How's Your Romance?: Concluding the Buddies Cycle

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Author: Ethan Mordden

ISBN-10: 0312333315

ISBN-13: 9780312333317

Category: Gay & Lesbian - Circle of Friends

For a generation, Ethan Mordden's tales about a tightly knit circle of friends who live within the shifting confines of gay Manhattan have entertained tens of thousands of readers and devoted fans. Now Mordden returns to his best-loved characters - the ultimate hunk Carlo; the best friend Dennis Savage; J. (who was once Little Kiwi); Cosgrove the maturing elf-child; and narrator and ultimate observer Bud - in this eagerly awaited new volume in the cycle.\ How's Your Romance? brings the series...

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Mordden explores a tricky moral universe in which emotional loyalty is exalted but sexual fidelity is not assumed...There is a sense of real pain amid the zingers; Mordden's characters run their mouths to avoid baring their souls." — New York Times Book Review on Some Men Are LookersAfter a hiatus of eight years, Ethan Mordden returns to the fictional universe for which he is most beloved in this latest, possibly last, volume in his much lauded "Buddies" cycle. Following the exploits of his best-loved characters — Dennis Savage, J. (who was once Little Kiwi), Carlo, the slowly maturing 'elf-child' Cosgrove, and narrator Bud - as he lays bare the changed emotional landscape of the city within a city that is Gay Manhattan. Blending the comic, the sexy, the tragic, and the at once idealistic and realistic, these stories are Ethan Mordden at his very best.Library JournalThis fifth and concluding volume of Mordden's "Buddies" series (once a trilogy, it seems to have evolved into a "cycle") offers more loosely interwoven stories about a group of gay male friends living in New York City. These core characters were all featured in the earlier volumes, which have been published over a period of 20 years; here, they continue with their lives, but there's no real plot moving them forward. Readers familiar with the earlier "Buddies" books will undoubtedly be interested in this installment. However, while the story line is likely to resonate with urban gay men, it may be confusing to most other readers, as Mordden frequently makes esoteric references that only insiders to the subculture would understand. Moreover, the dialog sounds stilted at times, as though English weren't the characters' first language. Mordden is well known for a large body of nonfiction work on theater and opera, and many of the book's redeeming moments come when he tosses in a choice theater tidbit. Recommended for larger public libraries.-Caroline Mann, Univ. of Portland Lib., OR Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

\ Library JournalThis fifth and concluding volume of Mordden's "Buddies" series (once a trilogy, it seems to have evolved into a "cycle") offers more loosely interwoven stories about a group of gay male friends living in New York City. These core characters were all featured in the earlier volumes, which have been published over a period of 20 years; here, they continue with their lives, but there's no real plot moving them forward. Readers familiar with the earlier "Buddies" books will undoubtedly be interested in this installment. However, while the story line is likely to resonate with urban gay men, it may be confusing to most other readers, as Mordden frequently makes esoteric references that only insiders to the subculture would understand. Moreover, the dialog sounds stilted at times, as though English weren't the characters' first language. Mordden is well known for a large body of nonfiction work on theater and opera, and many of the book's redeeming moments come when he tosses in a choice theater tidbit. Recommended for larger public libraries.-Caroline Mann, Univ. of Portland Lib., OR Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.\ \