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| Works by
David Leavitt (Writer) |
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Profile created 2004
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The Lost Language of Cranes (1988)
Set in the 1980s against the backdrop of a swiftly
gentrifying Manhattan, The Lost Language of Cranes tells the story of
twenty-five-year-old Philip, who realizes he must come out to his parents
after falling in love for the first time with a man. Philip's parents are
facing their own crisis: pressure from developers and the loss of their
longtime home. But the real threat to this family is Philip's father's own
struggle with his latent homosexuality, realized only in his Sunday
afternoon visits to gay porn theaters. Philip's admission to his parents
and his father's hidden life provoke changes that forever alter the
landscape of their worlds.
Equal Affections: A Novel (1989)
The vivid and emotionally powerful story of a family in
crisis.
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While England Sleeps (1995)
David Leavitt has earned high praise for his
empathetic portrayal of human sexuality and the complexities of intimate
relationships. Now, with While England Sleeps, available for the first
time in two years, Leavitt moves beyond precisely controlled domestic
drama to create a historical novel, one that has greater breadth and
resonance than anything he has written before. Set against the rise of
fascism in 1930s Europe, While England Sleeps tells the story of a love
affair between the aristocratic young British writer Brian Botsford, who
thinks homosexuality is something he will outgrow, and Edward Phelan, a
sensitive and idealistic working-class employee of the London Underground
and a Communist party member. When the strains of class difference, sexual
taboo, and Brian's ambivalence impel Edward to volunteer to fight against
Franco in Spain, Brian pursues him across Europe and into the violent
chaos of war.
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The Page Turner (1998)
At the age of eighteen Paul Porterfield dreams of
playing piano at the world's great concert halls, yet the closest he's
come has been to turn pages for his idol, Richard Kennington, a former
prodigy who is entering middle age. The two begin a love affair that
affects their lives in ways neither could have predicted. "Absorbing from
start to finish" (The New Yorker), The Page Turner testifies to the
tenacity of the human spirit and the resiliency of the human heart.
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Martin Bauman or, A Sure Thing (2000)
David Leavitt's deliciously sharp new novel is a
multilayered dissection of literary and sexual mores in the get-ahead
eighties, when outrageous success lay seductively within reach of any
young writer ambitious enough to grab it.
At the dawn of the Reagan era, Martin Bauman -- nineteen, clever,
talented, and insecure -- is enrolled at a prestigious college with a
hard-won place under the tutelage of the legendary and enigmatic Stanley
Flint, a man who can make or break careers with the flick of a weary hand.
Martin is poised on the brink of the writing life, and his twin desires,
equally urgent, are to get into print and find his way out of the closet.
As he makes his way through the wilderness of New York -- falling in love,
going to parties, and coming to terms with the emerging chaos of AIDS --
Martin matures from brilliant student, to apprentice in a Manhattan
publishing house, to one of the golden few to be anointed by the highly
regarded magazine in which it is every young writer's dream to be
published. Yet despite his apparent success, his emotional and creative
desires stubbornly refuse to be satisfied, and his every achievement is
haunted by that austere and troubling image of literary perfection, his
elusive mentor, Stanley Flint.
An irresistibly entertaining epic, erotic, honest, and funny, MARTIN
BAUMAN lays bare the life of the artist, in all his venal, envious,
poignant glory.
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Crossing St. Gotthard (2002)
Story of a trip through the nine-mile tunnel of St.
Gotthard in the Swiss Alps, the beginning of an Italian grand tour.
Leavitt constructs a compelling tale of two boys, escorted by their mother
and their cousin, who is acting as tutor, and the hidden emotions that
guide them on their journey. The story focuses on the boys' cousin,
Harold, and his acutely self-conscious behavior that blends both levity
and pathos.
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Florence: A Delicate Case (2002)
David Leavitt brings the wonders and mysteries of
Florence alive, illuminating why it is, and always has been, one of the
most popular tourist destinations in the world.
The third in the critically-acclaimed Writer and the City Series-in which
some of the world's finest novelists reveal the secrets of the cities they
know best-Florence is a lively account of expatriate life in the
'city of the lily'.
