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Rating:  Summary: AN UNDERAPPRECIATED WRITER Review: With his fourth book, Peter Weltner offers many perfectly pitched moments that capture gay characters who range from teenage to old age. In "My Faithful, Faithless Friend," Weltner has two boyfriends playing a clever, childlike driving game, trying to top each other at precisely naming the colors of passing cars: "Toasted almond." says Todd. "Maybe." says Jay. "More like butterscotch." As well as he captures such youthful whimsy, Weltner can convey a more mature perspective. In "The Greek Head," a man in his sixties whose lover has just died, offers angry and essential advice to his uneccesarily restless thirtysomething neighbors, seemingly poised for a break-up: "We made it work," he argues. "Is my message clear? "It just makes you all so angry, thinking you can't have everything and everyone, because you can't. You never could. It's such an elementary truth." "The Greek Head" also boasts a craftily twisted surprise near its end. It's a nuance-rich revelation worthy of O. Henry, packing a real storytelling wallop, the likes of which are rarely found in the moody open-endedness of most contemporary gay short fiction. "Hearing Voices", the book's third piece, is stunning; reason enough to own the book. San Franciscans Kevin and Joe attune their ears to the inevitable creaks of their long, steady and truly loving relationship while, next door, AIDS roars at their neighbors, Jerry and Jorge. A mysterious phone caller- who Weltner renders hauntingly sensual rather than obscene -begins drawing Kevin into a web of sexual fantasy as fraught with guilt as it is with release. That conscientious ache of guilt, which arises in story after story here, is one of the consistent glories of Weltner's work. The author's voice is that of a responsible, romantic grown-up, not another self-protectively cynical, post-modern gayboy writer. Weltner is at his most gamesome in the collection's final story, "Unlike Himself". After all of Weltner's subtle etching of realistic subject matter, here's what, at first, appears to be a gothic body-switching story. Uptight, repressed academic Arthur Loudermilk and handsome, arrogant hustler Brice Landry supernaturally swap bods in a New Orleans hotel room. Weltner's wrinkle is that each of these self-absorbed and self-loathing little gargoyles ultimately come to realize that it's just as troublesome living with his own mind and body as it is to live with the other guy's. Initially surprising in its nod toward old-fashioned horror yarns, "Unlike Himself" is really quite like all of Weltner's strong work. It blends sturdy literary traditions with bracingly contemporary situations and psychology.
Rating:  Summary: AN UNDERAPPRECIATED WRITER Review: With his fourth book, Peter Weltner offers many perfectly pitched moments that capture gay characters who range from teenage to old age. In "My Faithful, Faithless Friend," Weltner has two boyfriends playing a clever, childlike driving game, trying to top each other at precisely naming the colors of passing cars: "Toasted almond." says Todd. "Maybe." says Jay. "More like butterscotch." As well as he captures such youthful whimsy, Weltner can convey a more mature perspective. In "The Greek Head," a man in his sixties whose lover has just died, offers angry and essential advice to his uneccesarily restless thirtysomething neighbors, seemingly poised for a break-up: "We made it work," he argues. "Is my message clear? "It just makes you all so angry, thinking you can't have everything and everyone, because you can't. You never could. It's such an elementary truth." "The Greek Head" also boasts a craftily twisted surprise near its end. It's a nuance-rich revelation worthy of O. Henry, packing a real storytelling wallop, the likes of which are rarely found in the moody open-endedness of most contemporary gay short fiction. "Hearing Voices", the book's third piece, is stunning; reason enough to own the book. San Franciscans Kevin and Joe attune their ears to the inevitable creaks of their long, steady and truly loving relationship while, next door, AIDS roars at their neighbors, Jerry and Jorge. A mysterious phone caller- who Weltner renders hauntingly sensual rather than obscene -begins drawing Kevin into a web of sexual fantasy as fraught with guilt as it is with release. That conscientious ache of guilt, which arises in story after story here, is one of the consistent glories of Weltner's work. The author's voice is that of a responsible, romantic grown-up, not another self-protectively cynical, post-modern gayboy writer. Weltner is at his most gamesome in the collection's final story, "Unlike Himself". After all of Weltner's subtle etching of realistic subject matter, here's what, at first, appears to be a gothic body-switching story. Uptight, repressed academic Arthur Loudermilk and handsome, arrogant hustler Brice Landry supernaturally swap bods in a New Orleans hotel room. Weltner's wrinkle is that each of these self-absorbed and self-loathing little gargoyles ultimately come to realize that it's just as troublesome living with his own mind and body as it is to live with the other guy's. Initially surprising in its nod toward old-fashioned horror yarns, "Unlike Himself" is really quite like all of Weltner's strong work. It blends sturdy literary traditions with bracingly contemporary situations and psychology.
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