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Paperback Life Outside: The Signorile Report on Gay Men: Sex, Drugs, Muscles, and the Passages of Life Book

ISBN: 0060929049

ISBN13: 9780060929046

Life Outside - The Signorile Report on Gay Men: Sex, Drugs, Muscles, and the Passages of Life

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Popular Out magazine columnist Michelangelo Signorile
investigates the hot-button issues
confronting gay men today.

"Exhaustively researched, surpassingly perceptive."
--New York magazine

"Life Outside bravely advances a critique of the attitudes and ideologies that have shaped the gay 'scene' and merits the attention of a broad audience for its courage and informativeness."
--New York Times Book Review

"A stunning expose. Gay men should be handed three things when they come out of the closet: a box of condoms, a videocassette of George Cukor's The Women, and a copy of Life Outside."
--The Advocate

Michelangelo Signorile galvanized a generation of lesbians and gay men when he took on the "closets of power" in his 1992 classic Queer in America. Now, in Life Outside, he offers an expose of what he calls the "cult of masculinity" within contemporary gay male culture, while finding hope and renewal in other aspects of gay life. He reveals the origins of the current obsession in much of the gay community with an impossible physical ideal and explores the malevolent commercialization of gay sex.

Life Outside also identifies another, more positive phenomenon in the gay male world. With the expansion of the gay movement, with more gays coming out--and remaining--in suburban, small-town, and rural America, the urban "scene" is no longer setting the standard for what it is to be gay in America. With the "deghettoization" and "deurbanization" of homosexuality, we find men who challenge long-held assumptions about being gay, relationships, and coping with growing older. With first-person accounts from men who are moving into midlife with pride and vitality, Signorile points the way for all gay men to face the passages of life with a new maturity.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

I must read for middle aged gay men.

This book takes the dark side of gay culture and puts it in your face. You may not agree with every point, but you are challenged to at least take a stance. Some find the writing simplistic and repetitive but I think all agree the reader is forced to spend time with some very uncomfortable issues. For this reason I consider the work worthy of every gay mans attention.

Superb analysis of life in the gay male "fast lane."

Signorile writes an insightful and long-overdue book on the self-destructive nature of current gay male circuit party life. While by no means representative of the gay community as a whole, he makes the very valid point that virtually everyone who is gay and male is affected by the standards promoted by this subgroup. The result is extremely damaging.Those who have attacked this book as intellectually inferior or "sex negative" miss the point. They are attempting to shift the discussion away from what are very ugly truths about much of gay male culture today. Fortunately, Signorile also offers insights into gay men who are choosing to build their lives outside of the gay urban demimonde - a model that is well worth emulating if gay men want to avoid the inevitable waves of disease and infection that are part and parcel of the "fast-lane" lifestyle and culture. A culture, I might add, with extremely distorted "values."

This book is smart, warm and well-written

I just finished Life Outside. I was pressured to read it by a friend who was moved by it and who wouldn't shut up about it. I was very impressed. There's so much here, so much that is important and prickly, the kinds of things people do not want to hear. But Signorile is very talented. He says it with soul and compassion. I was afraid to read the book when it came out. I'd followed Signorile over the years and always knew he was right even when I didn't like what he had to say. He is the gay male community's conscience and people either love him or hate him for that. Witness some of the reviews here. The pretentious academic types hate him. But he's the intellectual of the street, not of the ivory tower. He speaks his mind about gay male behavior, the politics of the gay left, the gay right, the gay community as a whole. He always points to the elephant in the room. That's why I didn't want to read Life Outside. But once I got started I was driven. The writing is crisp and wonderful. I felt compassion and I felt warmth while reading Life Outside but i also know how it could get a lot of people riled up. It's a testament to the book that it is still causing controvery a couple of years after it was first published. That's a very valuable book.

Extraordinary

It was extraordinary to read so many of my own thoughts, ideas and observations finally put down on paper by someone who shares them. Mr. Signorile is very perceptive. As someone who has lived in West Hollywood, Boystown in Chicago and for the last four years in Chelsea, I can attest to the veracity of his reporting. Those who claim it's not true just don't want to admit what the problems are. So they come up with cliches to put it down or they hurl names. Both immature responses. Gay men should read this book and be moved to action and energized to make real and positive changes in their culture.

Provocative and challenging: Should be read by every gay man

I've been passing this book on to friends every chance I get. I think every gay man should be aware of these issues, and read Sigorile's point of view. I like Signorile's directness and fearlessness. He reminds me of Camille Paglia. He doesn't take any crap from anyone. He says what feels. The attacks on him only seem to make his fame grow bigger and bigger. And he seems to capitalize on it briliantly. His style is easy and confident, and this makes a lot of people very comfortable with him. Dare I say , we're also attracted to him, physically and emotionally. When he came here to Miami Beach to Books and Books right in South Beach, it was like he was entering the belly of the beast of the gay party scene and the gay body culture. The Miami Herald played it up, making it seem like he'd be so controversial, and that there would a lot of trouble at the signing from people who disagreed with his book. Instead, the audience was totally entralled with him, including all of the muscle guys from the beach who came. We're still talking about. Great book.
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