The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 21, 1988 - Page 9 .B I Ma div. " es int1o his identity iPo The Swiming Pool Library By Alan Hollinghurst Random House $16.95/hardcover Alan Hollinghurst's first novel is a com- pletely brave and sensitive approach to homosexuality, illustrating the differences within a group of people narrowly defined by society. Neither apologetic, self-aggrandizing, nor defen- sive, this is not just another "cause" novel. Written before the thin whine of hysteria over AIDS had risen to a repressive scream, Hollinghurst frees his character to live a life which has been called today a "life that can no longer be lived with impunity." History and Hollinghurst contradict that premise at the basest level. At times blatantly shocking, Hollinghurst uses concrete details not only for the sake of confrontation but for the sake of understanding. The Swimming Pool Library reveals more about sexuality of an individual than homosexuality in general. William Beckwith, a young writer and artist, goes through a series of unsuccessful relation- ships driven by a search for sex, satisfaction and, of course, although he doesn't want to admit it, love - a situation that transcends sexual prefer- ences. He mistakes stark desire and abusive loy- alty for mutual respect and tender consent, caus- ing him to get into messy affairs with two teenage lovers, and in a hotel room with a pick- up who sports leather wares and power tools. William's life is charmed, however, with a friend. Lord Charles Nantwitch collapses in a public bathroom and is saved by Willy (Hollinghurst uses William, Will or Willy, to fit the character's behavior at the time - he is sometimes strong and forthright but more often self-satisfied and weak). They later meet at the bathing club, "The Corry" (of Roman concubine fame), and develop a working relationship. As Charles slowly feeds William information about himself and his homosexuality, the two Oxford alums discover a common history which goes beyond social ties. Charles, a regal 83 year old socialite, explores the historical and mandated repression of his sexuality by law, society and each other, and William picks up the blood line to carry it into modern-day London. Hollinghurst commands a huge range of vo- cabulary and language - lots of oiled verbal muscle, smooth glistening skin, heightened breathing innuendo and hardened pornographic detailing. However he sometimes tends to portray William as a little too La Cage aux Folles-ish in his stereotypical sticky, frosted perception of the male body. Gym sweat as an "aphrodisiac"? Although his belle epoche is undeniably over, William succeeds and remains undefeated by the pressure and fear of the outside "traditional" world as well as by his elite inner circle with its own perverse and unwritten laws. He remains not unchanged but yet the same - his lifestyle is his own and it is normal. The Swimming Pool Library overflows with talent and, in William's words ... ".... deeper dichotomies , differing stories- one the 'account of myself' the sex-sharp little circuits of discos and pubs and cottages, the sheer crammed, single-minded repetition of my empty months; the other 'the romance of myself,' which transformed all these mundanities with a protective glow, as if from my earliest days my destiny had indeed been charmed, so that I was both of the world and beyond its power, like the pantomime character Wordsworth describes, with 'invisible' written on his chest." Heron Continued from Page 7 else, are present in the art of Gil Scott-Heron. Aside from Kwesi- Johnson, Scott-Heron is the sharpest, wittiest, dead on the heavy funk political lyrical hipster that :music has had since the early '70s. Whereas Johnson frames his poems with the riddims of reggae, Scott-Heron treads a far more ad- venturous musical path. Scott- Heron's wild and intoxicating mix of be-bop, free jazz, and funk is simply incredible. Outside of the hip-hop arena, only Prince can claim to be as Down and vocal a socio-musical force as Scott-Heron. Go see Scott-Heron live and hear Gil Scott-Heron an artist who not The chance to see Scott-Heron old classics like "The Bottle," "The only commands your attention, but live is not to be missed. Particularly Revolution Will Not Be Televised," deserves it. since virtually all of his more than and "We Almost Lost Detroit," and 15 albums are out of print, live is whatever new songs he's written GIL SCOTT-HERON enlivens and W EEKEND Fridays in The Daily the easiest way to catch Scott-Heron since the last time we didn't hear enlightens tonight at 8 p.m. at the M AGAZINE 763-0379 these days. Commercial radio cer- from him. Lyrically astute, mu- Mendelssohn Theatre. Sorry, it's tainly doesn't play him... sically flexible, and spritually alive, sold out. S p AR( Shi n h1 a 4 r )ASS IT )UNDI are the ews, I ailj1 mu.... -4 kIN11 53 I ._ A Y T-SHIRT PRINTING COTTON HANES BEEFY-T & HEV. WT SWEATS 1002 PONTIAC TR. 994-1367 rn- CAMPUS] 0 Labatts Blue R 112 Barrel N $45.95 E +Tax +Deposit Rl -while supplies last 665-4431 818 S. STATE, ANN ARBOR OPEN TIL MIDNIGHT SUN-THURS 2AMFRI& SAT RESUME ERVICE - 1 U