the exact years of this magical era, but the 70s were definitely a part of it.