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Dale Peck

    13 juni 1967

    Dale Peck is een Amerikaanse romanschrijver, criticus en columnist. Zijn werk duikt vaak in complexe interpersoonlijke relaties en de zoektocht naar identiteit in de moderne wereld. Peck's stijl staat bekend om zijn scherpzinnigheid en zijn vermogen om de subtiele nuances van de menselijke psychologie te vangen.

    Drift House
    Martin And John
    Visions and Revisions: Coming of Age in the Age of AIDS
    Greenville
    The Law of Enclosures
    Sprout
    • When Sprout and his father move from Long Island to Kansas after the death of his mother, he is sure he will find no friends, no love, no beauty. But friends find him, the strangeness of the landscape fascinates him, and when love shows up in an unexpected place, it proves impossible to hold. An incredible, literary story of a boy who knows he's gay, and the town that seems to have no place for him to hide.

      Sprout
    • The Law of Enclosures

      • 368bladzijden
      • 13 uur lezen
      4,0(4)Tarief

      Exploring the complexities of a decades-long marriage, the narrative follows Beatrice and Henry from their initial bond during Henry's battle with a brain tumor to their enduring relationship filled with love and conflict. Set against the backdrop of Long Island and the Finger Lakes, the story is interwoven with a poignant memoir about the author’s own family experiences, featuring his father, mother, and stepmothers. This dual narrative creates a powerful examination of how family shapes our lives, both positively and negatively.

      The Law of Enclosures
    • Greenville

      • 304bladzijden
      • 11 uur lezen
      3,0(3)Tarief

      Set against a backdrop of poverty and family turmoil, the story follows Dale Peck Sr.'s challenging childhood in suburban Long Island. Abandoned by his alcoholic father and subjected to an abusive home, Dale finds refuge at his uncle's dairy farm in upstate New York. There, he experiences genuine love and support from Uncle Wallace and Aunt Bess. However, despite this newfound stability, he struggles to escape the shadows of his tumultuous past, highlighting the enduring impact of trauma and the search for belonging.

      Greenville
    • Focusing on a pivotal era in the AIDS epidemic, this work blends memoir and extended essay to explore the transformative years from 1987 to 1996. It delves into the activism of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) and the significant shift brought about by combination therapy, which redefined AIDS from a fatal diagnosis to a manageable condition. Peck's insights offer a personal and critical examination of the societal and medical changes during this crucial time.

      Visions and Revisions: Coming of Age in the Age of AIDS
    • Martin And John

      • 236bladzijden
      • 9 uur lezen
      3,8(22)Tarief

      Dale Peck’s debut is a tour de force in which Martin and John find each other again and again: in a trailer park, a high-end jewelry store, a Kansas barn, and later, in New York City, living under the shadow of the AIDS epidemic. Though their names remain the same, their identities are constantly shifting, creating a fractured view of loss and desire in the early years of the AIDS crisis. Vaulting through self and history, Martin and John is one of the most remarkable novels to emerge from an America ravaged by disease, and one of the finest and most complex love stories of the ’90s. Martin and John is the first volume of Gospel Harmonies, a series of seven stand-alone books (four have been written) which follow the character of John as he attempts to navigate the uneasy relationship between the self and the postmodern world.

      Martin And John
    • Drift House

      • 448bladzijden
      • 16 uur lezen
      3,5(18)Tarief

      First children's book by award-wining adult author Dale Peck Brilliantly realised literary fantasy

      Drift House
    • Hatchet Jobs

      Writings on Contemporary Fiction

      • 228bladzijden
      • 8 uur lezen
      3,5(109)Tarief

      Focusing on textual analysis and historical context, the author delves into the essence of contemporary novels, stripping away unnecessary elements to reveal their core significance. Through insightful commentary, the book explores the transformative power of fiction, offering a fresh perspective on modern literature and its relevance.

      Hatchet Jobs
    • The first collection of short fiction from Lambda Award–winning novelist Dale Peck spans twenty-five years of writing, including two O. Henry award-winners and the recipient of a Pushcart Prize. The stories in What Burns examine the extremes of desire against a backdrop of family, class, and mortality. In “Bliss,” a young man befriends the convicted felon who murdered his mother when he was only a child. In “Not Even Camping Is Like Camping Anymore,” a teenage boy fends off the advances of a five-year-old his mother babysits. And in “Dues,” a man discovers that everything he owns is borrowed from someone else—including his time on earth. Walking the tightrope between tenderness and violence that has defined Peck’s work since the publication of his first novel, Martin and John, through his most recent, Night Soil, What Burns reveals Peck’s mastery of the short form.

      What Burns
    • "You'd think it has been done before but it really hasn't—the perfectly crafted, haunting and heartbreaking, raw, funny, unblinking yet merciful art novel."—Marlon James Family secrets, sexual explorations, art world wealth, and legacies of racism and environmental destruction collide in the new novel from Lambda Award-winning author Dale Peck. A century and a half of family secrets are written on Judas Stammers’s body, painted purple by a birthmark that covers half his face and abdomen. Judas is the last descendent of a 19th-century robber baron who made his fortune off the slaves who died in his coal mines. The money’s gone, but the legacy lives on in the form of an all-male, all-black private school founded by the family patriarch in atonement for his sins. Ostracized for his name as much as his appearance, Judas’s lust for his classmates is matched only by their contempt for him, until finally he’s driven to seek out sex in places where his identity means nothing to the anonymous men he gives himself to. Hovering over everything is Judas’s mother, Dixie, an acclaimed potter whose obsession with creating the perfect vessel over and over again leaves her son that much more isolated. By turns philosophical and perverse, Night Soil is a tour de force by the writer whom Alexander Chee called “the only genius I know who could write it and live.”

      Night Soil