This wonderful and engaging book consolidates Frank Perez’s essays on queer New Orleans that he wrote for Ambush Magazine over the last dozen years. There is a total of seventeen themed sections (such as Activism, Preservation, Southern Decadence, and Interviews). Each section consists of five essays that are roughly three pages long. New Orleans has an incredibly rich queer history that has yet to tap into the mainstream and this books helps put our history into the spotlight. My favorite section was “Preservation” and led me down a rabbit hole of 1920s Dixie Bohemia.
A couple notes on the format of the book. First, the writing style is very easy to follow and interspersed with personal reminiscences which gave a tone of warmth and care to the history being told. The short essays made it easy to devour several sections at a time, or pop in and out in spurts. The format gives an incredible breadth of information, but in my opinion largely serves as a starting point for historical inquiry. There is a focus on breadth over depth (given that the essays are only a few pages long), and I sometimes found myself wanting more information and taking notes to do my own research. There are some footnotes that serve to guide the reader in this regard. The format, as noted by another review, also tends to repeat information across the book since these essays were originally published independently from one another.
The last thing I’ll say is while the title is “essays on queer New Orleans”, the book is largely (but not completely) about gay male history. This speaks more to the canon of queer history that centered and preserved gay male narratives. While this representation is important and interesting, the history of minority groups within the New Orleans queer community warrant future research, which Perez notes is forthcoming in one of the footnotes.