Reviews tagging 'Misogyny'

High-Risk Homosexual by Edgar Gomez

2 reviews

mood_reading_maya's review against another edition

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medium-paced

3.0

In my hunt for nonfiction that looks at the intersections between queerness and Latinidad, this was one of the books that I landed on during my library catalog search.

Gomez relays personal experiences as a child, teen, and young man navigating the world as a gay man. While there are moments of insightful reflection on themes of masculinity, machismo, in/visibility, and community, most of the essays contend with Gomez's struggle with internalized homophobia. I can appreciate this message, but it wasn't quite what I was looking for. It's heavy on the personal anecdotes and storytelling and very light on the broader conclusions or reflections on what they meant for the queer & Latinx community. Just...a touch too surface level? The sections centered on Pulse Nightclub had the most depth.

The narration, done by the author, was really not for me. Lots of repeated lip smacking and breathy pauses after every other sentence forced me to break up my listening because it was distracting.

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kgmittty's review

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emotional funny hopeful reflective fast-paced

4.75

“… you can lose part of yourself to save the rest.”

Edgar Gomez’s writing is precise and beautiful and cuts straight to the heart of what so many of us have feared and loved growing up queer in a world that hates queerness.

Following him through snapshots of his life as he tries simultaneously to hide and embrace who he is so familiar and heartbreaking.

He reckons with the inherent contradictions of being effeminate and gay, how masculinity is covered by gay men while also being a standard they can never truly live up to in the eyes of others. His nature is something he tries to camouflage but is constantly met with the reality that it’s not enough — people can somehow see though it and hate him for it, this thing that he is and cannot control and still loves in so many ways.

“Everything I’d been taught about surviving was wrong. I wasn’t surviving before. I was existing.”

Hiding is not living. Surviving is one thing, but shoving down parts of yourself to appease others kills a part of you. Gomez spends this memoir recounting the steps he took to come to that realization in a way o could see parts of myself reflected in, even though there is so much that separates our experiences.

He speaks about his identity as a gay Latino in a way that tries to hold all the contradictions they carry. His passages about Pulse and the aftermath of the massacre there are especially gutting, but so so tender. They’re something I think everyone should read.

This book is about survival, about learning to face yourself in a broken mirror. Sometimes what you are given is not enough, but each step you take makes the path a little more clear for the ones behind you. And sometimes that’s all you can do and that is enough.

There’s a lot more I could say about this because I loved every page of it. But for now I’ll leave off with Gomez’s final words:

“What you do when you’re not afraid anymore is the same thing you do when you are: Keep Going.”

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