The End of San Francisco

Author:   Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore
Publisher:   City Lights Books
ISBN:  

9780872866065


Publication Date:   08 March 2013
Format:   Electronic book text
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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The End of San Francisco


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Author:   Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore
Publisher:   City Lights Books
Imprint:   City Lights Books
ISBN:  

9780872866065


ISBN 10:   0872866068
Publication Date:   08 March 2013
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Electronic book text
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

A blisteringly honest portrait of a young, fast and greatly misunderstood lifeAn outspoken, gender-ambiguous author and activist reflects on her halcyon days as a wild child in San Francisco. Kirkus Reviews one of the most important memoirs of the decadeThe End of San Francisco is one of the most vulnerable memoirs I've read. Ariel Gore, Psychology Today It is so difficult to assess The End of San Francisco because it is a work of such blazing originality that one cannot compare it to anything else and say 'this is more or less successful than that.' The experience of The End of San Francisco simply bears no comparison. Charles Kruger, Litseen The End Of San Francisco, published by City Lights, is activist Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore's denunciation of assimilationThis book is a useful reminder that the gay community is far from monolithic and that it is especially important to listen to the voices of resistance. June Thomas, Slate Sycamore s associative, non-linear narrative is filled with sparkling language that illuminates the importance of reaching for connection and alive-ness in the face of brutality and loss. Wendy Elisheva Somerson, Tikkun The result is brilliant, a collection of unstructured vignettes about sex abuse, dying parents, feminism and veganism, Tracy Chapman and Le Tigre, dyke bars and gay tricks, AIDS and ACT UP that all weave together a life of hope in 90s San Francisco and the disappointment that follows. Diane Anderson-Minshall, The Advocate Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore's whip-raw memoir The End of San Francisco is all aboutthe need to discover who you are by defining yourself in a place. She avoids the cliches of other angry young memoirs by sharing her protagonist role with San Francisco. Paul Constant, The Stranger Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore s long awaited memoir The End of San Francisco will rip you open, crack your rib-cage and pour glitter into your heart. It s hard and captivating, a book that truly pulls you in and won t let you go. Brutal and brilliant, the memoir weaves in and out of time, bringing readers into the intimate details of Sycamore s adolescence and early activist days. Sassafras Lowrey, Lambda Literary The End of San Francisco could be the most insightful break-up memoir the city has ever received. Ingrid Rojas Contreras, KQED San Francisco Searing, funny, maudlin, elegiac, infuriating, and confessional, The End of San Francisco is a deliberately disordered collection of vignettes dealing mostly with Sycamore's span living in the citya brilliant writer Marke B., SF Bay Guardian The End of San Francisco is the opposite of nostalgia. Nostalgia is fundamentally conservative, and its conservatism is often embedded in the form in which stories are told. The End of San Francisco seems to me radical, not just in content, but formally, in insisting on other ways of remembering and documenting. Jessica Hoffman, Los Angeles Review of Books The 'infamous radical queer troublemaker, organizer and agitator, community builder, and anti-assimilation commentator' brings you the story of her escape to San Francisco. This is a wonderfully messy mix of memoir, social history, and elegy. Alexis Coe, SF Weekly a fin-de-siecle late '90s narrative that captures the city's underground demimondaine of artists, punks, activists, anarchists and addicts whose ranks will soon be, if not completely swept away by the tech boom's false promises, then severely thinned by gentrification. Tomas Mournian, Huffington Post The End of San Francisco recounts both joyful days and dark nights, and it's an important socio-historical account by someone who's been there and done all that. New York Journal of Books A trenchant observer, her denunciation of racism, classism and homophobia is fierce and she does not spare queer communities for their refusal to reject hetero-normativitymarriage and childrenor capitalist consumption. Eleanor Bader, Truthout It's a trippy readin multiple senses of the wordbut at the same time profoundly honest and raw. Unlike many queers today, Sycamore doesn't write or live with a chip on her shoulderand that's really refreshing and just nice to experience as a reader. Velvetpark The End of San Francisco has potential to enlighten individuals within a generation that has been told that 'marriage equality' is the ultimate right to be won by the LGBTQ community. Some readers won t like Sycamore for her social and political critiques, but she is an important figure who encourages a critical look at social action, and, for that, The End of San Francisco is an important book. Capitol Hill Times This memoir oozes devastation and glamour, twirling around the Nineties like it's San Francisco, and San Francisco like it's the Nineties! Back when queers and anarchists fueled the political momentum in the Mission. But, honey, things are different now. The Nineties are over, and so is San Francisco. Maybe disillusionment and rejuvenation aren't so different when you're ready to go deeper still. Dave at Elliott Bay Books This autobiography is a story of the way people fail each other, whether out of malice or exhaustion or just not knowing how to be there. It's a chronicle of the ways that we need each other, and the way that need can be turned around, inside-out, torn in all the wrong places but still the only blanket that you have. It's about critiquing out of love and loving despite critique, despite failure, until you can't do it anymore, until you genuinely feel as though an entire city has come to an end. Maximumrocknroll Sycamore identifies the complicated messiness of identities wrestling with belonging, activism and being instruments of gentrificationHer styleemotional and conversationalcreates a rich, satisfying, evocative and deeply relatable world. Broken Pencil It is so difficult to assess The End of San Francisco because it is a work of such blazing originality that one cannot compare it to anything else and say 'this is more or less successful than that.' The experience of The End of San Francisco simply bears no comparison. Charles Kruger, Litseen Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore has a model for relationships that says: 'First you reveal everything, and then when you can't think of anything else to reveal you go deeper.' In The End of San Francisco, Sycamore lets the reader feel the bitter sweetness of that relationship model, the push-pull of intimacy that makes the process of excavating memories so painful but so cathartic, so difficult but so urgent. Mariana Roa Oliva, Rain Taxi Author Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore is the artistic love child of Jean Genet and David Wojnarowicz, deconstructing language swathed in unbridled sensuality, while flinging readers into a disrupted, chaotic life of queer anarchyImages cascade and collide with one another in an accomplished literary cadenza of salvation. John R. Killacky, The Gay and Lesbian Review WorldwidePraise for Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore s previous work: Brutal, raw, cathartic and redemptive. San Francisco Chronicle Startlingly bold and provocative. Howard Zinn You may have thought you understood human nature before you read this book; after reading it you will be humbled by all you failed to grasp until now. Edmund White You're not going to be reading anything similar elsewhere. The Times of London Alternately moving and sprightly, contemplative and outraged. Publishers Weekly


Author Information

Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore is the gender-bending author of the highly praised novels, Pulling Taffy and So Many Ways to Sleep Badly, and the editor of four nonfiction anthologies, including Why Are Faggots So Afraid of Faggots?, Nobody Passes: Rejecting the Rules of Gender and Conformity and That s Revolting! Queer Strategies for Resisting Assimilation. Sycamore writes regularly for a variety of publications, including Bitch, Utne Reader, AlterNet, Make/Shift, and Maximumrocknroll, and lives in Seattle, WA.

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