Lincoln Avenue: Chicago Stories

Lincoln Avenue: Chicago Stories

by Gregg Shapiro
Lincoln Avenue: Chicago Stories

Lincoln Avenue: Chicago Stories

by Gregg Shapiro

eBook

$5.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

With its twelve sharply observed stories filled with memorable characters and dialogue imbued with the pop music of the day, Gregg Shapiro reflects on what it meant to grow up gay in Chicago during the 1970s and 1980s. Relationships —family, boyfriends, and otherwise—are explored in stories such as “Lunch with a Porn Star,” “Marilyn, My Mother, Myself,” and “Your Father’s Car.” Only a gay Chicago native with a keen eye could give us such an insider’s view of the Windy City from a more innocent time not too long ago.

“The men of Lincoln Avenue are in search of something, but don’t worry, they’ll find it before morning. In these unflinching and deeply located stories, Gregg Shapiro inhabits the cars, bars, and avenues of the gay metropolis that came of age in 1980s Chicago. This is fiction that embodies and pays homage to a world as fleeting as youth but as indelible as the city streets themselves.” — Barrie Jean Borich, author of Body Geographic

“Gregg Shapiro creates whole worlds with these stories, in which characters navigate everything from first lust to familial dramas, in narratives told with humor, understanding, and a keen sense of place. Stories such as ‘Lincoln Avenue’ pose the meaningful, unanswerable question: Why do we love the people we love? This is a memorable and entertaining collection.” — Kelly Dwyer, author of Self-Portrait with Ghosts and The Tracks of Angels

“I love these great Chicago stories, so fresh and sharp, so excitable and hard-edged and tenderhearted. These stories remind once again why I’ve been a fan of Shapiro’s work for years.” — Richard McCann, author of Mother of Sorrows

“A nostalgic ride through the streets of Chicago that starts in a 1975 Hornet and ends in a 1980 Cutlass wagon, the stories in Lincoln Avenue are like a stack of faded Polaroids from our collective gay past—each capturing the hopeful novelty and awkward uncertainty of youth in a single frame.” — Wayne Hoffman, author of Sweet Like Sugar and Hard

“These lovely stories from the streets of Chicago are filled with entertaining twists, turns and sudden stops, and include a title story that’s a sexy little masterpiece.” — Jerry Rosco, author of Glenway Wescott Personally: A Biography and editor of Glenway Wescott’s A Heaven of Words: Last Journals, 1956-1984

“I’m delighted to discover that talented Gregg Shapiro has a collection of fiction out. These richly textured short stories portray the lives of gay men in the Midwest with wit, lyricism, and tenderness.” — Jeff Mann, author of Cub and Purgatory: A Novel of the Civil War


Product Details

BN ID: 2940046134254
Publisher: Handtype Press
Publication date: 08/27/2014
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 316 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Gregg Shapiro’s poetry collection Protection was published by Gival Press in 2008, and his 2012 chapbook GREGG SHAPIRO: 77 was published by Souvenir Spoon Books. His poetry and fiction have appeared in numerous outlets including literary journals such as BAC Street Journal, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, BLOOM, Court Green, Gargoyle, Jonathan, Mary: A Literary Quarterly, Pearl, RHINO Poetry, and White Crane Journal. He has also appeared in the anthologies Among the Leaves: Queer Male Poets on the Midwestern Experience (Squares & Rebels), Best Gay Poetry 2008 (Lethe Press), Blood to Remember (Time Being Books), Collective Brightness: LGBTIQ Poets on Faith, Religion & Spirituality (Sibling Rivalry Press), Encounters: Poems about Race, Ethnicity and Identity (Skinner House Books), Full Moon on K Street (Plan B Press), Hibernation and Other Poems by Bear Bards (Bear Bones Books), Mondo Barbie (St. Martin’s Press), Reclaiming the Heartland (University of Minnesota Press), Sex & Chocolate: Tasty Morsels for Mind and Body (Paycock Press), Unsettling American (Penguin), and Windy City Queer (University of Wisconsin Press). His often-anthologized poem “Tattoo” can be found in numerous textbooks. As an entertainment journalist, he writes interviews and reviews for a variety of regional LGBT publications and websites. A Chicago native, Shapiro has also lived in Boston and Washington, D.C. He currently resides in Fort Lauderdale, Florida with his husband Rick and their dog k.d.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews