Tuesdays are the days I showcase my own
work on this blog. Today I’d like to share a review of my latest novel, First
Exposure.
Reviewer: Lirtle at Prism Book Alliance http://www.prismbookalliance.com/2014/08/first-exposure-by-alan-chin-book-review-by-lirtle/
Publisher: Bold Strokes Publishing
Rating: 5 of 5 Stars
Blurb:
Straight, married Petty Officer Second
Class Skyler Thompson battles homophobia from his navy buddies, the military,
and his wife when he takes a job creating flower arrangements at a gay-owned
florist. But rather than yield to pressure and quit, he refuses to give up the
joy of creating beautiful arrangements, battling homophobia for artistic
expression. His dream is to leave the navy and open his own florist shop.
Ezra Dumphy—his shipmates call him
Dumpy because of his obesity—is a gay sailor who likes to dress in drag. He is
shunned by his shipmates, tragically lonely, and uses drugs to cope with his
solitude. What he wants more than anything is someone to share his life with.
Can these two men, opposites in every
way, help each other achieve their dreams?
My View:
“Life, friendship, love, was a
crapshoot.”
After just two chapters into this book,
I had bought into this story, to Ezra and Skylar, to their lives, to this
author’s writing.
On the surface of things, it may appear
like these are trope-worn characters with trope-worn backgrounds, but this is
not the case. Chin has given these people lives through their struggles and the
crutches with which they try to deal with those struggles. He’s given to them
talents and the joy they feel when they get lost in them. The level of
emotional honesty is unavoidable, it’s so real.
Ezra and Skylar share a connection,
though through different media. The result is a door that opens practically on
its own.
To him, art was somehow sacred, the way
you gaze up at a night sky and wonder if you’re standing on an electron that
revolves around a proton in a series of infinite universes, and suddenly your
mind expands and you experience your reality in a new and more significant
light.
Anyone who has ever gotten lost while
looking at a photograph or watching a playing musician or reading a passage in
a poem, or anything of the like, will understand that feeling. There’s no
turning back from it, either.
Desperation.
Fleeting joy.
Deep pain.
Strength.
Loneliness.
Wispy hope.
Sadness.
Unexpected chances.
This writer has a healthy comfort level
with language and knows how to use it. It’s such an interesting juxtaposition,
his use of what I can only call celebratory prose in writing about difficult
things taking place in complicated, uneasy lives. The styles aren’t all similar
but I got the same feeling from his writing as I do when reading Harper Fox or
Edmond Manning. The words the words the words.
There are a few cases of what feels
like overindulgence in that language, but when it’s this enjoyable, I let it go
like a two-day old bagel.
At some point during all of this, I
realized I wouldn’t be able to ever forget these characters. Beautiful, sweet,
carrying their burdens, frightened, hopeful and working to survive. Again, it’s
the writing. It brings inspiration and darkness to life.
“Flowers are more delicate, more
ethereal than the plants they emerge from, and they have scent, which is
amorphous. They are the bridge between the physical and the formless, body and
spirit. Flowers are a metamorphosis of the plant in the same way spiritual
awakening is to a human.”
Hollister, one of the supporting
characters and co-owner of the flower shop with his partner Miguel, says this
to Skylar as they work on creating some arrangements for an event. This is one
of many, many turns in this story for multiple characters. I have to say, as
well, that in this kind of story, I almost don’t like to use the term “supporting”,
as if they aren’t important all on their own. Believe me, every character in
this book is meant to be there.
Unpredictable characters making
unpredictable choices. I like that I didn’t always agree with those choices or
that they didn’t always feel right for the characters. Whenever that happened,
it forced me to reexamine my understanding of them. How great is that? Highly
involved reading is the name of the game here. Love it.
There are all types of relationships
explored in this story: friendship, co-workers, married couples, child/parent,
long-time companions, lovers, and all of them feel very real. Real means
emotional, relatable, they made me think, stayed with me, and I couldn’t wait
to get back to reading about them each day.
“Honey, did you ever have a kite pull
you right off the ground when you were a kid? If so, then you know the thrill I
get when I work with flowers.”
There’s a nostalgic feel to this book.
I’m not even sure how I can “prove” that, except that it does. Maybe it’s the overall
style of the storytelling Chin has. I think that’s what it is. I want more.
This is not an easy read given the wide
array of tangled, difficult subjects examined and experiences revealed. Despite
all of that, I felt peaceful when I was finished. Looking back at everything
that happened, everything these characters put themselves through, I never
would have predicted peace being my final reaction. Just like the story itself,
it was unpredictable.
This is a novel that, frankly, defies
categorization. It left me utterly satisfied. It’s very personal. And that last
scene? I still can’t find the words to adequately describe how it made me feel,
all of these days later. I do know that I want more of Ezra’s story.
I could not recommend this book more even
if ‘more’ meant… more. Read it.
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