Title: Brother
to Brother: New Writings by Black Gay Men
(Click title to order on-line)
Author: Essex Hemphill (Editor), With Joe Beam
Publisher: Alyson Publications, Inc.
Date Published: July 1991
Format: Trade Paper
Publishers Weekly
Believing that the ``gay community . . . operates from a one-eyed, one
gender, one colorstet without hyphens. is a perception of community ,'' Beam and Hemphill
have compiled a volume of writings that addresses the emerging black gay sensibility in
all of its glory, pain and promise. The strength of the book's politics, however, is
undermined by offerings of dubious literary merit. Generally, the short fiction is only
adequately written, depicting young closeted men afraid to come out to their abusive
parents and peers. One exception is John Keene Jr.'s ``Adelphus King,'' a sweet tale about
a man who falls head over heels for his cousin's boyfriend, a charismatic jazz musician.
The poems in the collection speak routinely about sex and love; the most touching deal
with the loss of loved ones to AIDS. By far, the most satisfying writing is Ron Simmons's
incisive ``Some thoughts on challenges facing black gay intellectuals,'' which exposes the
homophobic views of many black writers and calls for the development of ``an affirming and
liberating philosophical understanding of homosexuality that will self-actualize black gay
genius.'' Hemphill is a poet; Beam, who edited In the Life , died in 1988.