Why has Florence always drawn so many English and American visitors? (At
the turn of the century, the Anglo-American population numbered more than
thirty thousand.) Why have men and women fleeing sex scandals
traditionally settled here? What is it about Florence that has made it so
fascinating-and so repellent-to artists and writers over the years?
Moving fleetly between present and past and exploring characters both real
and fictional, Leavitt's narrative limns the history of the foreign colony
from its origins in the middle of the nineteenth century until its demise
under Mussolini, and considers the appeal of Florence to figures as
diverse as Tchaikovsky, E.M. Forster, Ronald Firbank, and Mary McCarthy.
Lesser-known episodes in Florentine history-the moving of Michelangelo's
David, and the construction of temporary bridges by black American
soldiers in the wake of the Second World War-are contrasted with images of
Florence today (its vast pizza parlors and tourist culture). Leavitt also
examines the city's portrayal in such novels and films as A Room with a
View, The Portrait of a Lady and Tea with Mussolini.
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The Body of Jonah Boyd: A Novel
(2004)
The brilliant new novel from an author The
New York Times has called "one of his generation's most gifted writers."
It's 1969, and Judith "Denny" Denham has just begun an affair with Dr.
Ernest Wright, a psychology professor at Wellspring University, who just
happens to be her boss. But her position in the Wright household is not
merely as a mistress. Ernest's wife, Nancy, has taken Denny under her wing
as a four-hand piano partner and general confidante, although Denny can
never seem to measure up to Anne, Nancy's best friend from back east.
Ernest's eldest son has fled over the Canadian border to escape the draft,
while his only daughter has embarked on a secret affair with her father's
protégé. The remaining son, Ben, is fifteen, and as delicate and
insufferable as only a poetry-writing fifteen-year-old can be.
That autumn, Denny crosses the freeway that separates Wellspring from its
less affluent mirror image, Springwell, to spend Thanksgiving with the
Wrights and their assortment of strays, including two honored guests: the
eagerly anticipated Anne and Anne's new husband, the acclaimed novelist
Jonah Boyd. The chain of events set in motion that Thanksgiving will
change the lives of everyone involved in ways that none can imagine, and
that won't become clear for decades to come.
Hilarious and scorching, David Leavitt's first novel in four years is a
tribute to the power of home, the lure of success, the mystery of
originality, and, above all, the sisterhood of secretaries. Flawlessly
crafted and full of surprises, it is a showcase for Leavitt's considerable
skills.
Italian Pleasures (1996) with Mark Mitchell
In Maremma: Life and a House in Southern Tuscany (2001) with Mark Mitchell
A delightfully warm and intimate portrait of life in a
small rural town in Tuscany. In Maremma recounts David Leavitt and Mark
Mitchell's restoration of a dilapidated 1950's farmhouse in southern
Tuscany and the process by which they became initiated into a part of
Italian life that foreigners rarely see. The pleasures of the olive
harvest and picking wild asparagus are juxtaposed with the vagaries of
political corruption and self-perpetuating bureaucracy. Landscape and
weather provide the stuff of reverie, as do the benefits of boredom and
the longing for peanut butter. A celebration and exploration of a
little-known part of Italy, In Maremma is also a fond if sometimes
critical corrective to other more rapturous portrayals of Tuscany.
The Man Who Knew Too Much: Alan Turing and the Invention of the Computer (2006)
To solve one of the great mathematical problems of his day,
Alan Turing proposed an imaginary computer. Then, attempting to break a
Nazi code during World War II, he successfully designed and built one,
thus ensuring the Allied victory. Turing became a champion of artificial
intelligence, but his work was cut short. As an openly gay man at a time
when homosexuality was illegal in England, he was convicted and forced to
undergo a humiliating "treatment" that may have led to his suicide.
With a novelist's sensitivity, David Leavitt portrays Turing in all his
humanity—his eccentricities, his brilliance, his fatal candor—and
elegantly explains his work and its implications.
