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Pagan's Father

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A Lambda Literary Award finalist, Pagan's Father explores a timely and important issue: gay parenting. The reader is taken on a dramatic journey in which Leo Young must confront the passions and opinions of his peers and the legal system -- and fight not only for the right of sexual preference but for the custody and care of the young girl he helped raise and dearly loves.

258 pages, Paperback

First published August 20, 1997

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Michael Arditti

23 books17 followers

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5 stars
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25 (31%)
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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Philip Price.
20 reviews1 follower
September 22, 2018
Gave up on this pretty early. I found the characters unbearable and the writing style close to unreadable. Pagan’s mother Candida sounds like a proper nightmare - half manic pixie dream girl, half self-obsessed social climber, and then you have Leo, who is so ashamed of his working-class upbringing that he barely talks to anyone at university (Cambridge, natch, and of course they “go up” there rather than just “going”) and is so wet that he follows this annoying woman around like a lapdog, accepting all of her criticisms and even getting roped into acting as father to her child. He also just so happens to be a famous TV presenter and documentary maker, despite those shameful vowels.

And it’s written in the second person, from Leo to dead Candida, which is annoying and difficult to read.

The other three novels by Arditti that I’ve read have been uniformly brilliant, but this is a much earlier work. He’s obviously managed to pare down the silliness with age.
Profile Image for Girl with her Head in a Book.
644 reviews207 followers
October 31, 2012
I have a habit of finding a book that I think looks interesting and then writing down the title and author in the Notes bit of my iPhone. It means I don't forget and when I get book vouchers I know what I'm looking for. It does mean though that I can be surprised when I find myself buying books that I've forgotten I wanted. Pagan and her Parents has been a wonderful surprise. It was written in the early 90s and out of interest, I checked the web to find out more and I was surprised that it had been so forgotten yet aside from being recommended by Stonewall, there was nothing. Still, I do not believe that this book was written purely for the gay and lesbian community. While some of the attitudes and prejudices described within are dated, all too much of it is as fresh as a daisy and the case of Pagan and her parents still offers a lot for discussion.

For my full review:
http://www.girlwithherheadinabook.blo...
40 reviews
May 10, 2010
A story of a bereaved companion of the mother of the child Pagan and his battle for custody of the child with her parents. Common themes of Michael Arditti's work are homosexuality and its place in society, child safety and abuse, a spell in jail for the protagonist, and a positive outcome for the sympathetic characters in the novel. Absent is the debate on religion so much to the fore in Easter and The Enemy of the Good.
Profile Image for Kate.
15 reviews1 follower
June 18, 2011
I read this as the April read for Walk Cafe Book Club in Nottingham. At first I found the narrative pretty hard going, between talking to his deceased friend and talking to the reader, the place and time seemed to flick back and forth between paragraphs. However, I was really interested in the character buildup, even if I didn't like them. The twist towards the end of the book came as a surprise, as I had another character pegged in that role. Would recommend to others.
Profile Image for Wifenotlodger Sunflower.
55 reviews1 follower
March 17, 2013
The subject matter and ensueing conflict kept me going, but to be honest the style this novel was written in put me off, not my most enjoyable read. Would have given up if it were not for Book Group. History has over taken the events too, 'Every Child Matters' means the child would have been treated very differently. Scary though, which things did not seem to have progressed as much. Interesting and irritating in equal measures!
Profile Image for Marston Hall.
2 reviews5 followers
November 11, 2012
i read this as a read only...someone had it before it was officially released...it was a great read... i couldn't put it down....it really went a long way in reinforcing how i wanted to be read..how i want to be heard... this author has a great voice
33 reviews1 follower
February 26, 2008
The author is a fucking genius. I wish I had this much talent. I've read his book 6 times over and I'm not willing to part with it.
Profile Image for Beth Tovar.
76 reviews
December 22, 2016
i thought I could get through it in short spurts on the treadmill but half way through i gave up. i will never understand why men think women with no moral center are interesting
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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