The Taos News

Not your classic feminist

New prose works take on the pandemic — and the rarefied world of a women’s studies program

- PAGES By Amy Boaz

‘CROSSING THE BRIDGE’ By Ron Ramsay Hagg

(2021, 176 pp.)

What would happen if, under a deadly pandemic, lawlessnes­s gripped American institutio­ns, clans of neoNazi motorcycli­sts roamed the land and fear stalked every household? Where would you go to hide?

To Taos, of course. The first-person protagonis­t of Hagg’s

latest novel (after “Lost and Found”) has an excellent career in Los Angeles managing “facilities” that incarcerat­e immigrants for the government — let’s call them prisons — and under the Trump administra­tion he has grown very rich indeed. Al’s much younger wife, Margaret, is

perfect, and his house overlookin­g Los Angeles “practicall­y a mansion.” Yet once he actually visits one of his “facilities” and is confronted by an immigrant with a heart-wrenching story, Al is sunk.

His world appears hollow, his marriage loveless. And everything caves in.

Al reemerges in Taos, though we are not quite sure why. It seems the order of the universe. He buys a small house,

lets go of his L.A. life, allows his ex to have everything — and eight years roll by in Arroyo Hondo. “Which is worse,” Al wonders, now at age 68: “being totally alone or the loneliness that can grab you when you live with someone who doesn’t care for you?”

Then the pandemic hits, and superimpos­ed isolation. Just as Al finally figures out what song will encapsulat­e him when he dies (a sound of wind brushing up against him), he

meets Angela, a distraught woman

who knocks on his door late at night. Her car has broken down, and she is

terrified of the marauding thugs on motorcycle­s who regularly prey on the vulnerable.

They trash her car, steal everything from her past life. Her family is dead from a gas fire in L.A. Angela has nothing left, and totters between giving

up — and staying. And what begins as a tentative extension of mercy on the

part of a decided hermit who likes his couple of beers and occasional weed, grows into a much-needed, warm human connection for them both.

In this straightfo­rward, uncomplica­ted, gracious effort, author Hagg

seems to float the question: How can you say no when the universe — fate,

God, you name it — seems to be giving you exactly what you need?

‘THAT GUY IN OUR WOMEN’S STUDIES CLASS’ By Allan D. Hunter

Sunstone Press (2022, 262 pp.)

“Hi, I’m Derek Turner, I am interested in feminism and I want to take this course.”

So proceeds with great determinat­ion this young “sissy femme” who is male and heterosexu­al, yet with a feminine nature, as he describes himself in

this “nonfiction memoir” which reads more like a novel. “I wasn’t a regular

straight guy but neither was I gay or transsexua­l” — not exactly the classic feminist, especially in the fall 1985 as

he signs up for classes in a State University of New York, Long Island branch.

The professors, not to mention the other students in his women’s studies classes, are slightly baffled by this new student, at 25 somewhat older

than the others as this is Derek’s third attempt at college, having floundered

back home in New Mexico. Coming out then, Derek hit a wall of misunderst­anding and lack of support from his family, who considered him “mentally unstable” and a “loser.”

Hunter’s previous novel “GenderQuee­r” left off when Derek is incarcerat­ed in a mental institutio­n because

he is simply too bizarre to categorize, and his parents in Los Alamos put him away rather than try to sort out his individual identity. Now, Derek knows that New York is the place for him, and there he eventually heads on a mission: “I want to explain to people what it is like to be a male feminine person … and to push for some social change that comes from making room for people like me to exist.”

Consequent­ly, Derek’s determinat­ion to succeed and be heard is marvelous: he helps bring political awareness

to the staff and residents of the Creedmoor Psychiatri­c Hospital, where he

has managed, creatively, to find a place to live while attending school; inserts a fresh voice in classroom discussion­s about the abuses of patriarchy; and even shakes up the school’s Catalyst newspaper.

This era marked the blossoming of feminist theory, and readers will relish the roiling discussion­s about pornograph­y, rape, power differenti­als, racism, sexual liberation versus feminism around works by writers then very

much in vogue like Marilyn French, Vivian Gornick and Andrea Dworkin. Derek is constantly attacked for claiming he is a radical feminist although

he is a man. His crowning success is publishing a groundbrea­king essay in “Feminism and Psychology,” yet he does not complete his graduate degree.

A Reader’s Guide at the back offers provocativ­e questions about themes that Derek is pursuing, how he adjusts

his understand­ing over time and what a change agent is, e.g., “Do you perceive tensions between being radical, being pragmatic and being effective at

producing social change?” Certainly this work will spur readers to go back and check out some of the inspired

texts.

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