Grafts roughly a quarter century of gay existence—from casual pre-Stonewall hedonism to the ghastly depredations of the AIDS crisis—onto the shaggy armature of a road novel. Thematically, this form suggests how impermanent queer self-discovery is, a constant jaws-of-life procedure attended by losses, reversals, cliff-hangers, and narrow escapes ... Tramps Like Us demonstrates the extent to which queer life in America is bound up in migration and the urban demimonde ... Joe’s interlude in the 'elsewhere' of New Orleans exemplifies the novel’s charms and shortcomings ... There’s a sweetness to some of the vignettes here ... But the prose also has a flatness that accentuates the tedium of playing bystander to someone else’s buzz ... The pages describing the piecemeal disintegration of Joe’s friends—the hospitalizations, the vigils, the denials, the fumbled goodbyes—are the book’s most gutting. Here, the simplicity of the prose matches the quotidian anguish of the moment ... As a narrator, Joe can often be too banal and passive for my taste, but he can also be vulnerable, and sympathetic, and appealingly horny. His story is a valentine to queer friendship, which saves his life and breaks his heart, the way love always does in the end.
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