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   Book Info

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Eminent Maricones: Arenas, Lorca, Puig, and Me  
Author: Jaime Manrique
ISBN: 0299161846
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

Book Description
Jaime Manrique weaves into his own memoir the lives of three important twentieth-century Hispanic writers: the Argentine Manuel Puig, author of Kiss of the Spider Woman; the Cuban Reinaldo Arenas, author of Before Night Falls; and Spanish poet and playwright Federico García Lorca. "Manrique brings to [these] stories a novelist's eye for telling detail and a poet's gift for metaphor and condensation. . . . His double vision yields insights into Puig, Arenas, and Lorca unavailable to a writer less attuned to the complex interplay of culture and sexuality, as well as that of race and class in Latino and Anglo societies."—George DeStefano, The Nation

From the Publisher
Living Out: Gay and Lesbian Autobiographies Joan Larkin and David Bergman, Series Editors

About the Author
Jaime Manrique is the author of the novels Twilight at the Equator, Latin Moon in Manhattan, and Colombian Gold, as well as poetry and short stories. Among his honors are Colombia’s National Poetry Award, a grant from the Foundation for Contemporary Performance Arts, and a Guggenheim fellowship. He lives in New York City.




Eminent Maricones: Arenas, Lorca, Puig, and Me

FROM THE PUBLISHER

For the first time, in riveting and eloquent detail, Jaime Manrique describes the final days of his mentors, Manuel Puig and Reinaldo Arenas, both of whom died in tragic circumstances due to AIDS. Manrique also reveals Federico Garcia Lorca's struggle with homophobia and that poet's relationship with an American boyfriend.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

A novelist (Latin Moon in Manhattan) and poet, Manrique has fashioned a personal and sexual memoir out of five essays (four of them previously published) that range from revelatory autobiography to literary criticism and insightful examinations of the lives of noted Latin writers. Opening with an account of his emotionally difficult adolescence in Colombia and closing with the strange story of a doppelg nger, Manrique charts his own growth as a writer as well as his eventual acceptance of his homosexual desires. Interweaving his own life experiences with literary analysis, he devotes the bulk of the work to recollections of his friendships with novelists Manual Puig (Kiss of the Spider Woman) and Reinaldo Arenas (Farewell to the Sea), and an analysis of the homoeroticism of Federico Garcia Lorca's poems and plays. Stating that these "three writers... were maricones--homosexual men whose destiny was their sexual orientation," Manrique boldly recontextualizes their work (and his own) in relation to their homosexuality. He is at his best when discussing his own work--"The images of homosexuality in my work were very warped: like Garcia Lorca, violence and homosexual self-hatred were beneath everything I wrote"--and when he discusses dramatic events such as Arenas's and Puig's deaths from AIDS. This is provocative material, but too often its potential feels only half-explored, leaving the reader wishing for more details and depth. (July) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

     



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