Join Books.org — it's free

Fiction, Fiction Subjects
Comfort and Joy by Jim Grimsley β€” book cover

Comfort and Joy

by Jim Grimsley
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Praise for Winter Birds:

--Winner of the Sue Kaufman Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters

--Finalist for the PEN/Hemingway Award

"I have rarely read anything as powerful as Winter Birds. I wanted to steal it and pretend it was mine, or go on tour reading it out loud...This man got it right, he got it perfectly right."--Dorothy Allison

"I think I will not read another novel this year. Nothing else can be as vivid, as awful and awesome as this enormously powerful book."--Max Steele

"Reminiscent of Faulkner or Caldwell."--Booklist

"Southern landscape viewed from a gay perspective with the bitterness of memory but also with the unwavering, unsentimental love--all this, of course, is Dorothy Allison territory. I can't think of a soldier tribute."--The New Yorker

Praise for Dream Boy:

--Winner of the GLBTF Book Award for Fiction from the ALA

--Nominated for the Lambda Award for Fiction

"Grimsley clearly understands the pain and confusion of budding love...in this singular display of literary craftmanship."--Publishers Weekly

"My admiration for Jim Grimsley's power is widened and deepened."--Reynolds Place

Praise for My Drowning:

--A Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Writers' Award winner

"My Drowning is magnificent, just masterful. So much is not said and yet we know everything."--Ann Patchett

"Rural poverty can turn people vicious too, as readers discovered in Erksine Caldwell's 1932 best seller, 'Tobacco Road'...My Drowning eloquently carries on this dark tradition."--The New York Times Book Review

"Grimsley's delicate prose and defiant resilience of his protagonist make reading his work a rich, gratifying experience."--Publishers Weekly, starred review

About the Author, Jim Grimsley

Jim Grimsley is the author of four previous novels, among them Winter Birds, a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway Award; Dream Boy, winner of the GLBTF Book Award for literature; My Drowning, a Lila-Wallace-Reader's Digest Writer's Award winner; and Comfort and Joy. He lives in Atlanta and teaches at Emory University.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

New Yorker

Southern landscape viewed from a gay perspective with the bitterness of memory but also with the unwavering, unsentimental love--all this, of course, is Dorothy Allison territory. I can't think of a soldier tribute.

Clifford Chase

Comfort and Joy is something of an old fashion page turner.
β€” Bookforum

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Continuing to follow the life of Danny Crell, introduced in his debut, Winter Birds, Grimsley has written his fullest and most humane novel yet, a work whose commendable restraint does not impede its emotional impact. Opening with Danny's plans to visit his family over Christmas holidays with his lover, charismatic pediatrician Ford McKinney, the narrative flashes back to the first meeting between the two men, three Christmases earlier, and evokes the difficulties of their relationship as well as the bonds between them. Both men are survivors who hide their true emotions behind an air of detachment. The novel chronicles their efforts to break through their protective facades, as each slowly realizes that the only way their relationship will endure is through a courageous decision to risk rejection. One source of tension is their vastly different backgrounds. Home for Danny is a trailer in the pungently evoked backwoods of eastern North Carolina. Dan and his mother retain their wounding memories of Dan's father, an abusive alcoholic, and of Dan's dead brother, Grove. Native ground for Ford is patrician Savannah, where his handsome, chilly parents are hardly pleased to find their accomplished son indifferent to the woman they have picked out for him to marry. Further flashbacks show Ford's slow coming-out process and the pair's cautious courtship. But deeper issues intrude. Danny is a hemophiliac and HIV+, and Ford, as a physician, is well aware of the implications of Danny's disease. Scenes where Danny injects a blood-clotting mixture to prevent internal bleeding are bone-chilling and heartbreaking, as Danny rejects Ford's help because he doesn't want his lover to see the messy circumstances of his life. In the strong and moving denouement, Ford finally gains the courage to bring Danny to meet his family--to disastrous effect, although the novel ends hopefully. Grimsley's survivor's tales are always compelling; this book promises to be his breakthrough to a wider audience. Author tour. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

William Stevenson

Grimsley writes lyrically, and the multiple flashback structure allows him to gradually bring tensions to a boil...anyone who's ever brought a signinficant other home to meet the folks should relate to this affecting story.
β€”Entertainment Weekly

Hero

In the hands of a lesser-skilled writer this could have been a Harlequin romance, but Jim Grimsley's Comfort and Joy turns out to be one of the most satisfying and touching reads of the year, and was nominated for a Lambda Literary award...The honesty and beauty in Grimsley's writing keeps this novel real and beautiful.

Kirkus Reviews

A rather pale and bloodless coming-out story by Grimsley (My Drowning, 1996, etc.) in which a nice southern boy falls for a boy from the wrong side of the tracks. The McKinneys are the sort of family Europeans usually have in mind when they think of Americans from the Old South. Long-established, genteel, and, above all, rich, the McKinney line is crowded with Confederate officers, gentleman farmers, distinguished jurists, and, lately, respected physicians. Ford McKinney, heir to the family name and wealth, is the third generation to practice medicine. He does so happily and well at a hospital in Atlanta where he meets Danny Crell, one of the hospital administrators. Danny is also from the South, but the Crells are unlikely to have had any dealings with the McKinneys down the years unless one of them happened to be caught poaching on a McKinney estate. But this is still the 20th century, after all, and Danny and Ford fall for each other in a big way. After a long while together, they feel that they should take the plunge and visit each other's family over the Christmas holidays. For Danny, the angst is driven more by class than sex: his family is made up of simple country folk from the backwoods of North Carolina who know all about the odd things that boys can get up to, but who are uneasy around rich kids. All the same, they take to Ford right away. The real hurdle is Ford's Savannah family, who have been pressuring him to marry for years and are already lining up the perfect girl. This is a case of deep denial, intensified by inheritance rights. Can they learn to let go of their little boy? What was it Christ said about the rich man and the Kingdom of Heaven? A melodramatic andsomewhat rambling story that lacks much in the way of a focusβ€”let alone a climaxβ€”and unravels into a ball of self-absorption in short order.

Book Details

Published
October 16, 2003
Publisher
Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Pages
304
ISBN
9781565127180

More by Jim Grimsley

Similar books