Read The Guide to Getting It On Online
Authors: Paul Joannides
Tags: #Self-Help, #Sexual Instruction, #Sexuality
Also, your chances of being accepted by your teammates would probably be better if you were in a sport where there are individual performances, like gymnastics, track or swimming. Your chances would also be better if you played women’s sports, but you didn’t mention having gender issues.
If you do come out, you might need to deal with some of your teammates’ concerns about what will happen in the showers and locker room. You can laugh and point out that nothing happened before you told them you were gay. Or you might try kidding them by telling them not to worry and that your standards are higher than those of their girlfriends.
Another book you might try is
Inside Out: Straight Talk from a Gay Jock
by former Olympic swimmer Mark Tewksbury, Wiley (2006).
The Guide’s Hard & Wet Steamy Fiction Reading List
Let’s say you are a young adult and you would like to explore more about same-sex feelings. If you check with your local Gay and Lesbian organizations, they will probably recommend one of the usual coming out books with pictures on the cover of a white kid, a black kid, a Hispanic kid, and an Asian kid, all smiling and happy. Sorry, but it didn’t make our list of suggested titles.
What follows is
The Guide’s Hard & Wet Steamy Fiction Reading List.
Several very smart people have helped assemble this list. The purpose is for you to have a fun time exploring same-sex feelings through the theater of your mind. One of the criteria in constructing this list was to include books that would cause a stirring in your crotch. Many of these titles manage to do just that. It was also important that the books be well-written or intelligent and fun to read.
What if you have homophobic friends and family members? How would you explain these books to them? If that’s an issue, it’s probably best to keep them hidden. (What else is new?) If you drive or use public transportation, maybe you can visit a library in another city. You can spend the day reading there. Perhaps a librarian will keep a book on reserve for you if you’re coming back in a few days. Or maybe you have an aunt or uncle you can trust, or there’s a teacher or minister who will keep your secret. Perhaps they can get the book for you and you can read it at their place. Just be sure it’s not someone who is going to insist that you “come out” or that you “get help,” unless you really do need help. This is about the freedom to explore without social, political or religious pressure.
There are dozens other books that deserve to be on this list. No one would be surprised if we missed some exceptional titles. Also, some of the books will be out of print. You may need to hunt them down.
Young & Wet
A list of books for girls who are exploring same-sex feelings:
Skim
— Mariko Tamaki
Keeping You a Secret
— Julie Anne Peters
grl2grl: Short fictions
— Julie Anne Peters
Far from Xanadu
— Julie Anne Peters
Annie on My Mind
— Nancy Garden
Ruby Fruit Jungle
— Rita Mae Brown
Fried Green Tomatoes
— Fannie Flagg
Valencia
— Michelle Tea
The Passion
— Jeanette Winterson
Tipping The Velvet
— Sarah Waters
Dive
— Stacey Donovan
Strangers in Paradise
— Terry Moore
Flaming Iguanas
— Erika Lopez
The Wrestling Party
— Bett Williams
Girl Walking Backward
— Bett Williams
Dare, Truth or Promise
— Paul Boock
Deliver Us from Evie
— M.E. Kerr
Crush
— Jane Futcher
Memory Mambo
— Achy Obejas
Parrotfish
— Ellen Wittlinger
As you might notice, the guy’s list that follows is substantially longer than the women’s list. The body of lesbian literature for young adults is a bit thin if you include the criteria of “fun and sexy.” Tragic and angst-filled, no problem; boring and academic—you could fill a library. Fortunately, there’s plenty of excellent panty-drenching lesbian erotica, but that could be a little intense for someone who is just starting to explore. On the other hand, the rules of “intense” have changed since the Internet became part of our lives!
If you do watch lesbian porn, be aware that there’s real lesbian porn that’s done by lesbians, and there’s fake lesbian porn which is for straight guys and has little to do with the kind of sex that women have with women.
Young & Hard
A list of books for guys who are exploring same-sex feelings:
PINS
— Jim Provenzano
Lawnboy
— Paul Lisicky
Diary of a Hustler
— Joey
My First Time
— Jack Hart
Foolish Fire
— Guy Willard
Dream Boy
— Jim Grimsley
Boys Like Us
— Patrick Merla
Easy Money
— Bob Condron
Glove Puppet
— Neal Drinnan
My Worst Date
— David Leddick
The Persian Boy
— Mary Renault
The Boys on the Rock
— John Fox
Changing Pitches
— Steve Kluger
Smooth and Sassy
— John Patrick
Enchanted Boy
— Richie McMullen
For a Lost Soldier
— Rudi van Dantzig
Harlan’s Race
— Patricia Nell Warren
Blind Items
— Matthew Rettenmund
Boy Culture
— Matthew Rettenmund
World of Normal Boys
— K.M. Soehnlein
Execution Texas: 1987
— D. Travers Scott
The Milkman’s on His Way
— David Rees
The Front Runner
— Patricia Nell Warren
The Arena of Masculinity
— Brian Pronger
Sex Toy of the Gods
— Christian McLaughlin
Angel, The Complete Quintet
— John Patrick
Telling Tales Out of School
— Kevin Jennings
Gay Olympian
— Tom Waddell & Dick Schaap
Out on Fraternity Row
— Windmeyer & Freeman
Entries From a Hot Pink Notebook
— Todd Brown
Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You
— Peter Cameron
Dan Woog —
Jocks
Keith Hale —
Cody
Perry Moore
— Hero
Wiliam Taylor —
Jerome
Will Fellows —
Farm Boys
Paul Russell —
Boys of Life
Kief Hillsberry —
War Boys
Russell —
The Coming Storm
James St. James
— Freak Show
Alex Sanchez —
Rainbow Boys
Mark A. Roeder —
A Better Place
William Taylor
—
The Blue Lawn
David Levithan —
Boy Meets Boy
William Corlett —
Now and Then
Brent Hartinger —
Geography Clu
b
Brian Malloy
—
Twelve Long Months
James Lecesne
—
Absolute Brightness
Richie McMullen —
Enchanted Youth
Andre Aciman
—
Call Me by Your Name
Here are some newer titles suggested by friends of Charlie Glickman from Good Vibrations:
Choir Boy — Charlie Anders
Alanna Series — Tamora Pierce
My Fathers Scar: A Novel — Michael Cart
The Left Hand of Darkness — Ursula Le Guin
The Weetzie Bat Books — Francesca Lia Block
The Perks of Being a Wallflower — Stephen Chbosky
The Heart’s Progress: A Lesbian Memoir — Claudia Bepko
Am I Blue?: Coming Out from the Silence — Marion Dane Bauer
The Man Who Fell in Love with the Moon: A Novel — Tom Spanbauer
A Big Thanks
to Charlie Glickman from Good Vibrations, Matthew Torrey, Kayla Strassfeld, Dan Culliane, and Judith Rosen from PW, Eric Garrison, and to Ralph Bolton, Professor of Anthropology, Claremont College. Professor Bolton is first person in the country who the author of this Guide turns to for help with mind-boggling questions of an anthropological nature.
CHAPTER
79
Gender Benders
T
he author of this book recently sent the following e-mail to a university professor who is renowned for his incredible sex education course saying, “I’m really struggling with how to present transgenderism. Do you have any suggestions?” The professor, who has always been generous with advice, replied apologetically that he struggled with trying to understand transgenderism. He said, “Be sure to let me know what you come up with.”