[Loon Songs Trilogy]

By Richard Amory
(1966, 1967, 1968)

First editions of all three volumes in Amory's Loon Songs trilogy, the classic gay pastoral romance once described as a cross between Andre Gide and Louis L'Amour.

Very good plus.

"SONG OF THE LOON was a first: a paperback original soft-core porn novel [...] that didn't merely have literary aspirations; it had actual literary merit." - Michael Bronski

Though SONG OF THE LOON enjoys a secure status as the first gay Western, its Pacific Northwest setting is in large part a disguise worn by its heroes' true home: the Arcadia of the "highly erotic and extremely artificial sixteenth-century Spanish pastorals" the author judged to be "a perfect vehicle for a gay novel." Amory first encountered Gil Polo's DIANA ENAMORADA and Montemayor's LA DIANA during his graduate studies in Spanish literature, and explicitly pointed them out as his models in a prefatory note disclaiming any attempt at realism in his depiction of Native Americans: "He has taken certain very European characters from the novels of Jorge de Montemayor and Gaspar Gil Polo, painted them a gay aesthetic red, and transplanted them to the American wilderness." This pre-emptive defense against willful critical "misunderstanding [of] the nature of the pastoral genre" was as successful as such authorial pre-emptions ever are, which is to say, not very: most criticism has treated the Loon Songs books as publishing phenomena, as positive indicators of progress toward gay liberation, but not as literature. A welcome reassessment by Beth Boulokos places Amory's work in its proper context, in dialogue with not one but three genre traditions: gay pulp fiction, the Renaissance pastoral, and American utopianism, with all the deliberate anachronism, idealization, and improbability proper to that long and particular literary history. This combination proved a patent one, as each book in the series went through multiple printings and the series was formative for an entire generation of gay men. Rare as a set.

Read more: David Bergman, "The Cultural Work of Sixties Gay Pulp Fiction" in Smith, The Queer Sixties; Bouloukos, "Shepherds Redressed" in Gunn & Harker, 1960s Gay Pulp Fiction; Bronski, Introduction, Song of the Loon, 2005 edition.

San Diego: Greenleaf Classics, (1966, 1967, 1968). Song of the loon. Song of Aaron. Listen, the Loon Sings. Three volumes, 7'' x 4''. Original color pictorial wrappers all. 191, [1] pages, 191, [1] pages, and 255, [1] pages. Light edge scuffing and page toning to all volumes. Light corner creasing to volume 3.

This listing was created by Bibliopolis.