What do you think?
Rate this book


226 pages, Hardcover
First published April 1, 2014
So when a good friend gave me this book for christmas, I was pretty skeptical. Gay boys, again?? Give me a break... but it turns out I was dead wrong: this anthology is sharp, twisted, jagged, clever, and irreverent in a way that is deeply beguiling, though I can't suppress some frustration that Duncan doesn't pursue some of the ideas that gain prominence in the earlier stories. At any rate, I am eternally skeptical of stories involving fairies, but the concept as applied here is hilarious, bawdy, and quite self-aware. Unflinching in his allusions to the ugly history of workhouses, Duncan's scruffy victims are rewritten literally and figuratively to let them wield their afflictions as weapons against the powers that grind them down. Hal Duncan uses Scruffians! to scramble queerness and madness and punk and oppression without narratively dawdling where identity-politics infighting could bog him down-- he doesn't even open that door, to my intense relief. Scruffians! takes its queers as they are, as they've been made, as they become, all without a mote of saccharine triteness. I'm pleased.