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Clifford Chase (Writer) |
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Profile created June 9, 2008
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The Hurry-Up Song: A Memoir of Losing My Brother
(1995)
Out of love, anger, and grief Clifford Chase has crafted a moving and
brilliant memoir of loss and family bonds. With startling honesty, he
evokes scenes of life in a suburban American family and illuminates the
strong ties that are woven between two gay brothers as they become adults.
Chase documents how, in turn, the family dynamics change forever when one
brother-the elder, the admired, the feared, the loved-weathers
AIDS-related illnesses and ultimately dies. This is a searching,
unsentimental account of how AIDS steals away loved ones and how the
wounds of loss come to be healed.
Winkie (2006)
In Cliff Chase’s scathingly funny and surprisingly
humane debut novel, the zeitgeist assumes the form of a one-foot-tall
ursine Everyman — a mild-mannered teddy bear named Winkie who finds
himself on the wrong side of America’s war on terror. After suffering
decades of neglect from the children who've forgotten him, Winkie summons
the courage to take charge of his fate, and so he hops off the shelf,
jumps out the window, and takes to the forest. But just as he is
discovering the joys and wonders of mobility, Winkie gets trapped in the
jaws of a society gone rabid with fear and paranoia. Having come upon the
cabin of the mad professor who stole his beloved, Winkie is suddenly
surrounded by the FBI, who instantly conclude that he is the evil
mastermind behind dozens of terrorist attacks that have been traced to the
forest. Terrified and confused, Winkie is brought to trial, where the
prosecution attempts to seal the little bear’s fate by interviewing
witnesses from the trials of Galileo, Socrates, John Scopes, and Oscar
Wilde. Emotionally gripping and intellectually compelling, Winkie
exposes the absurdities of our age and explores what it means to be human
in an increasingly barbaric world.
Queer 13: Lesbian And Gay Writers Recall Seventh Grade (1998), Clifford Chase, ed.
Seventh grade: You remember it, don't you? Sweet
sixteen seemed impossibly far away, an elegant, unattainable future. All
that we had was the doldrums of thirteen -- not so sweet, and definitely
queer.
Now, some of the finest observers of the gay experience take us back to
the homerooms and hallways of our youth, in a collection of original
essays that captures that time of adolescence when social and sexual
development was at its raging worst.
From gym class to kissing parties, obsessive crushes to after-school
pummelings, every day held the possibility of discovery -- and complete
humiliation. For those of us who are gay, our sexuality added another
twist, that extra little way we didn't quite fit in. It was a time of
becoming who we truly are, a passage into adulthood that was as memorable
as it was agonizing. Queer 13 tells these tales of teenage trauma -- from
funny to painful, reflective to literary -- all ringing with the universal
truths of a poignant, extraordinary time.
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