Andrew Holleran's first novel, Dancer from the Dance, was published in 1978. He is also the author of the novels Nights in Aruba and The Beauty of Men; a book of essays, Ground Zero (reissued as Chronicle of a Plague, Revisited); a collection of short stories, In September, the Light Changes; and a novella, Grief.
"An astonishingly beautiful book. The best gay novel written by
anyone of our generation." - Harper's magazine
"Compelling characters and a vision of society, straight and gay."
- Village Voice
"Holleran summons up the most lyrical prose imaginable. The novel
is a banquet." - Boston Globe
"We have never been to Fire Island and we have never lived on the
Lower East Side, but we have looked for love and we are growing
older, and this book is the story of our life." - New York
magazine
"Beautifully written, evocative, and hilarious. . . . Holleran has
the uncanny ability to combine emotional abandon and high comedy."
- New Republic
"Superb . . . erotic heat percolates through these pages." - New
York Times Book Review
"One of the most famous works of gay literature." - New York
Times
"Set in New York in a pre-AIDS era, Holleran brilliantly captures a
generation of men for whom hedonism is never-ending, while desire,
loneliness and a restless wish for love continually jostle." -
British Vogue
"For countless gay men of a certain age, and many others in
generations that followed, Andrew Holleran's 1978 debut novel
"Dancer From The Dance" is held in the highest regard.
Groundbreaking, humorous, sexy, and tragic, with "Dancer From The
Dance" Holleran paved the way for the gay literary boom of the
early-to-mid 1980s that continues to this day. In other words, 45
years after its original publication, Holleran's essential novel is
as relevant as ever." - Washington Blade
"Dancer From the Dance holds a sacred place in gay literary history
for its seductive glimpse of post-Stonewall and pre-AIDS New York
City." - The Nation
"A hymn to gay liberation in the city, and to male beauty." -
Darryl Pinckney, New York Times Style magazine, T
"Dancer from the Dance accomplished for the 1970's what The Great
Gatsby achieved for the 1920's ― the glamorization of a decade and
a culture." - Edmund White
"A life changing read for me. Describes a New York that has
completely disappeared and for which I longed--stuck in
closed-on-Sunday's London." - Rupert Everett
"The first gay novel everybody read. . . .It's the story of youth
and beauty and money and drugs. But overarchingly...the story of a
new queer future." - Michael Cunningham, New York Times
Magazine
"A book of spirited elegance and energy." - New York magazine
"Andrew Holleran's 'Dancer from the Dance, '. . . is bathed in
melancholy gorgeousness, as attuned as any of its characters to
'the animal bliss of being alive.'" - The New Yorker
"Nothing could be more beautiful than Holleran's tableaux of New
York, those hot summer city nights when lonely men sit on their
stoops or their fire escapes and stare at that endless parade of
unattainable lovers." - Boston Globe
"Through the sweat and haze of longing come piercing insights -
about the closeness of gay male friendship, about the vanity and
imperfections of men. The more one reads the novel, we realise that
what Holleran has given us is our very own queer (queerer?) Great
Gatsby: its decadence, its fear, its violence, its ecstasy, its
transience." - The Guardian
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