Stephen Wright is a Vietnam veteran, MFA graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and the author of four previous novels. He has received a Whiting Award in Fiction, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Lannan Literary Fellowship, and has taught writing and literature at Iowa, Princeton, Brown, and The New School. He was born in Warren, Pennsylvania, and lives in New York City.
3.5. Most of these stories are a product of their time, and although they can be interesting from a historical perspective, most are here because they were likely scandalous because of their queer content—even when it’s buried in the subtext, in a few cases. The Phil Android stories are some of the most interesting—well written and indifferent to how they would have been read. The Crooked Man is a gem.
These stories are a glimpse into life pre Stonewall - no happy endings, lots of death and sadness. Some of the stories have not aged well, surprisingly the sexcapades of Phil, Andros have.