Used price: $24.00
Used price: $11.00
Collectible price: $21.18
List price: $14.00 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $1.50
Collectible price: $2.59
Buy one from zShops for: $2.84
In the book, he spins the yarn of Dr. August, or Fitz, a musical spiritualist who communicates to his audience messages through playing the piano. At first reading, I worried this device would become overblown, but through some excellent writing and plot twists, it manages to keep the story focused without totally consuming it. Dr. August is a great character, gifted without seemingly so, and yearning for love and companionship that is just beyond his grasp. Throw into the mix Isaac, an ex-slave who bravely overcomes his upbringing and learns to lead with his heart, and Alice, a 27 year old "spinster" just brave enough to buck societal norms, and we have a triangle that is complex, and so much more.
You will notice upon reading "Dr. August" how quickly paced the story is. Never dwelling too much on any one moment, it is a brisk and consuming read. Yet Bram leaves nothing out, and creates a real world before, during, and after the turn of the century. Absolutely, spotlessly breathtaking.
Do not delay in reading this fine work!
List price: $12.95 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $0.99
Collectible price: $5.99
Buy one from zShops for: $5.29
Bram provides us with an insider's view of Whale's life--itself something of a horror story. His turbulent life--and lifestyle--haunted him until his death in 1957 (an "apparent" suicide). Of course, such things that Whale suffered
were never publicized--or much acknowledged--while he was still alive. In this biography Bram seems to pull no punches, as he deftly presents the life of Whale that few outside Hollywood knew (his homosexuality, for instance), especially his background growing up in England, his experiences in World War I, and so on.
Whether a fan of Whale (the classic films "Frankenstein" and "Bride of Frankenstein" still have a following!) or not, the reader can expect a mesmerizing
read--something out of "Time" magazine and not the "National Inquirer"! At times, however, it does resemble "People" magazine a bit, but Bram does not resort to bitchy sensationalism to carry the book. He gives us a very interesting--but not altogether revealing--look at Hollywood in the Thirties. (Billyjhobbs@tyler.net)
Highly Recommended indeed.
Father of Frankenstein is an elegant and poignant tale about the hidden gay side of Hollywood, war stories, and dementia. Like the Frankenstein movies of James Whale, the book begins with a dark and stormy night, only not in the cliched terms of 19th-century hack Paul Clifford. Nonetheless, I drew an instant parallel with Paul Clifford's words: "It was a dark and stormy night . . . and the rain fell in torrents--except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which swept up the streets (for it is in London that our scene lies), rattling along the housetops, and fiercely agitating the scanty flame of the lamps that struggled against the darkness."
In its own way, Father of Frankenstein is based off these words. James Whale, famous director of the movies he'd rather not be remembered for, had a stormy life beginning somewhere around London. Somewhere between his inauspicious beginnings as a impoverished child in a factory and his mysterious demise near Hollywood, he lived a full and colourful life. The book begins at the end, really, after James Whale is an old and shattered man. He's recovering from a stroke. Well, he'd like to believe he's recovering, but his worsening mental state disabuses him of that notion rather quickly. His damaged mind dwells more and more on the past until he can scarcely differentiate between the present and events forty years past.
And then there's Clayton Boone. He's a moody loner, a presager to James Dean, I suppose. Young, muscular, virile, and not too bright, he's everything James Whale looked for in a monster. But like Frankenstein's monster, Clayton Boone won't do what his creator wants him to do.
List price: $19.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $9.95
Buy one from zShops for: $13.87
It also contains the original ending to "The Jewel of the Seven Stars." This portion alone is enough to purchase the book in my opinion.
If you are a fan of Bram Stoker or like Victorian/Edwardian literature, this one is for you.
