Tales of the City - Armistead Maupin
Hands up if you can quote long stretches by heart and 'babycakes' has entered your vocabulary as a term of endearment
| 15 Jul 2006
First published as a serial in San Francisco area newspapers in the mid-1970s, 'Tales of the City' was aimed at a mass audience, and accordingly began with the super-straight (in all respects) Mary Ann Singleton's move to San Francisco, before introducing an ever-broadening range of LGBT and other characters, beginning with her neighbour Michael 'Mouse' Tolliver, another refugee from the red states; the prototypical Bohemian Mona Ramsay; and their landlady Anna Madrigal, interacting in densely interlocking plotlines that required another five books to play out. Although the original journalistic format produced a certain glibness in the one-liners and cliffhangers, the characters are fully-dimensional and sympathetic. 'Tales of the City' is the great novel of chosen family, as the residents of 28 Barbary Lane live in increasing intimacy under the cannabis-scented wing of Mrs Madrigal, "the mother of us all." Maupin's vision of Oz made it harder than ever to stay in Kansas. [Diana ben-Aaron]
Out now.