Galleys sent to print magazines in advance of publication, finished book sent to list of reviewers created in collaboration with the author, twitter, instagram, Nightboat blog and catalog, NYC and Bay Area book launches.
Larry Mitchell was born in 1939 in Muncie, Indiana and died of cancer in 2012 in Ithaca, New York. He is the author of many works of fiction that explored queer life and radical politics in New York City's Lower East Side and East Village in the 1980s and 90s. Mitchell founded Calamus Press, an early small press devoted to gay literature, and with Felice Picano and Terry Helbing, co-founded Gay Presses of New York in 1981. Mitchell received a PhD in Sociology from Columbia University, and was a professor at the College of Staten Island for 25 years. In addition to The Faggots and Their Friends Between Revolutions (1977), his novels include The Terminal Bar (1982), In Heat (1986), My Life as a Mole and Other Stories (1988), which won a Lambda Literary Award, and Acid Snow (1993). He helped form multiple communes, including one on Staten Island-which collectively wrote the Great Gay in the Morning: One Group's Approach to Communal Living and Sexual Politics, published in 1972 by Times Change Press-and one outside of Ithaca, NY, called Lavender Hill, which is the subject of a 2013 documentary by Austin Bunn.
Ned Asta, born in Brooklyn, New York, has been a member of the Moosewood Restaurant Collective in Ithaca, New York since 1980 and was a founding member of the Lavender Hill Commune. Asta was a member of the New York City queer theater troupe Hot Peaches in the late 1970s, and later co-founded the Breast Cancer Alliance of Ithaca, with Andi Gladstone.
Tourmaline is an activist, writer, and filmmaker living in New York City. Along with Sasha Wortzel, Tourmaline wrote, directed and produced Happy Birthday, Marsha! a short film about legendary trans activist Marsha P Johnson starring Independent Spirit Award winner Mya Taylor. Other films include The Personal Things about iconic black trans activist Miss Major. Along with Eric Stanley and Johanna Burton, Tourmaline is an editor of the New Museum anthology on trans art and cultural production published by MIT Press in 2017.
Morgan Bassichis is a performer living in New York City. With TM Davy, Don Christian Jones, Michi Osato, and Una Osato, Morgan adapted Larry Mitchell and Ned Ast''s 1977 fairytale-manifesto The Faggots and Their Friends Between Revolutions for performance for the New Museum's 2017 exhibition, Trigger: Gender as a Tool and a Weapon. Morgan has presented work at MoMA PS1, the Whitney Museum, and Danspace Project, where Morgan recorded a live album concert recording called More Protest Songs! in October 2017.
"Part gay manifesto, part collection of fantastical vignettes,
Mitchell’s book is one of the defining pieces of 1970s queer
literature. . . It’s worth trying to track down a copy of the 2019
reissue which was put out by Nightboat Books and features a
stunning preface by artist Tourmaline."—Vogue
"Oppression births art, hatred inspires love, and revolutions bring
change. It would be easy to say that these are the main ideals
Larry Mitchell had in mind when he created the astounding,
dangerous, oppressive, and fantastical world of The Faggots & Their
Friends Between Revolutions—but there is so much more to discover
inside the book’s pages, including playful, erotic illustrations by
Ned Asta."—Interview Magazine "Inspired by Mitchell and Asta’s life
in communes such as Lavender Hill in Ithaca, New York, the book
feels like a small treasure, a care package from another era
providing a witty blueprint in creating chosen family and
world-making outside of dominant institutions. Though it was
out-of-print for years, The Faggots & Their Friends Between
Revolutions was certainly never out of circulation, exchanged
between friends and lovers throughout the years."—Filthy Dreams
"Beauty is currency; sexuality is sustenance. But more valuable
than that is friendship—which usually involves some degree of
sexual intimacy. Pleasure will keep you going. So will humor,
possibly more effectively."—Slate "First published in 1977 by
Mitchell’s own Calamus Press, The Faggots has circulated in PDF
form in recent years, shared across the Internet as both queer
consolation and fuel for fighting. Nightboat Books has now brought
it back into print with introductory essays by filmmaker Tourmaline
and performer Morgan Bassichis. Not quite speculative fiction, not
quite allegory, and not quite polemic, The Faggots surveys a
dystopian empire called Ramrod in its twilight years, where state
agents struggle to enforce heteropatriarchal discipline as their
kingdom crumbles around them."—The Nation"For years, the book
remained out of print, living only as a PDF shuffled between
friends. Nightboat Books reprinted the cult classic in 2019. This
is a book to read when it’s time to act."—Electric Lit
"It’s 1977. The faggots, the women, the fairies and the queens have
each other for love, sex and inspiration. They have the natural
world, music, the body, feelings, crannies of cities in which to
be, believe, touch, dance, dream, fuck, and grow. This was the
liberation vision of Larry Mitchell from another time, another
consciousness. With this new edition of The Faggots and Their
Friends we can remember the collectivity of fun and pleasure and
the necessary faith of silly hope as part of our legacy and wish
for survival."—SARAH SCHULMAN "Oh! This book is so delicious and
timeless! Open the pages, enter the fantastical, familiar empire of
Ramrod, and hear someone whisper to you: here are the ways to
survive. This is how we have always survived, swallowing every
aspect of each other, holding on to each other, becoming more
fabulous together. This book instantly awakens in the reader our
inner faggots, strong women, queens, queers, fairies...even our
men. We are held accountable for how free we are being in our
lives, and then we are invited, no, required! to open even more to
our own power, our own pleasures, our own revolution. This cult
classic is in the lineage of pleasure activism - you must read it
and then pass it along to someone who needs to be reminded that
their freedom is necessary for all of us. This is a guide and an
escape, whimsical and practical. Hit this pipe. Again."—ADRIENNE
MARIE BROWN "Arrayed so earthly and erotically against the men, and
the Man, and his world; but also before them, and beside them, to
show them how to be beside themselves beside the women, the faggots
& their friends fuck and style and till and dig so deep down
through the sterile danger between revolutions that revolution
comes to flower every day, before and after itself, as absolute
embrace, a continual folding and holding in their arms. Just
imagine what’s real: that there is such a time and place. The
faggots & their friends say right here, right now. Larry Mitchell
says, say it again!"—FRED MOTEN "We need this book so badly. The
Faggots & Their Friends Between Revolutions invites and models the
deep grieving, mutual care, love, play, commitment to pleasure, and
frivolity that is so essential right now, as we face existential
political and environmental crises, increasing numbness, and
disconnection. Faggots & Their Friends brings to life the spirit of
collective, mirthful invention in the face of dire circumstances
that characterized radical experiments of the 1970's, and brings
longed-for inspiration to today's fruits and nuts. Best of all,
this book is fun, and moving, and sexy. It cultivates our
imaginations for surviving the current disasters and creating ways
of being together that we desperately crave. This gift from the
past is arriving right on time, right when we need it."—DEAN SPADE
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