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   Book Info

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Surface Tension: Love, Sex, and Politics between Lesbians and Straight Women  
Author: Meg Daly (Editor)
ISBN: 068480221X
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
Addressing seemingly all the permutations of lesbian/straight relationships and identity (the friendship between gay and straight women, straight women who pass as gay women, bisexual women, sexual relations with lesbians who eventually become straight), poet and essayist Daly's collection is certainly wide-ranging, but it's also rather formless. Many of the pieces are confessional, but readers (or readers likely to buy this book) will find that the guilt, the disapproval, not to mention the mechanics, sound familiar. Some writing is jargon-filled ("culturally I am woman-identified"; "I told Becky it was a little hard for me to be nonreductive") or just bad ("maybe she's desirous in general currently and I'm receptive to desirousness."). There is some good writing: notably Lisa Palac's delightful, bemused description of sexual experimentation through the personals and Guinevere Turner's touching account of a chance encounter with a woman who shared her childhood in a commune. Two straight women, perhaps because they are outsiders among outsiders, give very clear readings of social and political complications: Ann Powers discusses the muddled issue of straight women committed to queer politics, while Daphne Merkin is painfully honest in her opinion that male homosexuality has a greater validity than lesbianism: "When I think of two women together, I think of it as the default position... I have no doubt that somewhere in this assessment floats a sadder, more insidious piece of reality, having to do with the way women continue to be perceived by society at large and how we in turn assess one another." Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
Essays, short stories, and interviews representing a broad diversity of views and voices make up this energizing and enjoyable book that provokes thought, laughter, and tears. Editor Daly sorts the contents into six categories: "Best Friends," "Romantic Love," "Curiosity, Desire, and Sex," "Passing and Solidarity," "Blurred Boundaries; or, Which One Is the Lesbian?" and "Visibility, Community, and Our Separate Spheres." Outstanding specific pieces include an interview with Robin Morgan and Gloria Steinem on their "friendship beyond sisterhood" ; Harriet Brown's account of a growing spiritual sisterhood with a sibling; Carla Trujillo's stunning account of losing a former lover and longtime friend because of the woman's marriage to a threatened, inflexible man; Susie Bright on the curious allure of straight women (who may turn out to be not so straight, after all); a meditation on conceptual lesbianism by Dorothy Allison that includes wonderfully witty notes on "political" and "spiritual" lesbianism; a delightful commentary on sharing a bathroom by Louise Rafkin and Barbara Selfridge; and a riveting Grace Paley story on communication between women. Whitney Scott


Book Description
Representing a fascinating spectrum of feelings and opinions about lesbianism, the friendships women share -- or fear -- and the rich diversity of personal choices women make today, this collection of brash and thoughtful essays, stories, and interviews offers-- Dorothy Allison on what it means to be a lesbian-- Carla Trujillo on the impact of "sexual betrayal" by an ex-lover-- Elizabeth Wurtzel on the creative freedom experienced only by lesbians-- Susie Bright on the sexual dance between lesbians and straight women-- Guinevere Turner on the pain of reconciling one's sexual orientation with past relationships




Surface Tension: Love, Sex, and Politics between Lesbians and Straight Women

ANNOTATION

The voices of Dorothy Allison, Gloria Steinem, Robin Morgan, Susie Bright, Sarah Schulman, Gloria Anzaldua, and other women--lesbian, bisexual, and straight--come together in this illuminating exploration of the relationships among women. National ads/media.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Representing a fascinating spectrum of feelings and opinions about lesbianism, the friendships women share - or fear - and the rich diversity of personal choices women make today, this collection of brash and thoughtful essays, stories, and interviews offers Dorothy Allison on what it means to be a lesbian, Carla Trujillo on the impact of "sexual betrayal" by an ex-lover, Elizabeth Wurtzel on the creative freedom experienced only by lesbians, Susie Bright on the sexual dance between lesbians and straight women, and Guinevere Turner on the pain of reconciling one's sexual orientation with past relationships.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Addressing seemingly all the permutations of lesbian/straight relationships and identity (the friendship between gay and straight women, straight women who pass as gay women, bisexual women, sexual relations with lesbians who eventually become straight), poet and essayist Daly's collection is certainly wide-ranging, but it's also rather formless. Many of the pieces are confessional, but readers (or readers likely to buy this book) will find that the guilt, the disapproval, not to mention the mechanics, sound familiar. Some writing is jargon-filled (``culturally I am woman-identified''; ``I told Becky it was a little hard for me to be nonreductive'') or just bad (``maybe she's desirous in general currently and I'm receptive to desirousness.''). There is some good writing: notably Lisa Palac's delightful, bemused description of sexual experimentation through the personals and Guinevere Turner's touching account of a chance encounter with a woman who shared her childhood in a commune. Two straight women, perhaps because they are outsiders among outsiders, give very clear readings of social and political complications: Ann Powers discusses the muddled issue of straight women committed to queer politics, while Daphne Merkin is painfully honest in her opinion that male homosexuality has a greater validity than lesbianism: ``When I think of two women together, I think of it as the default position... I have no doubt that somewhere in this assessment floats a sadder, more insidious piece of reality, having to do with the way women continue to be perceived by society at large and how we in turn assess one another.'' (Jan.)

     



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