Used price: $3.05
Collectible price: $4.24
Buy one from zShops for: $10.95
The central figure, Jim Goodall, is a Washington career diplomat at once homosexual but only 'almost' gay. In the course of the novel he travels from detachment to muted acceptance of his sexuality, and from detatchment to confrontation with the war machine that employs him. Unlike the attractive gay heroes in some of Bram's novels - Hank, in 'Hold Tight', for example - Goodall is not particularly appealing. But unlike Bram's better-known bystander, the James Whale figure in his 'Father of Frankenstein', Goodall is living at points where history truly is happening, and there are no sidelines. His urgent question is whether gayness and diplomat status do keep him only 'almost' complicit with the gung-ho male-bonding military that he's actively on side with - and the answer is (almost) 'no'. So it's not a simple book with a positive-image hero, but something braver. Like a lot of great big bold novels - from 'Middlemarch' to 'Lolita' - it takes the risk of centring on a protagonist who is never fully likeable. There are parallels for this too in distinguished gay writing, and I found myself recalling Angus Wilson's wonderful 'As if By Magic', which also surveys the disasterousness of first-world intervention in third-world countries - and does so through the eyes of a man coming to terms with gay sexuality while bonded more with a girl from a younger generation of his own family than with any of the men who happen to share his bed.
Bram's fearlessness is especially apparent in several extraordinary scenes that feature Imelda Marcos as a high-camp Dickensian monster. These are black comedy encounters testing out how far camp excess is tolerable when crisis is extreme. It's in the end a novel about responsibility, asking what happens people who have been written out of history - as for so long gay people have been - once they find themselves assimilated through turning-point events. Resolution is only on the level of the personal and the intimate, and the ending makes plain the dissatisfactions which thereby persist. In short, it's a story of personal revolution achieved in lives that stay tied to a culture that blocks off change and betterment on any broader level.
Among the great pleasures of this novel are its unfaltering commitment to awareness, always evident in the quality of its writing, which is never less than fluently elegant, and which again and again manages moments of lucidity and illumination that reach out towards a better state than the characters can achieve. Hence for me its re-readabilty.
Straight friends -- even some who aren't used to gay people, and who would never read "gay fiction" -- have found this book compelling for its core story of a diplomat whose career (driven in part by a denied sexuality) propels him to the edge of great moments of history -- from the Vietnam war through the Philippine revolution -- but who never leaves his mark on history itself. A great read.
Used price: $1.49
Collectible price: $18.00
Buy one from zShops for: $23.95
As for the second half, the so-called "mystery", readers would be well-advised to take that on Bram's terms, too; he's not really trying to make a big socially significant point, but he's not just settling for a frothy Robert Rodi-type novel, either. (No offense to Rodi, whose novels I always enjoy).
In some respects, Bram's style reminds me of Peter Cameron or Nick Hornby. These authors clearly care about their characters, but in a somewhat detached way which may not appeal to everyone.
Don't mistake this detachment for disinterest or lack of conviction; it's all there, it's just that Bram is evoking the era a bit more effectively than we may be comfortable acknowledging. No, the loose ends are not all neatly wrapped up at the end, but when does that ever happen in real life anyway?
Used price: $58.48
Used price: $2.23
Collectible price: $13.22
Bram's premise for this novel is a good one. Seaman Hank Fayette is arrested at a gay brothel while on shore leave in New York. Rather than court martial him they turn him into a prostitute in order to capture spies in the same brothel that he was arrested in.
If Bram had stuck to this plot line the story would have been much more interesting. Bram however uses the next third of the novel building a relationship between Fayette and the black houseboy, Juke. The Fayette/Juke storyline is the stuff of trashy romance novels and really does nothing to advance the plot of the novel. If you want to write a romance novel well and good but don't cloak it as as espionage thriller.
The characterizations in this novel tend to be disappointing as well. Characters drift in and out of the story with very little development and there is plenty of stereotyping throughout the book.
If the neding of this novel is supposed to show the redeeming power of friendship between the gay and straight worlds that point is missed completely. The ending is contrived and feels as if it were added just to provide a conclusion to the love story presented earlier.
Mr. Bram can write much better than this and I hope he will do so in the future. Overall the read was not a bad one but rather one that could have been much better had it been able to deliver what it promised.
The characters are sometimes well drawn and interesting, but Bram does not develop them in a way that satisfies the story. Obviously Hank and Juke are attracted to each other. but Hank's attitude towards African-Americans is not overcome until it is too late. That is good writing, but why Juke's outcome happens is not.
This novel has some good passages, some interesting characters, but a plot that falls apart.
Used price: $1.40
Collectible price: $2.07
Buy one from zShops for: $8.44