Title: Two
Natures
Author: Jendi
Reiter
Release Date:
September 15th 2016
Genre: LGBT
fiction, MM Romance
BLURB
Two Natures is the coming-of-age
story of Julian Selkirk, a fashion photographer in New York City in the early
1990s. His faith in Jesus helped him survive his childhood in the Atlanta
suburbs with an abusive alcoholic father, but the church's condemnation of his
sexual orientation has left him alienated and ashamed.
Yearning for new ideals to anchor him after his loss of faith, Julian
seeks his identity through love affairs with three very different men: tough
but childish Phil Shanahan, a personal trainer who takes a dangerous shortcut
to success; enigmatic, cosmopolitan Richard Molineux, the fashion magazine
editor who gives him his first big break; and Peter Edelman, an earnest
left-wing activist with a secret life.
Amid the devastation of the AIDS epidemic and the racial tensions of New
York politics, Julian learns to see beyond surface attractions and short-term
desires, and to use his art to serve his community.
**Kindle Price $0.99
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Honors:
2016 Rainbow Awards: First Prize, Best Gay Contemporary General Fiction;
First Runner-Up, Debut Gay Book
Named one of QSPirit's Top LGBTQ Christian Books of 2016
Review
Many of us remember the early 90's and how AIDS was actually vocal. Yes, it had been around for years before but it wasn't really until the 90's that people talked about it. Many people suffered and died because of this virus. This book not only addresses AIDS and that time period but you are gutted at the loss of one character because of the virus. That is the only warning you're getting about the seriousness and emotional upheaval in this book.
This tale is close to 400 pages long but it flowed. Pacing was terrific and the characters were fleshed out nicely. There's a high angst count on this story obviously so be ready.
You may walk away from this book angry and frustrated and that is really just a testament to the realism the author creates. The truth here is a beacon for awareness. Take a deep breath and be ready for an emotional pummeling.
EXCERPT
The storm hit when we were about an hour south of the campgrounds.
Sheets of rain covered the Chevy's windshield. We crawled along, following the
fuzzy glow of the taillights in front of us. Peter searched the AM band for a
local station that could give us traffic and weather. I refrained from saying
that we could see both of those by looking out the window. There's the
difference between us: he likes to know
that he can't do anything about a situation, while I just assume it.
Up ahead, flashing lights and a row of orange cones marked a lane closed
off by a wreck we couldn't make out. Peter was all for pulling off the highway
and finding a shortcut via the local roads. Phil's presence made me less
adventurous. We had to get this right. If he'd been awake to vote, though, he
would have sided with Indiana Jones, so I resigned myself to studying the map
for the shortest possible detour. "Hey, did you know there's a city in New
York called Sodom?"
"Is it anywhere near Coxsackie?"
We bounced along winding roads through tired towns that blended together
in the rain: another white clapboard with a sagging porch, another vintage
Pepsi sign over a liquor-store marquee ("happy 21st birthday
Amanda!"), more black and white cows grazing around a metal silo. I never
went in for that Depression-documentary stuff. People who wear overalls deserve
their privacy.
After half an hour we seemed to have outrun the rain, but finding our
way back to the highway was another story. We stopped for coffee and pie in a
diner with turquoise vinyl siding, where the waitress gave us directions to the
campsite. I could have sworn one of the truckers at the lunch counter was
cruising me. If I hadn't been with my boys, I might have gone for him, and
probably gotten myself murdered. It's not a good idea to die luridly if no one
knows you're a celebrity. I doubted whether the local Walgreen's carried Femme NY.
We crested the hill leading into the campgrounds as a yellow-gray sunset
was filtering through the pines. Peter surveyed the scene and frowned.
"Guys, I don't think this is it."
"Nah, I saw the sign, just like the waitress told us — Deer
Mountain Nature Preserve," Phil said.
"But it's not how I remember it, from when we used to come here — I
thought there was a lake, and this little bunkhouse with showers."
"Maybe we're on the other end."
"Does it really matter?" I asked impatiently. "Nature is
nature, right?"
"And why is it called a nature preserve? Maybe we're not even
allowed in here," Peter fretted.
"Cool, we'll be, like, anarchist squatters," Phil said. Thus
outvoted, Peter pulled the Chevy into a broad clearing with a view of the
mountains, where we would pitch our tents. He'd brought two,
in case Phil and I wanted some privacy. The ground was damp and spongy
under a fragrant carpet of pine needles. I sprayed a mist of bug repellent all
around us. In the forest, you think it's quiet, but it really isn't, once you
let go of expecting to hear human voices. Phil had brought a battery-operated
radio that played staticky doo-wop oldies (the only station we could find out
there) while I built a campfire.
