From Publishers Weekly:
Co-creator of Monk, an underground zine that chronicled his travels throughout America with coauthor Jim Crotty, Lane here describes two memorable journeys he took on his own. After nine years on the road with Crotty, Lane jumped ship in Oregon and struck out across the country to attend the 1993 gay rights march in Washington, D.C. Along the way, he partied with drag queens in San Francisco, helped create "performance art on wheels" on the freeway between New York and Washington and got more enmeshed than he meant to in the troubled life of a young hitchhiker he picked up in Arizona. Sometimes joyous and sometimes profoundly disturbing, Lane's encounters with old friends and total strangers inspire reflections on the endless quirks in the American psyche and on the often startling consequences that ensue when members of different subcultures try?or are forced?to intermingle. Lane's experiences provoke recollections of a coming-of-age journey to Morocco during which he began to come to terms with his sexual and national identities. This is the most memorable section of the book. His vision of America?both strange and engrossing?is worth discovering.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist:
Both the blurb and the CIP say this is a nonfiction travelogue, but if everything gay voyager Lane presents in it actually happened to just one person, that individual would be the queer world's answer to Forrest Gump. Lane, cocreator of the eccentric travel magazine Monk but perhaps better known for his column "Pink Highways" in The Advocate, tells of hitching down highways, riding Greyhound buses, sharing rides across African deserts, and having other travel adventures through the years. Along the way he encounters a man who has cut his penis off, a fashion designer who makes bells out of soft drink can tabs and dresses out of metal and rubber, a Swedish Adonis in Morocco, and older assorted strangers. What's more, on virtually every page, Lane weaves into his reminiscences other first-person anecdotes that provoke yet more laughter. Whether every story is really real or not, many a reader will welcome Lane's literary company in bus, plane, and car alike. Charles Harmon
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