Geography of the Heart,
Johnson’s chronicle of his three-year relationship with a beloved who succumbed
in the health crisis, is one of the finest AIDS memoirs ever written:
passionate, wise, enraged but shot through with
a faith that love is stronger than death, and grief ultimately more
fundamental to our lives, and to our getting of wisdom, than anger.
Keeping Faith: A
Skeptic’s Journey is part reminiscence of growing up Catholic in eastern
Kentucky--quite literally over the back fence from Thomas Merton’s Gethsemane
Abbey--and part comparative exploration of the Christian and Buddhist monastic
traditions.
But while you’re waiting for copies of these to arrive--if
you don’t simply download the e-books--you can read “The Future of Queer: A
Manifesto” in the current January issue of Harper’s.
It’s a cri de coeur
for what we lost (and what we desperately need to find again) when we as queer
men settled for a place at the table of Business as Usual, in a materialistic
society obsessed with advancing the small, isolated selves that we misrecognize
as the essence of our life. It’s a call to value friendship over the
conventions of marriage. It’s a call to say no to late capitalism’s rape of the
planet and cooption of our souls. It’s
an uncompromising assertion that the one best hope for the earth, and for a
society that doesn’t consume itself in untrammeled greed and mutual suspicion,
is for us to reject the comfort of the
mainstream and to become more truly queer. Queer in the sense that the Buddha
was queer, leaving his family behind in his search for the Noble Truths of our
existence. Queer in the sense that Jesus was queer, setting aside the ties of
blood relations to embrace the poor and the marginalized as his true family.
It’s an exhortation to dream, believe in, and desire a world
that’s not yet made. And you need to read it.
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