The sky slowly turned from purple-gray to black. We drank Cokes because
Peter didn't like mixing beer and weed, and cooked hot dogs on sticks over the
sputtering fire. Phil tried to get away without eating anything with his
evening pills. "I thought you always had an appetite for this," I
said, waggling a plump hot dog in front of his face. We ate that one from both
ends and met in the middle, and Peter sang the Italian-restaurant song from
"Lady and the Tramp", and I laughed so hard the soda came out of my
nose.
The radio was off. If we strained our eyes, we could see faint stars
that vanished into the cloud cover when we looked directly at them. "I
want to try and find the lake," Peter said.
"It's too cold to swim," I said. "We should have come
sooner."
"I just want you guys to see it."
A nearly-full moon had risen, cresting and sinking in the swells of
clouds that drifted across its light. That and our flashlights helped us find a
marked trail. There was no reason to think that it led to any lake, but we were
buzzed and lucky to be there, and why not hope our luck would hold?
Phil slapped at the mosquitos that were drawn to our flashlight beams.
"So there, suckers — my blood is toxic."
"Must you think about that every minute?" I said.
"I got a right."
Peter slowed down to put his arm around my shoulders as we trudged
uphill on the winding trail. My tense breathing eased and I began to enjoy the
trek in spite of myself. The spindly pines swayed above us in the wind. Our
slow progress through the dark was hypnotic. Peter hummed a tune under his
breath and we joined in intermittently to stay focused. I heard Phil cough a
couple of times but he didn't stop
walking or look back at us, so I couldn't do anything.
The trail ended at the edge of a rocky outcropping overlooking a valley.
Silver light flashed below us, a fast-moving stream tumbling over glistening
rocks. To our left, a thicker, darker gray cloudbank was building up, edged
with moonglow.
I reached out to pull Phil closer to me so we were all holding each
other. Maybe it was the whisper of the stream we heard, or maybe it was too far
away and we only heard the trees tossing in the wind. Warm from the climb, I
spread my top-layer sweatshirt on the ground for Phil and me to sit on. We
leaned against each other and kissed, while Peter sat cross-legged on Phil's
other side, holding his hand.
"Got your camera?" Phil whispered. "Like you ever
don't."
"Too dark…besides, right now…let's just be here."
"Yeah, I know what you mean."
Oh, those blue eyes. I saw you, Phil, I was inside you, closer than sex,
clearer than words. And you in me. I hope, I believe. In the end, you trust it
or you don't, the ground under your feet, the air in your lungs, and something
surrounding you that's more than particles of heat and scent and skin.
The distant sky rumbled. A small flock of dark birds swooped and
scattered into the valley. Phil sneezed. I took off my other sweatshirt and
wrapped it around him. He didn't object. Peter stretched out on the ground,
propping his chin in his hands, and looked down at the stream with a sigh.
"I guess this is as far as we're going to get."
"It's all right," Phil said. "I'm happy here."
"Good, 'cause we're going to leave you here," I deadpanned.
He slugged my arm. "Hey, you promised me an ice floe."
"What's the big deal about the lake?" I asked, since Peter was
still acting glum.
"It's where he lost his virginity," Phil teased.
Peter rolled over and swatted at him. "Ah, screw you."
"Is it?" I pressed him.
"For your information, I lost my virginity in the back of a
comic-book store in Brooklyn Heights. And I bet I was ahead of either of you
guys, too."
I wolf-whistled. Phil said, "I moved in with Ted, that was my first
boyfriend, when I was sixteen, but we'd been doing it since the year before. He
worked construction, like me, and the first time, we were fixing up this old
lady's attic and we all of a sudden got all over each other, and when she
complained about the noise we told her she had squirrels." Peter and I
laughed. Phil looked expectantly at me.
"Define virginity," I stalled.
"Fucking or being fucked. Messing around doesn't count."
"So how old were you?" I asked Peter.
He hesitated. "Thirteen."
Phil made a face, like he didn't believe this, but I didn't think Peter
was kidding. "Who the hell would do you at thirteen?" I blurted out.
Peter looked away. "Hey, I wasn't totally hideous," he muttered.
"No, I meant — " Too frustrated for words, I touched my hand
to his cheek. "I'm sure you were as delicious then as you are now, but I'm
feeling this primitive Southern urge to punch that guy in the face."
"It wasn't so bad. I mean, it was good. I liked him."
I stayed where I was, touching him. He wrapped his fingers around mine.
"Who…who was he?" I didn't want to know, but I had to.
"Uh, a friend of my dad's. I worked in his store the summer after
the last time we came here — after my real mom found out about Ada." He
gestured impatiently at the view. "Only it's not here, we're somewhere
else."
