A Boy’s Own Story by Edmund White
A Boy's Own Story by Edmund White is an autobiographical account of how an adolescent discovers and comes to terms with his homosexuality.
A reviewer of A Boy’s Own Story by Edmund White is presented with a number of problems, In the paraphrased words of one of the book’s characters, there may be a lot in the wash, but eventually not much to hang out, and this, by the end of the book, largely summed up what it had delivered. Be reassured, however, that the process of reading A Boy’s Own Story is a delight from start to finish. Edmund White’s style is quite beautiful, full of complex allusions, superb characterization and, above all, masterful description. Every character springs to life off the page. If only collectively or individually they had more to offer…
A Boy’s Own Story is an adolescent’s discovery and realization of his own homosexuality. The book promises a lot of sex and, sure enough, it both begins and ends with explicit encounters. Throughout the remainder, however, the sex seems to be more in the mind than in the experience. It appears that Edmund White’s adult recollection of his teenage dilemmas could have been subject to the embellishment of later reflection. Repeatedly the author stretches time to explore the detail of options whenever the boy of the title is presented with a dilemma. These were surely the voices of later years speaking through an ostensibly reconstructed, but surely imagined past. The boy always spoke eloquently about his choices, considered options in detail, but perhaps not convincingly. One of the more engaging aspects of coming of age sagas is how innocence is portrayed and how its conquest is engineered. In A Boy’s Own Story one feels that Edmund White wants to deny that he was ever innocent, or at least suggest that he would ever admit it. And so a spark that could have lit up the glowing prose never quite ignited.
When the book first appeared over twenty years ago, the fact that it did appear in its explicit form, apparently denying the guilt that oozes off every page, might itself have been worthy of note. Twenty years on it now reads as merely dated, but still it reads beautifully thanks to the author’s supreme skill with words and expression. The issues that might previously have rendered it remarkable have, however, long since cooled, so now the reader must approach the book either as it is, as an autobiography, or alternatively in historical terms. The book, however, cannot sustain the latter approach.
I will now certainly seek out other books by Edmund White, but in the case of A Boy’s Own Story I am tempted to conclude that though writers have to be self-obsessed, when that neurosis is turned completely inward, it raises new barriers that can exclude the reader. Hence the gloss. Hence the sheen of the whiter than white washing that proves to be just half a load.
A Boy’s Own Story is an adolescent’s discovery and realization of his own homosexuality. The book promises a lot of sex and, sure enough, it both begins and ends with explicit encounters. Throughout the remainder, however, the sex seems to be more in the mind than in the experience. It appears that Edmund White’s adult recollection of his teenage dilemmas could have been subject to the embellishment of later reflection. Repeatedly the author stretches time to explore the detail of options whenever the boy of the title is presented with a dilemma. These were surely the voices of later years speaking through an ostensibly reconstructed, but surely imagined past. The boy always spoke eloquently about his choices, considered options in detail, but perhaps not convincingly. One of the more engaging aspects of coming of age sagas is how innocence is portrayed and how its conquest is engineered. In A Boy’s Own Story one feels that Edmund White wants to deny that he was ever innocent, or at least suggest that he would ever admit it. And so a spark that could have lit up the glowing prose never quite ignited.
When the book first appeared over twenty years ago, the fact that it did appear in its explicit form, apparently denying the guilt that oozes off every page, might itself have been worthy of note. Twenty years on it now reads as merely dated, but still it reads beautifully thanks to the author’s supreme skill with words and expression. The issues that might previously have rendered it remarkable have, however, long since cooled, so now the reader must approach the book either as it is, as an autobiography, or alternatively in historical terms. The book, however, cannot sustain the latter approach.
I will now certainly seek out other books by Edmund White, but in the case of A Boy’s Own Story I am tempted to conclude that though writers have to be self-obsessed, when that neurosis is turned completely inward, it raises new barriers that can exclude the reader. Hence the gloss. Hence the sheen of the whiter than white washing that proves to be just half a load.
Philip Spires - Author Of Mission And A Fool's Knot, African Novels Set In Kenya
The books of Philip Spires examine how people and communities react to economic and social change, in particular the role that education plays in transformation.
The books of Philip Spires examine how people and communities react to economic and social change, in particular the role that education plays in transformation.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- 5 Tips To Write Great Book Reviews
- Book Reviews-6 secrets of writing a Book Review
- Book Review - The House on Prague Street
- Book review of Keys to Success by Napoleon Hill
- Magician: Apprentice by Raymond Feist – Book Review
- Girlfriends Hit the Road: A 1920s Road Trip - Book Review
- The Compleat Gamester: A Medieval Book Review
- Altared Book Review
- Killing Che by Chuck Pfarrer Book Review
- Book Review: Pathways to Transformation
- Spiritual Warfare and Deliverance Book Reviews
- The Bobbed Haired Bandit by Stephen Duncombe and Andrew Mattson Book Review
- Revealing Secrets to Book Review Writing
- Book Review: Anne Rice: Christ the Lord Out of Egypt
- Small Business Book Review - Scott Bedbury A New Brand World
- Small Business Book Review - Ries and Trout on Positioning
- French Women Don't Get Fat - Book Review
- Book Review - Marley and Me : Life and Love with the World's Worst Dog
- Book Review: "The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder"
- Book Review: Phil Hellmuth's Texas Hold'em
- Love and the Incredibly Old Man: A Review
- Symbolism and Themes in the Grapes of Wrath
- I am an Old Communist Hag - A Controversial Book
- Little Women
- Letters from the Underworld - Dostoevsky
- Boris Vian, "Foam of the Days"
- Haroun and the Sea of Stories
- The Bay of Pigs Invasion: John F. Kennedy
- Spiritual Coach Diane Hall Publishes Book on Life Purpose
- On My Own: Outing the Secret of the Injured Self
- Walking the Rainbow: An Arc to Triumph
- Economy - The Good Society
- Thursday Next: First Among Sequels
- Silver
- A Declaration of Energy Independence



