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A Stunning Look at Growing Up Gay in the Striving, Black Middle-Class of the '60s and '70s

EU editor ~ 8/19/2024
PARADISE , Calif. , Aug. 8 , 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- While providing a rare glimpse into the worlds of New Orleans ' black Creoles and the upwardly mobile `` strivers , '' author Leonce Gaiter 's `` A Memory of Fictions ( or ) Just Tiddy-Boom '' turns the tables

PARADISE, Calif., Aug. 8, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- While providing a rare glimpse into the worlds of New Orleans' black Creoles and the upwardly mobile "strivers," author Leonce Gaiter's "A Memory of Fictions (or) Just Tiddy-Boom" turns the tables on identity by presenting a young man who rejects others' ideas of who he ought to be or how he should behave - as a man, as black, or as gay - to crash his way through life on his own imperfect terms.

Book trailer for "A Memory of Fictions (or) Just Tiddy-Boom"
Book trailer for "A Memory of Fictions (or) Just Tiddy-Boom"
New novel is part memoir, part fiction.
New novel is part memoir, part fiction.
Author Leonce Gaiter
Author Leonce Gaiter

From a child aghast at his Louisiana family's southern gothic bent, to a teen facing devastating tragedy, through a ribald, raucous stint at Harvard that feeds his grandiose ambitions, to a liquor-soaked swirl through '80s Hollywood, "A Memory of Fictions…" presents a vivid, eloquent portrait of Jessie Vincent Grandier as he grows into a man.

About the book's status as part memoir, part fiction, author Leonce Gaiter said, "Quite often I think memories are simply lies we tell ourselves. I realize that what I recall might be no truer than what I imagine. This book plays with the haze between memory and make believe. I can't even tell where the facts of my life end and my perceptions of those facts distort them to the level of fiction. With this book, I stopped pretending I could tell the difference. It's part truth, part twisted truth, part complete fancy."

The novel also provides a unique focus on New Orleans' black Creole culture and the black, striver middle-class of the 1960s. "New Orleans Creoles were a wild bunch," Gaiter laughs. "They comported themselves—and insisted their children comport themselves—like semi-royalty. When they spawned strivers like my parents, the results could be a relentless pursuit of the impossible goal of proving themselves unassailable to racist white eyes—the epitome of 'respectability politics,' which took a toll."

The book has earned critical praise. Blue Ink Review stated, "Gaiter's wonderfully evocative language, filled with musicality, captures the complexity of Jessie's emotions as he struggles to make sense of his… place in the world."

IndieReader called it, "…a bold novel. Sometimes beautiful, sometimes brutal, the prose is always thoroughly engrossing."

Gaiter is thrilled that the book's sometimes tragic, often hilarious look at race, sex, and growing up is appealing to readers. "I think Jessie's journey is everyone's," he says. "We all want to throw off the shackles and be ourselves, regardless of what 'the rules' tell us we ought to be."

Author information: https://www.leoncegaiter.com/
For review copies or interview requests, please contact [email protected]Press information: https://www.leoncegaiter.com/Press/index.html 

Contact: Legba Books

(530) 636-3581

[email protected] 

Paradise, CA 95969

SOURCE Leonce Gaiter Originally published at https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/a-stunning-look-at-growing-up-gay-in-the-striving-black-middle-class-of-the-60s-and-70s-302216842.html Images courtesy of https://pixabay.com

Photo by Skylar Kang via Pexels

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