THE BEAUTIFUL ROOM IS EMPTY


     I am now about ready to retire for the night but I decide to pick up my pencil to jot down the lingering thoughts running in my mind - because I don't wanna forget -  The Beautiful  Room Is Empty by Edmund White.
     This novel by White, written with brutal frankness, honesty and bravery kept me turning its pages because they were so reflective of my life, of every gay's life for that matter, that every now and then, as I read it, I'd take a deep sigh and whisper, I know what you mean, Edmund.
      Here is a gay novel that narrates how to grow up gay in America in the fifties, utterly strange to me but real, a distinct voice so deviant from the chorus of  Marlon Brando and Paul Newman and Doris Day and John Wayne that I thought made up America in those days.  Those of us who were born in the sixties and went to Philippine public schools could probably  recall the US AID - handed American books that were the staple of our learning, which bore illustrations of a Hudson-looking father reading his newspaper, a baseball- uniform -attired-Rooney-looking son holding  fork and knife, a Judy Garland-looking daughter pouting -- all three sitting around the dining table -- waiting for the Doris Day-looking mother who is about to serve dinner.
     That image in my Filipino mind was shattered ever since I came to America where it was revealed to me how the real families of America live. That's somehow frustrating... making me wish I'd never been in this country at all. It is so much like London...I spoke recently with a British woman and told her how I perceive London, how I'd like to see  Britons take a respite at three in the afternoon to prepare tea and eat biscuits...I told her my dream of sitting on green pastoral places where I could watch  Britons spread their mantles on the grass for picnics - she burst out laughing, Are you mad? she said, Do you think Britain still lingers in the twenties? London no longer contains the people you dream it contains... her message saddened me, prodding me to revise so much of my romantic notions about places that have long changed.
     I was surrounded by John Wayne movies in growing up, and I fell in love with him since the day I watched him embrace the Asian boy in The Green Beret. I cried many nights when in its ending, John Wayne died and the boy searched all over the place looking for him. How I prayed for John Wayne to come back. And re-played that ending in so many ways -  John Wayne was still alive,  he just got lost in the jungles,  he'd just captured temporarily - and in no time, he'd come back to resume his friendship with the Asian boy...you know...
      I guess I got stuck with John Wayne. In coming to America, I thought every American male was John Wayne.  I lamented the fact there were no visible gays in America.
      Until I came to this country. Until I discovered that The Beautiful Room Is Empty.
      In this book White describes the missing character of America which many foreigners like me never saw before, he is the gay American who lives so American-next-door-like yet deep inside is full of fears, denial, futile search, sadness and self-rejection.
      Edmund White, the blond-haired boy  who desperately tries to camouflage his  homosexuality through art and whose family spends money for his shrink to escape his malady is the narrator of this triumphant gay novel.
      Every gay who is born to a rejecting society knows Edmund's story doesn't lie, every gay went through what it tells: the woman he befriends, Maria, turns out to be a lesbian. His family -  his weird and self-centered mother;  his father who instills in his young mind his state of abnormality; his sister who has a tendency to lesbianism herself - offers no consolation. His friends - the bookstore owner who spends lavishly on a straight cop until he himself was engulfed in poverty and  the solitary painters - cannot be good role models for him. And his first rejection in sex sounds all too familiar.
      When freedom is given to Edmund, he immediately gets magnetized to toilets and dark corners of the city, in secluded rooms - for anonymous sex that are quick, impersonal, guilt-ridden, self-destructing- all the more fanning his internal conflict - his conflict of getting rid of homosexuality and lusting after men at the same time.That, again, sounds too familiar.
      Then Edmund gets into college and joins straight guy fraternities because it is the correct thing to do - only to struggle in their midst, and resort to the only survival instinct gays have - to be one of them.  In copying straight mannerisms, talks, body moves, even fantasies, he deprives himself of truth. A man who denies his true self can never be happy.  He is the classic closet queen who, even after he made love exclusively with men still thinks he'd become straight one way or another. Edmund took hold of this false hope for a long long time that he lost so much in life -
      It's called  the wasted youth.
      Only when he unmasks does he secure for himself a place in the world. In accepting the truth, he outwits and outlives even the shrink who promised him normalcy. In the last parts of the book, Edmund the blond-haired boy becomes Edmund White, one of the greatest contemporary novelists of our time.
      From hereon, he will embark into an exciting gay world, the germinating world which the present gays now enjoy.
      He will introduce us to the colorful and sometimes tragic characters of A Boy's Own Story and Farewell Symphony.
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