Gay author Richard Bowes talks about his new
autobiographical novel “Dust Devil on a Quiet Street” just released by
Lethe Press with Emmy Winner Charlotte Robinson host of
OUTTAKE VOICES™. Born in Boston, Richard Bowes has lived in Manhattan for
almost his entire adult life. “Dust Devil on a Quiet Street” takes you
on an amazing ride. It’s like traveling in a time machine spanning over
50 years of gay life in New York City. Bowes shares everything from
coming to terms with his sexuality to his struggle with overcoming ...
Gay author Richard Bowes talks about his new
autobiographical novel “Dust Devil on a Quiet Street” just released by
Lethe Press with Emmy Winner Charlotte Robinson host of
OUTTAKE VOICES™. Born in Boston, Richard Bowes has lived in Manhattan for
almost his entire adult life. “Dust Devil on a Quiet Street” takes you
on an amazing ride. It’s like traveling in a time machine spanning over
50 years of gay life in New York City. Bowes shares everything from
coming to terms with his sexuality to his struggle with overcoming years
of substance abuse. David Pratt, Lambda Literary Award-winning author
stated, “From the Bowery to Times Square, from The Saint to Saint
Vincent’s, from Sleepy Hollow to Hoboken, Richard Bowes takes us on an
eerie, bittersweet, wonderfully nostalgic tour of a slightly bygone (and
very haunted!) New York, New York. It’s like hanging in West Village
bar with a gay Joseph Mitchell or Jimmy Breslin. A delightful read for
anyone ever captivated by Gotham, by art, by youth, or by the spirits
that lurk within ever-shifting cityscapes.” We talked to Richard about
his new book and his spin on our LGBT issues.
When asked what his personal commitment is to LGBT civil rights, Bowes
stated, “You know it use to be easier and clearer. I mean if you just
said ‘I am gay’ you were doing the work. Now it requires more thought,
it requires more action and it requires a lot more donations. I remember
in the early days of gay liberation knowing that I had to march in that
parade. People took an enormous risk being in the parade because there
would be pictures and their dear mother wherever she was would see these
and realize. That would be their coming out. I always felt because of
where I was and because of what I did, I worked in the library at New
York University and nobody there cared if I was gay or straight. I think
in fact with guys it was more or less assumed that you were gay. I had
an easy life in those ways and I’ve tried to remember that and give
something to those who are in my opinion on the frontlines.”
Richard Bowes has won two World Fantasy Awards, the International Horror
Guild and Million Writers Award. By the end of 2013 he will have
published six novels, four short story collections and seventy stories.
This year Lethe Press republished his Lambda Award winning 1999 novel
“Minions of the Moon”. His modern fairy tale collection “The Queen, the
Cambion and Seven Others” appeared in March 2013 from Aqueduct Press. A
collection of new and old stories, “If Angels Fight” will be published
by Fairwood Press this October.
For More Info: rickbowes.com
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