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Michael Thomas Ford

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It's Not Mean If It's TrueIt's Not Mean If It's True by Michael Thomas Ford

The third collection of Michael Thomas Ford's syndicated humor pieces from his column "My Queer Life" more than lives up to its sparkling predecessors, Alec Baldwin Doesn't Love Me and That's Mr. Faggot to You. Revel in Ford's tart summary of the suppressed all-gay season of MTV's Real World, with its outbreak of crabs and a heart-rending incident involving the impossible-to-find Julie Andrews recording Live in Japan. Ponder in pity or solidarity Ford's brave revelation that he has no style sense whatsoever and is taken for a hopelessly muddled straight man whenever he wanders into a J. Crew or a Gap. The best essays here are often not the topical ones, in which Ford responds to recent antigay news, but the most whimsical. In "Ah-Choo," he proposes a useful new hanky code, based not on sexual proclivities but on personality traits, such as Orange Hanky for "Tanning booth aficionado and gym bunny" or Green Hanky for "Eats only organic produce." Don't miss his mordant reflections on the outing of Tinky Winky in "Et Tu, Po?" or his "Condensed History of Queer Sex," beginning with God's anger at Adam and Steve for eating forbidden fruit: "As punishment, Steve's name and penis are both severely shortened, forever altering history." --Regina Marler

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Alec Baldwin Doesn't Love Me and Other Trials of My Queer LifeAlec Baldwin Doesn't Love Me and Other Trials of My Queer Life by Michael Thomas Ford

The short humorous essay is a form that few writers can master. Sure, pithy and funny are easy enough (if you are, in fact, pithy and funny), but the failings of most humorous essays come from a lack of seriousness. Humor is most effective when the writing articulates a clear, thoughtful point of view. The essays in Michael Thomas Ford's Alec Baldwin Doesn't Love Me and Other Trials of My Queer Life are perfect models of the form. Ford, who writes a syndicated column titled "My Queer Life," can muse on anything from Martha Stewart's manias to his devotion to Alec Baldwin's chest, from the elusive gay gene to right-wing Fundamentalist Christianity (in which he was raised), and he manages to make us laugh and sometimes even cry. His ironic view of a world that keeps threatening to be wonderful but never quite succeeds dovetails perfectly with his desire for world peace, freedom for gay people, and better sex. Witty, funny, and surprisingly moving, Michael Thomas Ford explains life to us and it actually begins to make sense.

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That's Mr. Faggot to You : Further Trials from My Queer LifeThat's Mr. Faggot to You : Further Trials from My Queer Life by Michael Thomas Ford

Michael Thomas Ford garnered lots of laughs in 1998 with Alec Baldwin Doesn't Love Me and Other Trials from My Queer Life. The follow-up collection of pieces from his syndicated column, That's Mr. Faggot to You, continues Ford's exploration of contemporary gay life. In the title essay, reports of a teenager who successfully sued his school district for failing to prevent physical and mental abuse by his classmates prompts Ford to recall his own traumatic high school experiences and leads him to recognize that, years later, "he is happier, more successful, and a great deal more attractive" than his classmates. In other essays, he discusses the you-and-me-against-the-world relationship he has with his black Labrador, proposes a new line of Christian-friendly action figures (including a Jonah and the Whale Play Set, "appropriate for bath-time use or fun in the pool"), and even manages, despite his uncertainties, to offer an adolescent nephew dating advice (concluding that "guy problems were guy problems, regardless of who the person creating the dilemma was or how many holes she or he had"). That's Mr. Faggot to You is a humorous slice of contemporary gay life that's bound at least to elicit a smile from any reader.

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Michael Thomas Ford

Excerpt:

With two best-sellers and two Lambda Literary Awards under his belt, Michael Thomas Ford is still cranky. Lucky for you. The author of Alec Baldwin Doesn't Love Me and That's Mr. Faggot to You returns with more skewed observations on the strange state of the queer union. As fans of his previous collections have happily discovered, little escapes his attention, and no topic is too controversial or sacred to be tackled. "The Condensed History of Gay Pride" is enough to send any politically correct gay leader shrieking into the streets...

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Seriously Funny:  Gay Author Michael Thomas Ford

By Edward Guthmann, The Advocate

Excerpt:

Michael Thomas Ford has been called a lot of things since he started his writing career: "the gay Dave Barry," "a gay everyman," and his personal favorite, "the gay Erma Bombeck." It came about, he says, "because I was just kind of this ordinary guy who wrote things that people could relate to." Ordinary on the surface, anyway: At 31 the Boston-based author has written 40 books in a wildly divergent range of genres and using several pen names...

  

Michael Thomas Ford:  Here We Go Again

Author's Note from the Alyson Books Website

Excerpt:

Earlier this year I spent three months traveling around the country in support of my book Alec Baldwin Doesn't Love Me and Other Trials from My Queer Life.

On the night of the first reading, as I stood in front of the audience looking out at the expectant faces, I couldn't help but wonder, Why are these people here?

I knew why my friends were there; I'd forced them to come. I knew why I was there; my publicist made me go. But those other people--the men and women who had no such reasons for showing up--why had they come out on a rainy Thursday night to hear my stories?

Afterward, when I was signing books, a man approached me and held out his dog-eared copy. "I just wanted to say thanks," he said as I scribbled my illegible autograph. "Thanks for writing about our lives."

His statement took me by surprise. Until that moment, I'd been under the impression that I'd only been writing about my life. But as I went from coast to coast visiting cities from L.A. to D.C., Orlando to Minneapolis, I heard this same statement repeated again and again. "Thank you for writing about our lives." Pleased, but still a little baffled, I nodded and smiled...

  

The Final Chapter:  What Keeping Our Bookstores Open Really Means

By Michael Thomas Ford, from Inside Out

Excerpt:

By the time this column appears one of my favorite queer bookstores -- Boston's wonderful Glad Day Book Shop -- will have closed. In business for almost a quarter of a century, the store is closing not because of financial difficulties, but because the space they've occupied for many years is being turned into high-end condos and they can't find a new space in a neighborhood overrun with Starbucks and Pottery Barns.

The story of the independent bookstore being forced out by the ever-encroaching chains, online stores, and rising costs of operating a small business isn't a new one. And when it comes to queer, alternative, or women's bookstores, the casualties have been particularly high. But this is more than just a business issue...

   

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