Manuel Betancourt
Goodreads Author
Member Since
May 2014
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The Cardboard Kingdom
by
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published
2018
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6 editions
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Roar of the Beast
by
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published
2021
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4 editions
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The Male Gazed
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published
2023
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7 editions
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The Cardboard Kingdom #3: Snow and Sorcery (A Graphic Novel)
by
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published
2023
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4 editions
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Hello Stranger: Musings on Modern Intimacies
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published
2025
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6 editions
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Judy at Carnegie Hall
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published
2020
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3 editions
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Manuel’s Recent Updates
“Gay men were at the forefront of that community of misfits, happy to have found in Garland a performer whose tragedy and resilience (like their own) went hand in hand. Those “boys in the tight trousers,” her “ever-present little bluebirds” 10 as Time magazine euphemistically referred to them at the time (William Goldman was not so kind, outright talking about the “flutter of fags” 11 that filled up Garland’s closing night at The Palace in 1967), were drawn to Garland precisely because she spoke their language. As queer theorist David M. Halperin notes in his cheekily titled book How to Be Gay, this had little to do with a synchronous identification: Garland “wasn’t a gay man,” he writes, “but in certain respects she could express gay desire, what gay men want, better than a gay man could. That is, she could actually convey something even gayer than gay identity itself.” 12”
― Judy at Carnegie Hall
― Judy at Carnegie Hall
“Dear Ms. Garland, I am writing this to you And I’m hoping you can read this from up above Your passing made me sadder Cause your singing made me gladder And I thought I’d write this to tell you so Judy you made me love you I didn’t want to do it I didn’t want to do it Judy you made me love you And I wish you knew it I really want you to see this I know that you’ve ascended to heaven up above And when I get there too I can tell you you’re the one I love Judy, you know you’ve made me love you. 13”
― Judy at Carnegie Hall
― Judy at Carnegie Hall
“As queer theorist David Caron notes in his essay in the edited collection Gay Shame, Garland’s own “dissolution of the boundary between the private and the public, the personal and the non personal” 7 spoke to gay men because it was rooted in an acknowledgment of shame. Of childhood shame, moreover. The Broadway Melody scene exists at the intersection of queerness and fandom because it depicts a childhood scene of shame that Garland herself would continue to enact and perform throughout her career, a career that in its turn engendered many a childhood scene of shame.”
― Judy at Carnegie Hall
― Judy at Carnegie Hall











































