I enjoyed this collection of short stories. it's the first book I've read by Christos Tsiolkas, and I don't think it will be the last/only one I read 🙂
I appreciated the cast of characters and couplings - some LGBTQI some straight some undefined, some brown some white, alot of mixed heritage, esp European-Australian, and esp Greek migrant families and subsequent generations, I think drawing on some of the authors own background. the characters were mostly young to middling aged, tho some stories also referenced older folk, incl/esp older gay men and lesbians 🙂
alot were about sex and sexuality, and relationships. but while relationships and relations were often a focus, they were also a place where emotions, beliefs and opinions, and complexities of connection, were explored.
I'm not sure what it was about the last 3 stories that a few other readers didn't seem to like. while they were slightly set apart by their kinda group name, and some of their focus, I thought/felt they were in keeping with the rest of the collection wrt subjects, perspectives, feelings.
I think the above links with what some reviewers write about the shocking/'aiming to shock' nature of the stories. to me they felt more like direct and open explorations of relations and feelings. provocative maybe, but interestingly and constructively so. alot felt relatable. I guess alot of this also depends on the readers own perspectives, position, experiences.
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abit about the stories/my reception/interpretation of/thoughts about the stories:
* Merciless Gods.
the first story was kinda interesting wrt truths and lies, where a line/boundary is/should be. conversation amongst a group of friends over an evening, their mixed backgrounds and foregrounds. psychological rather than action.
* Tourists.
a young couple from Melbourne in New York.
culture, un/familiarity, being out of ones comfort zone. these things creating tensions in a relationship.
challenging racism. nicely short, tho the relationship was abit annoying in some ways 😉
* The Hair of the Dog
starts in Germany, in the time of the Beatles, during and post war (WW2). narrated by a grandchild. the generational impacts of national history. personal impacts of alcoholism, an alcoholic parent.
a woman who moved to Australia from Germany, looking back over her personal, and the national, history.
* Petals.
an interesting and brutal perspective on culture and prison, and prison culture. racism. violence. time.
at the end it says it was written in Greek and translated by the author. interesting that he might have written it in Greek and then translated the Greek into English - curious about what that process lends to the story etc 🙂🤔🙂
* Hung Phat.
Hypatia... astrology and Virgos... two friends over time, relationships and geography 🙂
* Saturn Return
a young gay couple, uncovering migrant history at Bonagilla (?spelled by ear?). they are making a video for one of their fathers, on their way to be with the other of their fathers as he dies. HIV ("the virus"), race, class, being poor 💔♥
* Genetic Material.
a man and his father... family, dementia, masculinity, fear, love, care, intimacy, memory... ♥💔♥
possibly my favourite! 😃
* Jessica Lange in Frances.
a relationship of sorts, a man meeting a man at a party, leaving with him instead of his girlfriend...
later, between them violence and rape. alcoholism.
* The Disco at the End of Communism
a death, and it's impact on a brother and his family.
family, LGBTQI community, gay rights, aboriginal rights.
the people you temporarily inherit after death.
remembering, forgiving? 💔♥
* Sticks, Stones.
this story was alot more interesting than I thought it would be from the start! a woman considering her family and her self, explores the impact of language, adolescent masculinity, the power to hurt each other, love.
* Civil War.
drugs, god/spirituality, and the desert. racism and anti indigenous prejudice. two young gay men connect briefly. a relatable and heartbreaking miniature portrait of people pushed to the margins. ♥💔♥
* The T-shirt with a Fist on it.
a middle-aged lesbian (not to eclipse the potential bisexuality of at least one) couple, Australians travelling in the Middle East. snippets of their travels, and thoughts about them. reflections on home, viewed in contrast.
the bulk of the story set in Jordan. gunfire from Palestine, heard from a tourist beach 💔 feelings brought up by an interaction with a couple of young Australians in a bar, the tensions of travel and navigating another culture, including as LGBTQI folk, coming to a head. a postcard home to a son, from Petra 🙂
* Porn 1
a woman purchasing a porn tape her son had been in before his death. reflections on her own sexuality/experience. family.
trying to understand something of her son... to try and connect the man with the child she birthed, nursed, cared for thru childhood.
dealing with her own shame and yet curiosity I think, and grief 💔
* Porn 2
where does Jesus live? in Micky! well, some of the time 😉 narrated by a young man who is friends with (and in love with) Micky, who looks out for him. they are two young sex workers, one gay one straight. a really sweet relationship of mutual care between them ♥
a porn shoot to pay off a debt.
I found myself especially moved by the end of this story 🙂 ♥💔♥
* Porn 3
Khassan (?spelled by ear?) and a European man he's wanted to have sex with/fuck for a while, his 'first European' 😉 his different feelings for his friend Omar, and the European man. all university students. I think the story positions Khassan and Omar as from Pakistan, referencing them speaking Urdu.
it's a kind of exoticism of one by the other, but a turn around of the usual, with the European exoticised by Khassan 😉 Khassan's explorations of his feelings (for Omar, and for the European), his expectations and perceptions. his separation of his pure relationship with Omar, his mix of love and loathing for the European and himself in relation to his sexual desires and sexual activity. viewing himself and his actions thru the opinions of Omar.
the unspoken emotion and avoided intimacy 💔 the impossibility of a possibility, in mind and/or reality?
a struggle with self and beliefs.
🤔 this was probably the story I was least sure about in some ways, because of the implicit Muslim main character and the portrait of him - too stereotypical? too heavy on infernal desire/acts? 🤔 while at the same time, it's a good exploration of internal conflict created by external narratives and norms.
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accessed as a library audiobook, Well read by Humphrey Bower 🙂
the audiobook was hard to navigate in places - some stories are more than one track long and it was hard to figure out where one will end, another start, and there was no obvious contents page listing the stories, their titles, their order (I searched online for the story titles and order part way thru, to remedy this in part, which helped).