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Blackouts

A Novel

ebook
3 of 3 copies available
3 of 3 copies available

Winner of the National Book Award
Winner of the California Book Award
Winner of Tournament of Books
Out in the desert in a place called the Palace, a young man tends to a dying soul, someone he once knew briefly but who has haunted the edges of his life: Juan Gay. Playful raconteur, child lost and found and lost, guardian of the institutionalized, Juan has a project to pass along, one built around a true artifact of a book—Sex Variants: A Study of Homosexual Patterns—and its devastating history. This book contains accounts collected in the early twentieth century from queer subjects by a queer researcher, Jan Gay, whose groundbreaking work was then co-opted by a committee, her name buried. The voices of these subjects have been filtered, muted, but it is possible to hear them from within and beyond the text, which, in Juan's tattered volumes, has been redacted with black marker on nearly every page. As Juan waits for his end, he and the narrator recount for each other moments of joy and oblivion; they resurrect loves, lives, mothers, fathers, minor heroes. In telling their own stories and the story of the book, they resist the ravages of memory and time. The past is with us, beside us, ahead of us; what are we to create from its gaps and erasures?
A book about storytelling—its legacies, dangers, delights, and potential for change—and a bold exploration of form, art, and love, Justin Torres's Blackouts uses fiction to see through the inventions of history and narrative. A marvel of creative imagination, it draws on testimony, photographs, illustrations, and a range of influences as it insists that we look long and steadily at what we have inherited and what we have made—a world full of ghostly shadows and flashing moments of truth. A reclamation of ransacked history, a celebration of defiance, and a transformative encounter, Blackouts mines the stories that have been kept from us and brings them into the light.

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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2023

      In Torres's follow-up to the VCU Cabell--winning We the Animals, the protagonist tends a dying man in the desert who will pass along to him a project comprising stories collected in the early 20th century from queer subjects. Inspired by an actual artifact, Sex Variants: A Study in Homosexual Patterns; with a 100,000-copy first printing. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 7, 2023
      Torres’s ambitious sophomore outing (following We the Animals) intersperses a fictional biography of early 20th-century sex researcher Jan Gay with an enticing if murky present-day narrative. The unnamed 20-something narrator visits a dying man named Juan, whom he first met at 17, when they were patients at a psychiatric hospital. Now, after having accidentally flooded his apartment, the narrator moves into Juan’s rundown building (inhabited, in Juan’s words, by a “badling of queer ducks”) and promises to carry out Juan’s unfinished project involving a research study published in 1941—Sex Variants: A Study in Homosexual Patterns by George W. Henry—that draws on Gay’s research. Juan’s copy of the book is heavily redacted, leaving “little poems of illumination... a counternarrative to whatever might have been Dr. Henry’s agenda,” to de-pathologize Henry’s case studies and restore the egalitarian spirit of Gay’s groundwork. Juan and the narrator’s dialogues can feel contrived, but just as the Sex Variants erasure poems sparkle with possibility, so too does Torres make fruitful use of references to literature and art, including a Carl Van Vechten photo of a famous gay male ballet dancer and a children’s book by Gay’s partner Zhenya, the latter of which proves to contain deliciously queer subtext. At its best, this captures the spirit of Torres’s pangs of inspiration. Agent: Jin Auh, Wylie Agency.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2023
      An unnamed narrator and his elderly interlocutor weave together forgotten queer histories in Torres' second novel, following We the Animals (2011). When the 20-something narrator wakes up from a blackout to find his kitchen flooded, he drives into the desert to visit Juan, an elderly friend who lives with "a badling of queer ducks" in a housing complex called the Palace. In exchange for a place to stay, the narrator agrees to carry on Juan's life project, which involves a (real) 1941 research study called Sex Variants: A Study in Homosexual Patterns. Though the research was begun in 1935 by Jan Gay, a lesbian anthropologist, the author named in the published study was psychiatrist George W. Henry, who used the text to pathologize homosexuality. Perusing Juan's copy of the study, the narrator discovers largely blacked-out pages featuring highlighted fragments of text that Juan calls "little poems of illumination," exercises in erasure that attempt to wrest the text from Dr. Henry and blow life back into the individual testimonies collected by Gay. Scans of the blacked-out pages of Sex Variants, in addition to related photographs and documents from Gay's fictional archive, punctuate the novel's short chapters, which capture Juan and the narrator's conversations. Composed of stories both real and invented, collective and personal--Juan frequently asks the narrator to tell him about his sexual exploits--the novel's interlocutory structure recalls Manuel Puig's Kiss of the Spider Woman. As playful, inventive, and at times kaleidoscopic as the book may be, the dialogue between Juan and the narrator often comes across as forced, with some blocks of storytelling (including the entirety of Torres' short story "Reverting to a Wild State," which was published in The New Yorker in 2011) feeling wedged in. The novel shines and surprises, though, in sections where the characters interweave cultural and historical artifacts, as well as memory and literary references, to reconstruct and revise queer history. Here, the novel's central question about where storytelling ends and history begins comes to the fore, albeit with no clear resolution. It's up to the reader, the narrator concludes, to decide where truth and fiction converge. An inventive novel that displays the scope of its author's ambitions.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from September 1, 2023
      A dozen years since his award-winning debut, We the Animals (2011), National Book Foundation "5 Under 35"-lauded Torres' meticulous sophomore title illuminates the relationship between two gay men--one dying, the other caregiving. Juan will never leave the Palace, a "desert building fallen into disrepair," but he's hoping his younger companion might "finish the project that had once consumed him, the story of a certain woman who shared his last name. Miss Jan Gay." Among Juan's few possessions is a 1948 tome, Sex Variants: A Study of Homosexual Patterns, which, despite being credited to George W. Henry as author, was based on Jan Gay's pioneering 1930s interviews with homosexual men and women. (The book and Gay are real.) Juan's copy, however, has been defaced--or liberated?--with blacked-out text. Examples of the redacted pages interrupt and underscore the friends' cinematic conversation revealing intimate experiences lived and embellished, further enhanced by photographs and illustrations as if positing proof of existence. Torres combats erasure, reclaims history, and demands personal stories to create exquisite testimony to dismissed, yet defiant, humanity. Torres' literary acrobatics culminate in "A Sort of Postface," a meta-afterword that, despite insisting "Blackouts is a work of fiction," spectacularly displays his remarkable manipulations of fiction and reality.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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