Family Dancing (1984)
A Place I've Never Been (1990)
Arkansas: Three Novellas (1997)
Here are three novellas of escape and exile, touching and
funny and at times calculatedly outrageous. In "Saturn Street," a
disaffected L.A. screenwriter delivers lunches to homebound AIDS patients,
only to find himself falling in love with one of them. In "The Wooden
Anniversary," Nathan and Celia - familiar characters from Leavitt's story
collections - reunite after a five-year separation. And in "The Term-Paper
Artist," a writer named David Leavitt, hiding out at his father's house in
the aftermath of a publishing scandal, experiences literary rejuvenation
when he agrees to write term papers for UCLA undergraduates in exchange
for sex.
The Marble Quilt (2001) -- Finalist of the 2001 Lambda Literary Award for Male Fiction
In these nine masterly stories, David Leavitt surveys the
complicated politics of human relationships in families and communities,
in the present day and over the course of the last century. A "wizard at
blending levity and pathos" (Chicago Tribune), Leavitt displays here his
characteristic grace and intelligence, as well as his remarkable candor
and wit.
Here are stories that range in form from a historical survey to a police
interrogation to an e-mail exchange. In "The Infection Scene," a young
man's determined effort to contract HIV is juxtaposed with an account of
the early life of Lord Alfred Douglas. In the title story, an expatriate
tries to make sense of his ex-partner's senseless murder. In "Crossing St.
Gotthard," the members of an American family traveling in Europe at the
turn of the twentieth century find themselves confronting their own
mortality as they plunge into a train tunnel in Switzerland. And in "Black
Box," the partner of a man killed in a plane crash is drawn into an unholy
alliance with a fellow "crash widow."
Moving from Rome to San Francisco to Florida, from fin-de-siècle London to
Hollywood in the early 1960s, these stories showcase the agility and
sensitivity that have earned David Leavitt his reputation as one of the
most innovative voices in contemporary short fiction.
Collected Stories (2003) Stories
of David Leavitt (2005)
Anthologies Edited by David Leavitt
The Penguin Book of Gay Short Stories (1994) with Mark Mitchell
Pages Passed from Hand to Hand: The Hidden Tradition of Homosexual
Literature in English from 1748 to 1914 (1997) with
Mark Mitchell
Before
E.M. Forster's
Maurice, written in 1914, introduced a new openness about the favorable
depiction of homosexuality in English fiction, a number of novels and
stories carried coded portraits of homosexuals and homosexuality. Many of
these were, by necessity, published privately; still others were written
to insure that the homosexual component would be recognizable to a select
few; still others embedded homosexual content within such "safe" genres as
the Western and the public school novel. There have been several recent
anthologies of twentieth-century gay fiction, but David Leavitt and Mark
Mitchell's fascinating book is the first to explore the texts that
circulated before the "gay fiction" genre came into being, and before
greater tolerance allowed writers to treat homosexual themes directly.
Leavitt and Mitchell include extracts from stories and novels by
well-known writers such as Herman Melville, Walter Pater, Henry James,
Willa Cather, and D. H. Lawrence, as well as work from neglected figures
such as Count Eric Stenbock, John Francis Bloxam, "Alan Dale," and Gerald
Hamilton -- the inspiration for Christopher Isherwood's Mr. Norris. The
result is an entertaining and revelatory anthology, and a valuable
contribution to our understanding of the literary treatment of
homosexuality.
Selected Stories (2001) with
E.M. Forster and Mark Mitchell
Something Inside: Conversations With Gay Fiction Writers
(1980, 1999) by Philip
Gambone, Compiler and
Robert Giard,
Photographer
In the last twenty years, gay
literature has earned a place at the American and British literary tables,
spawning its own constellation of important writers and winning a
dedicated audience. No one though, until Philip Gambone, has attempted to
offer a collective portrait of our most important gay writers. This
collection of interviews attempts just that, and is notable both for the
depth of Gambone's probing conversations and for the sheer range of
important authors included. Virtually every prominent gay author writing
in English today is here, including
Alan Hollinghurst, Allen Barnett,
Andrew Holleran,
Bernard Cooper,
Brad Gooch,
Brian Keith Jackson,
Christopher Bram,
David Leavitt,
David Plante, Dennis Cooper,
Edmund White,
Gary Glickman,
John Preston,
Joseph Hansen,
Lev Raphael,
Michael Cunningham,
Michael Lowenthal,
Michael Nava,
Paul Monette,
Peter Cameron, and
Scott Heim.
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