Scene magazine - July 2021

Page 43

Book Reviews by Eric Page ) Chloe O Davis The Queens’ English (£14.99, Square Peg). This is very well researched guide to the LGBTQ+ community’s contributions to the English language - an intersectional, inclusive, illustrated glossary featuring more than 800 terms created by and for queer culture. It’s a fun, engaging and comprehensive guide to modern gay slang, queer theory terms, and playful colloquialisms that define and celebrate. This modern dictionary provides an in-depth look at queer language, including terms influenced by poet Sappho, leather scenes, New York’s underground queer ball culture and up-to-date lexicography from RuPaul’s Drag Race. It’s designed with a breath-taking collection of icon and colours that makes the book a real pleasure to use and includes historical insights into the construction and influences that shaped queer language, including the linguistic importance of pronouns, gender identity, Stonewall, and more. Every time I opened the book I learned something new, enjoying turning the pages of this celebration of queer history, identity, and the limitless imagination of the LGBTQ+ community. Editor Chloe O Davis is to be commended for this stylish and informative addition to exploring modern queer languages, how they get used, and where they come from. ) Miguel M Morales, Bruce Owens Grimm & Tiff Ferentini Fat and Queer (£14.99, Jessica Kingsley Publishers). We’re here. We’re queer. We’re fat. This one-of-a-kind collection of prose and poetry radically explores the intersection of fat and queer identities, with a superb collection of new voices,

and some established queer and trans writers. The stories in the book are filled with passion and charm, avoiding cliché and embracing a Rubenesque radical revolution, not just marking out territory but building new spaces, not taking away with critique but giving with generous warm-hearted constructive and illuminating narratives which offer real opportunities to celebrate and love yourself. All of you. With voluptuous voices as diverse as the big bodies celebrated in these stories we experience some seriously intimate stuff – not all of it easy to read, but each story written with a connective grace which puts the author firmly in control. You read it and think, ‘I so understand what that feels like’. I enjoy a good anthology and one which highlights the experiences and adventures of anyone who has to navigate the body-shaming highways of modern life, before

turning off to the sedate byways of homo queer fat folx is a treat to find. The trio of editors have selected stories, poems, prose and a rather delightful stream of consciousness which say, loud and proud, hey I’m here, and fat, come love it with me. ) Tom Rasmussen First Comes Love (£14.99, Bloomsbury Publishing). This is a charming book, by turns funny, educational, historically illuminating, jawdropping and written with a warm and informative style which delighted me. Author Rasmussen, who has quite the interesting life outside of writing, has spent rather a lot of time obsessing over and researching, interviewing, attending, examining, asking and wondering about marriage, and lays out some of their findings in this seriously funny look at the way we’ve changed our attitudes to this most ancient of institutions. Although droll, Rasmussen is relentlessly respectful, allowing us to draw our own conclusion of some of the challenging ideas and people they come across in their adventures into matrimony, certainly pausing and letting us consider contradiction or confusion but always bringing it back to personal experience and real people, taking about their own lives and how they build relationships which works for them. All the while offering up a side-line in personal observation which pushed this book a little further into ‘I love reading this’ territory. We are asked to consider marriage as an achievement, a compromise, a selling-out, a practical solution and given experiences of authentic lives of what marriage means to a range of people across the spectrum of sexuality and class, and what the future looks like for this most historic and universal

Scene 43

of institutions. Rasmussen holds up this glass bowl of performative social affirmation, turns it around in their careful hands, letting the light of a rather crystal-sharp and witty mind bounce off the deeply incised carved patterns, pointing out heritage and novelty, wear and provenance, and then settles it down again, with a glint in their eye and a ‘what now?’. First Comes Love is a welcome, queer-centred examination of marriage and the people who choose to embrace it, and a few who never, ever, will. ) Candas Jane Dorsey The Adventures of Isabel (£8.99, Pushkin Press). Not to be confused with the Ogden Nash poem, although very much in the bonkers celebratory style of his prose and radically mind-popping daftness, this is a delightful entertaining book from (one guesses the first of) the Epitome Apartments Mysteries. Author Dorsey adores words, pokes, tickles, makes them perform

these incredibly funny feats of phraseology and all the while packs in the narrative tension. I adore a writer who’s both clever and interesting, and combines it with a hefty slap from the bizarre, and Dorsey does just this. Positioning their queer female protagonist at the heart of this devilishly intricate story, we get to enjoy a particularly good murder mystery while examining some serious social issues from a queer perspective. It’s like Thursday Next on mushrooms or Arthur Dent on poppers, wild, daft, silly, laugh-out-loud, phrase-stealingly wonderful, dripping in ironic posturing but with a core of hard, solid reality which anchors this most wild of tales firmly in reality. Loved it.


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Articles inside

Classical Notes

5min
page 40

ART MATTERS

2min
page 41

ALL THAT JAZZ

2min
page 41

Book Reviews

4min
page 43

QUEER IN BRAZIL

3min
pages 46-47

AT HOME

3min
page 48

CRAIG’S THOUGHTS

5min
page 49

STUFF & THINGS

2min
page 50

ROGER’S RUMINATIONS

2min
page 50

RAE’S REFLECTIONS

4min
page 51

NETTY’S WORLD

2min
page 52

HOMELY HOMILY

2min
page 52

More To Me Than HIV

2min
page 53

Trans police officer celebrated in Pride of Birmingham Awards

4min
page 58

Birmingham’s LGBTQ+ community pays tribute to Conrad Guest

1min
page 59

Wallsall Pride 2021 cancelled

1min
page 59

Coventry Pride launches ‘Summer of Pride’

2min
page 59

Dutch queens invading Manchester this September

1min
page 60

Up close and personal with LoUis Cyfer

1min
page 60

A walk through Intra

2min
page 61

Medway Pride Radio

2min
page 61

Scene in Manchester with Dys Alexia

3min
page 60

SASSY PLANET

3min
page 45

INKANDESCENT

5min
page 44

ALLAN JAY

4min
pages 39-43

WELL OILED SISTERS

8min
pages 36-37

BILLIE RAY MARTIN

5min
page 38

BRIGHTON BOX

4min
pages 34-35

MISS MARTY

6min
pages 32-33

GAY BRIGHTON PAST

3min
page 31

KRISTEN BJORN: A LIFE IN PORN

7min
pages 28-30

THE SPIRIT OF BRIGHTON

8min
pages 26-27

ELLIOT DOUGLAS

4min
pages 22-23

BRIGHTON BEAR WEEKEND

5min
pages 24-25

TRANS COMMUNITY

3min
pages 19-21

BLACK PRIDE: INTERSECTIONALITY

4min
page 13

TRANS PRIDE LONDON 2021

3min
pages 14-17

TRANS PRIDE BRIGHTON & HOVE

4min
page 18

KINK AT PRIDE

4min
page 11

DO MORE AND DO IT BETTER

5min
page 12
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