The Milkman's On His Way by David Rees

The Milkman's On His Way by David Rees

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Zusammenfassung

The Milkman's on His Way is a young adult gay classic. It tells the story of Ewan McCrae, a gay teenager living in Bude, Cornwall. Ewan knows that in his claustrophobic hometown he’ll never fully be himself. Perhaps in a bustling and far-away city like London there is a whole new world waiting…

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The Milkman's On His Way by David Rees

“It was good to be Ewan, I said to myself, and good to be here doing this. I’m no longer a muddled kid: this is man’s estate." Ewan Macrae is gay. At the turn of the 1980s, being queer in a Cornish seaside town seems impossible. The teenage world he lives in is obsessed with girls, jobs and surfing, yet the handsome Leslie - his ripped surfing buddy - preoccupies Ewan's thoughts. Unsure if his parents will ever accept his sexuality, Ewan knows that in his claustrophobic hometown he’ll never fully be himself. Perhaps in a bustling and far-away city like London there is a whole new world waiting… Published by the ground breaking Gay Men’s Press in 1982, The Milkman’s on His Way was one of the first explicitly queer young adult novels to appear in the UK. For many gay teenagers of the early 1980s, it was a rare chance to read life-affirming stories that put their experiences at the centre.  The book was celebrated on publication, but scandal and controversy followed later. Published just before the AIDS pandemic took hold, The Milkman’s on His Way was hated by the Daily Mail and later suppressed under Section 28 due to public outcry about its “obscene,” sexually explicit contents.
'For some, this honest tale of young love was an affront to their prejudicesTo some of us it was a sign we were not alone. It remains as touching and relevant as ever - a gay classic.' Sir Ian McKellen

‘Our children are being corrupted and depraved by it.’ Patrick Moore.

‘I was horrified to see such things, and to think it is in the children’s library.’ Peter Bruinvels, Conservative, Leicester East.

‘Stomach-turning. I could just could not read it from cover to cover. It is desperate.’ Pat Headd, Parents Rights Group Chairman.
‘The book glorifies homosexuality and encourages youngsters to believe that it is better than any other sexual way of life.’ Jill Knight, Conservative, Edgbaston. House of Commons debate, 1987.

‘Obscene.’ Parents Rights Group.

‘Explicit in the extreme, and the vast majority of parents would view with horror the prospect of their children reading it.’ The Journal.

‘David Rees’s novel is a gentle and moving coming-of-age and coming-out story. With tenderness, Rees depicts the initial isolation and fear that queerness frequently meant in the 1980s, and can still mean today, and he gives hope to readers that actually it is possible and even likely that you can live a happy, fulfilled life as a queer person. This is well worth reading for its sweet, thoughtful portrayal of queer life in Cornwall and London in the 1980s.’ B.J. Woodstein, author of We’re Here! A Practical Guide to Becoming an LGBTQ+ Parent; Are the Kids All Right? The Representation of LGBTQ Characters in Children’s and Young Adult Lit; and other books.


‘Virtually pornographic.’ The Telegraph.

‘Why not read The Milkman’s on His Way yourself and then give it to your parents for Christmas? Its story could be enormously helpful to them as they try to come to terms with your gayness. Equally, it could be the Christman cracker that explodes too loudly. Either way, you’ll come out with a bang.’ C. Connellon, review from 1982.
David Rees (1936-1993) was the author of over thirty works, the majority being young adult novels. He was also part of the burgeoning gay journalism scene of the late 1970s, and regularly wrote reviews and articles for magazines and newspapers, including Gay News and Gay Times. In the late 1960s Rees moved to Exeter. Many of his stories are set in Devon and Cornwall, including his Carnegie Medal winning historical fiction, The Exeter Blitz (1978). Between 1968-1984 he worked as a Lecturer in Education at the University of Exeter, and the educational dimension of young adult fiction inspired his writing, especially themes of identity and sexuality. Quintin's Man (1976) and In the Tent (1979) featured gay protagonists but The Milkman's on His Way (1982) was his boldest attempt to foreground the experience of gay teenagers in his stories. Other novels like The Hunger (1986), a gay historical romance set during the 1840 Great Famine, were inspired by Rees' Irish family background. From 1985 David Rees was living with AIDS, an experience explored in his adult novel The Wrong Apple (1987). He continued to write until his death in 1993 from AIDS-related illness.
SKU Nicht verfügbar
ISBN 13 9781739744144
ISBN 10 1739744144
Titel The Milkman's On His Way
Autor David Rees
Buchzustand Nicht verfügbar
Bindungsart Paperback
Verlag Lurid Editions
Erscheinungsjahr 2024-05-30
Seitenanzahl 176
Hinweis auf dem Einband Die Abbildung des Buches dient nur Illustrationszwecken, die tatsächliche Bindung, das Cover und die Auflage können sich davon unterscheiden.
Hinweis Nicht verfügbar