Everywhere home A life in essays

Fenton Johnson

Book - 2017

"Part retrospective, part memoir, Fenton Johnson's collection Everywhere Home: A Life in Essays explores sexuality, religion, geography, the AIDS crisis, and more. Johnson's wanderings take him from the hills of Kentucky to those of San Francisco, from the streets of Paris to the sidewalks of Calcutta. Along the way, he investigates questions large and small: What's the relationship between artists and museums, illuminated in a New Guinean display of shrunken heads? What's the difference between empiricism and intuition? The collection draws together essays that originally appeared in Harper's, The New York Times, All Things Considered and elsewhere, along with new work. Johnson reports from the front lines of ...the AIDS epidemic, from Burning Man, from monasteries near and far. His subject matter ranges from Oscar Wilde to censorship in journalism to Kentucky basketball. Everywhere Home is the latest title in Sarabande's Bruckheimer Series in Kentucky Literature. Fenton Johnson is the author of the novels The Man Who Loved Birds, Scissors, Paper, Rock, and Crossing the River, and the nonfiction books Keeping Faith and Geography of the Heart. Johnson has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. He writes regularly for Harper's, and is a professor in the creative writing programs at the University of Arizona and Spalding University"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Essays
Gay autobiographies
Gay biographies
LGBTQ+ autobiographies
LGBTQ+ biographies
Published
Louisville, KY : Sarabande Books [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Fenton Johnson (author)
Physical Description
202 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781941411438
  • Prologue: On Fire
  • Part I.
  • North of the South, West of the West
  • Catholic in the South
  • Father to the Mother
  • Basketball Days
  • After Shock in San Francisco
  • Part II.
  • Journals of the Plague Years
  • The Limitless Heart
  • Lucky Fellow
  • The Secret Decoder Ring Society
  • All That Is Human Is Mine
  • Safe(r) Sex
  • City of Innocence and Plague
  • From the Depths: Oscar Wilde's De Profundis in Its Second Century
  • Part III.
  • Power and Obedience: Restoring Pacifism to American Politics
  • In Between: Fiction Writer as Drag Queen
  • Ordinary Acts
  • God, Cays, and the Geography of Desire
  • Beyond Belief
  • Part IV.
  • Witness and Storyteller
  • Shrines and Wonders
  • Reverence and Irony: On Beauty and the Sublime
  • Dreamers and Fools: Notes from Burning Man
  • Epilogue: Light in August
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this collection of 26 essays, the earliest published in 1989, Johnson (The Man Who Loved Birds) contemplates questions of identity, belonging, and belief. With a deft hand and trained ear for storytelling, he explores growing up Catholic in Kentucky, the complex nature of same-gender eros, and the desire to belong. His work is most poignant when he's bearing witness to the plague years of the AIDS crisis and its effects on the social and artistic networks of so many LGBTQ people. In the collection's most moving pieces, he reckons with grief after his lover dies of AIDS-related complications. "From understanding grows compassion; from compassion grows real, enduring, life-affirming change," writes Johnson. These essays trust in the power of communication to build the capacity for change. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

A writer with deep Appalachian roots rehearses his life story, positioning it under the most exacting of microscopes.Harper's contributor Johnson (The Man Who Loved Birds, 2016, etc.), who was born and raised "in the Kentucky Knobs, a westward-flung, northwest-curling finger of the Appalachians," has a variety of topics on his agenda in these essays, which date to as early as 1989 and as recently as 2016; some appear for the first time here. His dawning awareness that he is gay, the death of his lover to AIDS in 1990 (his most painful memories of this occur in several essays), his struggles with religion (somewhat resolved in recent years), his determination to recognize love as the key to allthese subjects he visits throughout. In another way, Johnson, whose first name came from a Trappist monk who lived near his home, reveals other aspects of his personality and character less directly. Numerous literary allusions, for example, show his wide and eclectic reading. William James, George Eliot, Sophocles, Lewis Thomas, Thomas Merton, Mark Twain, and numerous others rise up continually in his prose to reaffirm or confirm a point, to illustrate, or to summarize. Johnson also evinces a fairly liberal political sensibility, and his 2014 essay on war and pacifism, "Power and Obedience: Restoring Pacifism to American Politics," reveals the depths of his opposition to war. Johnson writes in a learned, serious, and occasionally erudite style, and he makes little use of irony or humor. Throughout the collection, we infer much about his personal life: his Kentucky boyhood, his undergraduate years at Stanford, and a bit about his teaching. One brief essay, "Witness and Storyteller," from 2008, is even a tad erotic. In taut, sometimes-tense prose, Johnson shows us so many varieties of human pain as well as many glimmers of hope. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.