"Wherever you go, there you are," Phil volunteered.
"Oh, profound," I said.
This time the dull boom of thunder sounded closer. The wind had picked
up, whipping the branches around. "Oh crap, we'd better get back,"
Peter said.
"Not until Julian tells us about his first time." Phil slid
his hand down my leg. I felt a flash of desire and wondered about the mechanics
of safe sex in a sleeping bag.
"It was you," I said, almost inaudibly.
Phil glanced up from nuzzling my neck. "Naw…I thought you'd been
with lots of guys," he said, just as softly.
"Yeah, but we said blowjobs didn't count, only real sex." I
kissed his ear, trying to revive the tender mood of a moment ago.
Rain began to patter lightly on the leaves. "Guys, come on,"
Peter urged, standing up.
Phil hung onto my thigh, keeping me on the ground. "What about the
first time you were on the bottom, was that me too?"
"Let's talk about this later, please?"
"Who was it?"
"I don't know, okay?" I burst out, pushing him off me.
"He was just some guy in Central Park."
Phil caught up to me as I followed Peter's bobbing flashlight beam along
the narrow path downhill. "Here's your jacket," he said gruffly,
draping the grass-stained sweatshirt over my shoulders. He didn't take his arm
away afterward, pretending to need my support as he dodged the humped tree
roots underfoot.
Superimposed on the path before me, there returned my one memory of that
man's lined and wistful face, the pure gratitude in his eyes when he held me
for a few seconds after fucking me under the arcade by Bethesda Fountain. I
hadn't expected it and it hurt quite a bit, though there was a thrill in it
too, the way he invaded the center of me, opening what had always been closed.
The downward-sloping trail was slippery with wet leaves. Distracted by
my thoughts, I stumbled and fell, skidding on my ass into a clump of bushes.
The sky chose that moment to flush its cosmic toilet. Water poured down hard. I
swore as the prickly bushes snagged my clothes. Phil tried to help me out but
got entangled himself, like two fools in a fairy tale glued to the golden goose.
"I'm sorry," he shouted over the noise of the storm. His face
was smudged and wet. "Jule, I know…I know you didn't want…to be with me,
like this."
"Phil. I love you." Words I'd never said before. I warmed his
rain-chilled lips with mine. His arms were the most solid thing in the world.
How could they vanish, how to conceive of a time when all of us would become
unreal?
Doubling back with the flashlight, Peter found us still clenched in our
silent embrace. Since he was the only one who'd thought to bring gloves, he had
little trouble pushing aside the thorny branches. We found our way back to the
campsite in silence.
"Oh, crap crap crap!" Peter exclaimed when we saw the fallen
tree limbs crushing his tent. He did this little stomping dance of frustration
that would have been funny if we'd been watching it from someplace dry. He
glanced back and forth from us to the other tent, which had stayed upright.
"Okay, I guess I'm sleeping in the Chevy."
Phil and I exchanged a look of agreement. I was just desperate to get
him inside. He wasn't hiding his shivering very well. "No, there's room
for you," Phil said.
Inside the tent, we stripped down to our T-shirts and underwear, leaving
our wet clothes in a heap by the door flap. Peter had found some spare blankets
in the van to supplement the two sleeping bags, which were barely enough to
cover the three of us when we zipped them together to make a sort of comforter.
I thought Phil should go in the middle. "Nah, night sweats,"
he said, nudging me to change places with him. His eyes were saying more than
that. So I lay against Peter's chest, with his arms around me, and Phil, on my
other side, reaching over to hold Peter's hand where it rested at my waist.
Phil tucked his head into the curve of my neck, the way we always liked to
sleep. I felt his heartbeat, steady and strong, and heard the faint wheeze of
his breath growing more regular
as he drifted off. Peter's body, too, relaxed without easing his hold on
us. I was just thinking about kissing him goodnight — on the cheek, would it be
so wrong? — when he pressed his face to mine. Silent softness of mouths and
tongues, a few minutes standing in for all the time gone and time to come,
until the three of us were sleeping in the incomparable warmth we made together.
About the Author
Jendi Reiter's books are guided by her belief that people take
precedence over ideologies. In exploring themes of queer family life, spiritual
integration, and healing from adverse childhood experiences, her goal is to
create understanding that leads to social change. Two Natures is her first novel; a sequel is in the works. Her four
published poetry books include Bullies in
Love (Little Red Tree, 2015) and the award-winning chapbook Barbie at 50 (Cervena Barva Press,
2010). She is the co-founder and editor of WinningWriters.com, an online
resource site for creative writers.
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This is quite a well written and interesting story, one that should not be missed.
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