Home :: Books :: Gay & Lesbian  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian

Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Crystal Diary: A Novel

Crystal Diary: A Novel

List Price: $12.95
Your Price: $12.95
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Read it with Naked in the Promised Land!
Review: ... In Faderman's book, Frankie Hucklenbroich is Nicky, a baby butch with a puppydog crush on Faderman, a teenager who is already a pinup girl for men's magazines. Faderman is a lesbian, but leaves Nicky to marry a gay man, which temporarily pleases parents all around. Nicky, in despair, disappears for years. A Crystal Diary fills in what happens in that time (in a lightly fictionalized way -- here Lil is Jil) as Nicky, never forgetting her first true love, tries to hide the pain of the loss of both that love and her family's love behind a facade of "butchinality" and pimphood. Nicky stays on the move, hustling her way from city to city, but can't leave her unhappiness behind. When she finally asks for help, it is Faderman -- now a professor who stripped her way through college and graduate school -- who comes to her rescue. Not only is the life story amazing -- the writing in A Crystal Diary is both economical and vivid; it takes the author very few words to paint an incredible picture of a world where attitude is everything and femmes are the prize.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Read it with Naked in the Promised Land!
Review: This book received great reviews in the lesbian press, but it was seriously under-promoted and never got the reader attention that it so justly deserved. After reading the manuscript, I was invited by the publisher to write a blurb for the book. Unfortunately, the blurb was never used, but I want to reiterate it here: A CRYSTAL DIARY is poignant and true and written from the gut. It's about working class lesbian hurt, anger, and alienation--and about lesbian strength, the will to survive, and noble courage. I've long admired Frankie Hucklenbroich's work, and in this novel it comes to brilliant and fabulous fruitiion.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A neglected classic
Review: This book received great reviews in the lesbian press, but it was seriously under-promoted and never got the reader attention that it so justly deserved. After reading the manuscript, I was invited by the publisher to write a blurb for the book. Unfortunately, the blurb was never used, but I want to reiterate it here: A CRYSTAL DIARY is poignant and true and written from the gut. It's about working class lesbian hurt, anger, and alienation--and about lesbian strength, the will to survive, and noble courage. I've long admired Frankie Hucklenbroich's work, and in this novel it comes to brilliant and fabulous fruitiion.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hucklenbroich's first novel
Review: This novel, Hucklenbroich's first, is another in a long line of well writtenworks chosen to see the light of print by Firebrand Books. Not that apublisher makes a work worth reading, but this publisher has a history of selecting authors who have talent. A CRYSTAL DIARY is part of that tradition. The fact that Hucklenbroich's other works, poetry and short fiction, have been included in anthologies edited by Lillian Faderman and by Joan Nestle provides those in need of endorsements with substantial ones. While the subject matter is not always what some lesbians might find politically correct, the novel is very well written and gives an excellent sense of place and time. These characters are not so much politically incorrect as they are simply products of their time and culture, and the author gives us an excellent sense of who and why each is as she is. Coming out in St. Louis, or almost anywhere else in the 1950's, and coming of age in a California caught in the cyclones of drug cultures and the open sexuality of the 60's and 70's, informs the self definitions of Hucklenbroich's baby butches and the women they fall in love and lust with. These are real people whom the author draws with believable accuracy and style. Regardless of your political views or definitions of what and who is attractive, you'll find this book engaging simply because it is thoughtfully written and heartfelt. If you have access to America Online, watch for an announcement about a live online interview with Hucklenbroich in late July, 1997. Go to keyword: LAMBDA RISING. If you miss the interview, a text of it will be archived at that keyword for later download.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates