Originally Posted by
stlukesguild
I haven't, he doesn't appeal to me...
How does that make such a decision... especially about a critically acclaimed writer... without reading what he has written?
I've watched him on tv and read about him in the news and I get the impression that he was a man who being openly gay in Conservative America felt very angry and marginalised.
Being openly gay strikes him off the list of writers you might seriously consider reading? Along with Oscar Wilde, Peter Ackroyd, W.H. Auden, Federico García Lorca, Allen Ginsberg, Juan Goytisolo, Wilfred Owen, Jean Genet, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Luis Cernuda, Constantine Cavafy, Marcel Proust, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Walt Whitman, Maurice Sendak... not to add bi-sexual writers such as William Shakespeare, Paul Verlaine, Herman Melville, Sappho, etc...?
Gore was certainly angry about many things... primary among these was the manner in which he viewed many modern and contemporary political leaders, especially on the extreme right, of abandoning much that he admired about the United States.
He seemed to imply that it was the whole of Western civilization that was failing to appreciate homosexuality rather than simply the societal prejudice at the time.
That may be the impression that you got from watching him on television, but I can't say that such was at all the impression I got from reading any of his books.