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Qtopia: A Memoir of Love, Land, and Liberation [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x140 mm, kaal: 454 g
  • Sari: Living Out: Gay and Lesbian Autobiographies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: University of Wisconsin Press
  • ISBN-10: 029935704X
  • ISBN-13: 9780299357047
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x140 mm, kaal: 454 g
  • Sari: Living Out: Gay and Lesbian Autobiographies
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: University of Wisconsin Press
  • ISBN-10: 029935704X
  • ISBN-13: 9780299357047
Teised raamatud teemal:
In the 1970s, while communes bloomed like wildflowers across the land, most had no room for queer members. The so-called counterculture still clung to heterosexual norms, even as it preached freedom from traditional gender roles and the nuclear family. Juda Bennett’s engrossing memoir follows his escape from suburbia into the back-to-the-land movement—and chronicles the efforts it took for him to “drop back in” to mainstream society and the ways in which he and his compatriots continued to honor their communal vision.

After enduring the hollow promises of “progressive” communes, Bennett finally found what he didn’t know he was looking for at Lavender Hill, a rural queer commune of visionaries carving out a life beyond heteronormativity, beyond capitalism, beyond shame. They didn’t just survive; they built something messy, luminous, and defiantly alive. And when the commune began to unravel, they didn’t vanish. They evolved. Qtopia is a story of chosen family and radical transformation. It is a reminder that queer utopia isn’t behind us—it’s still out there on the horizon, singing its song of joy, defiance, and fabulousness.

Arvustused

"The road to peace and love is paved with poise and self-discovery in Juda Bennett's coming-of-New-Age memoir. . . . The prose is witty and unflinching in covering Bennett's myriad travels. . . . Qtopia is a revealing coming-of-age memoir about a man's quest to find his chosen family." (Foreword Reviews)

As much about the future as the past, this memoir is a battle cry disguised as a love letter to anyone in search of queer utopia. - Ned Asta, illustrator of The Faggots & Their Friends Between Revolutions, and former Lavender Hill resident

The 1960s70s era was a time of social upheaval and transformation in the US and beyond. Bennetts memoir, focusing on his ventures into communal living and coming out as gay, among other things, provides a personal and intimate exploration of those tumultuous times. - Timothy Miller, author of The 60s Communes: Hippies and Beyond

"Bennett's beautiful memoir is as much about a fascinating time and place as it is about one charming, idealistic, fragile, brave young queer soul trying to find a chosen familyand himself. I'd follow this beguiling narrator anywhere!" - Elizabeth Graver, author of Kantika

An achingly tender memoir that is, at its heart, the story of how many gay men must leave behind loved ones in search of their chosen family. Bennett carefully deconstructs memoir as a form and then constructs a compelling narrative that is uniquely his own. - Steve Majors, author of Man Made: Searching for Dads, Daddies, Father Figures, and Fatherhood

Takes us back to an era when ragtag groups of queer folks had the courage to be their true selvestogether. With buoyant earnestness and self-deprecating charm, Bennett vividly retraces his path from virginal teenage hitchhiker to long-haired communard to slowed-down but still fabulous elder. A story about finding family in the least expected places and a testament to the power of feeling needed, Bennetts tale reminds us, in our current hopelessness, that the heart of any true revolution is optimism. Qtopia is a tonic for our times. - Michael Lowenthal, author of Place Envy

Bennetts triumph here comes from placing his past in the service of the now: Qtopia informs and invigorates current interests in how we live with intention and protect LGBTQ rights and families. His captivating story offers both inspiration and cautionary wisdom. - Patrick Davis, National Book Critics Circle lifetime voting member

"The sweet, rollicking charm of Bennett's commune memoir is Candide in reversea suburban gay boy, seemingly destined for the military, instead seeks out Eden and finds new family, first love, and a (forested) room of his own. Qtopia provides a touching and granular glimpse into the lived experience of dropping out, showing up, sharing everything, and sticking it outeven when the best of intentions start to unravel. Bennett went looking for a way of life and discovered, in this book, a way to see." - Austin Bunn, director of Lavender Hill: A Love Story

"Vivid and sharply crafted. Bennett's journey is both an on-the-road adventure and a coming out story. With unusual honesty and humor, Qtopia newly illuminates the converging promises of the hippie movement and gay liberation, and their challenges too." - Stephen Vider, author of The Queerness of Home: Gender, Sexuality, and the Politics of Domesticity After World War II

Bennetts beautiful memoir is as much about a fascinating time and place as it is about one charming, idealistic, fragile, brave young queer soul trying to find a chosen familyand himself. Id follow this beguiling narrator anywhere! - Elizabeth Graver, author of Kantika

Preface
Part One: Before I Could Dream of Lavender Hill
On Hippies and Boot Camp
In Walks the Mummy
Leaving Home
Walking to the Mountain
Too Much Flesh in the Afternoon Sun
Culture Shock
Back in the Diamond State
One Thousand Communes
Living in a Coal Bin
Everything Was an Experiment, Even Sexuality
Before Leaving, the Rats Came
What Its Like to Die
RFD, or How a Magazine Can Save Your Life
How Freaky Can You Get? Part Two: Lavender Hill
The Road to Utopia
I Need to Believe in This Place
A House Out of a Fairy Tale
First Love
In Search of Michael
Too Much Love
What Is Home to Queer People?
Pilgrimage to San Francisco
How I Got My Hippie Name
Locating Utopia on a Map
Jerry Becomes Ruby, and Ruby Becomes Green Man
House on Wheels
Too Poor Not to Be Educated
Fires Everywhere
How Many People Make a Commune
In Walks Allen Ginsberg
Insert Myth Here
How to Build Family with Only Two People
Empty and Naked
Interlude of the House That Was Not a House Part Three: Where Are They
Now?
Talking to Ghosts
A Virtual Gathering
Jeff, the Preservationist
Juda Bennett, a professor emeritus of English at the College of New Jersey, is the author of four academic books and numerous essays, short stories, and poems. He is a co-author of the group memoir The Toni Morrison Book Club.