Music from Another World, by Robin Talley (Inkyard)
In the late 1970s,
the gay rights movement was getting underway, with cities like San Francisco
leading the way. Harvey Milk’s election as city supervisor (1978) catalyzed a
generation of LGBTQ youth and their allies, while in other parts of the country
Anita Bryant was campaigning for anti-gay laws. The punk music movement was in
full swing, giving voice to the chaos and rage many of these young people felt.
Into this world come
two young women, high school students at extremely conservative schools. A
summer program pairs Sharon, a Catholic from San Francisco, with Tammy, a
Baptist from Orange County. Each harbors a secret she dare not let her
homophobic parents know: Sharon’s twin brother is gay, as is Tammy herself.
Gradually, through diaries and their correspondence, the girls discover the
courage to fight free of the homophobia, repression, and secrecy of their
lives. Matters come to a head when Tammy is outed and flees to San Francisco. Under
a pretext, she and Sharon convinced Sharon’s mother to let her stay with them.
Here she’s caught up in the Castro Street scene and a radically, woman-owned
bookstore. Tammy and Sharon find that adjusting to in-person intimacy is very
different from the openness they enjoyed in their letters.
So much of this book
evoked memories for me. I wasn’t in San Francisco when the story takes place,
but my sister was. We both frequented book stores like the one in the story; we
both knew people struggling with their sexual orientation, with the
condemnation of their families. We knew the fear of bigotry such as Bryant’s
and the exhilaration of Milk’s election. That said, we were both older, and
Tammy and Sharon are still teens. The teen years are agonizing enough without
issues of identity and the terror of being sent to a conversion camp or being
rejected by family and friends. It was no wonder gay teens had such a high risk
of suicide. But this story is filled with hope, too. The love and support of some friends and some family, and the riotous energy of the music, and the deep
friendship between the two girls is a message of hope.
Nowadays it’s all
too easy to look back on “those terrible times,” as if they will never happen
again. That’s a false confidence, as daily news stories remind us. The eternal
vigilance that is the price of freedom means that books like this one have
enduring value. Even in “enlightened” times, there are teens who struggle, who
come to loathe and even destroy themselves, because of isolation and hatred. I
would love to give each one of them this book, with the message, “It Gets
Better.”
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