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Onyx by Felice Picano β€” book cover

Onyx

by Felice Picano
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Overview

"Striking in its bold depictions of both pleasure and pain...a fresh angle on familiar themes of love and death and manifesting greater insight in its musings about living."-Publishers Weekly

"Incredibly rich and densely textured...highly recommended."-Library Journal

Three men. Two gay, one straight. Two searching for meaning in the face of loss, one searching for the heart of masculinity. What awakens between them will change their lives forever. The narrative-exploring six months in the life of Ray Henriques, a successful Manhattan record producer-unearths a sometimes jolting examination of how loss can awaken dormant desires and postponed dreams. Endings lead to beginnings, appearances do not match reality, and love can harden hearts as surely as it can expand them.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In the 20 years since the emergence of AIDS as a national health crisis, few writers have chronicled the disease's enormous impact on the nation's social and cultural landscape as has Picano (Like People in History; Ambidextrous, etc.). He turns inward with his new novel to explore the essence of sexual boundaries, love, and illness as a catalyst for personal analysis and growth. Ray Henrique, owner of a small record company, strives to maintain a little stability in his life while he cares for his longtime lover, Jesse, who is slowly surrendering to the relentless ravages of AIDS. The emotional demands of serving as dutiful caretaker do nothing to curb his hunger for sexual and romantic adventure, a situation remedied by his seduction (endorsed by Jesse) of Mike Tedesco, a young, married repairman with three children. Against an ever-shifting backdrop of eccentric characters, Ray and Mike embark on a physical relationship that forces both men to confront their notions of love, sex and masculinity and their conclusions are riddled with more questions than answers. Meanwhile, Picano takes a graphic yet compassionate approach to detailing Jesse's decline, and some fine comic moments arise when Adele, Jesse's horrible mother, takes center stage. Striking in its bold depictions of both pleasure and pain, this novel is more introspective than previous Picano books, taking a fresh angle on familiar themes of love and death, and manifesting greater insight in its musings about living and loss during the traumatic years of the AIDS epidemic. (May) Forecast: Picano's latest should only enhance his reputation as a major chronicler of gay life and culture, continuing his successful track record of 18 books, among them several bestsellers. The release of Onyx as a hardcover, backed by a national author tour, vouches for Alyson's faith in Picano's clout as a popular cultural icon. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

The author of A House on the Ocean, A House on the Bay here creates an incredibly rich and densely textured world. Picano guides us through the spiraling vortex of Jesse's dying from AIDS-related diseases and lover Ray's finding the means to let go through work and accidental sex. Picano is honest and excruciatingly descriptive, especially in the concrete details of a body literally falling to pieces and finally going up in smoke in a crematorium. It's a raw journey through death and dying, unsparing in his take on how survivors cope. Highly recommended for general and gay literature collections. Roger Durbin, Univ. of Akron Libs., OH Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2001
Publisher
Los Angeles : Alyson Books, 2001.
Pages
352
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781555836405

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