Sweet Tooth A memoir

Tim Anderson, 1972-

Book - 2014

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Subjects
Genres
Gay biographies
LGBTQ+ biographies
Published
Seattle : Lake Union Publishing [2014]
[Place of publication not identified] : [2014]
Language
English
Main Author
Tim Anderson, 1972- (-)
Physical Description
319 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781477818077
  • Prologue: Some Candy Talking
  • Chapter 1. Losing Streak
  • He's Lost Control #1: Freestyling
  • Chapter 2. The Honeymoon Period
  • He's Lost Control #2: Flames
  • Chapter 3. The Boy with the Thorn in His Side
  • He's Lost Control #3: Cueball
  • Chapter 4. Getting Away with It
  • He's Lost Control #4: Money Exchange
  • Chapter 5. I Started Something I Couldn't Finish
  • He's Lost Control #5: Glorious Pastries
  • Chapter 6. Meet Me at the Coterie, Where We Will Enjoy Avocados, the Village Voice, and Beer over Ice
  • He's Lost Control #6: Sweeping Up
  • Chapter 7. Like Bret Michaels, but Gayer
  • He's Lost Control #7: Shower Scene
  • Chapter 8. Meeting with the Moon Goddess
  • He's Lost Control #8: Hang the DJ
  • Chapter 9. Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now
  • He's Lost Control #9: The Heart of Durham
  • Chapter 10. Strangeways, Here We Come
  • He's Lost Control #10: Piccadilly Palaver
  • Chapter 11. This Charming Man
  • Epilogue
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Anderson's second memoir (Tune In Tokyo: The Gaijin Diaries) is a lively and invigorating look at the hormone raging days of adolescence as the author tries to make sense of his overwhelming desire for both candy and men (not to mention man-candy). At age 15, one month after finally acknowledging his attraction to men, Anderson is diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. As he grapples with his identity and new found desires, Anderson struggles to maintain control over his physical health. He suffers a series of diabetic episodes and hospitalizations which are told in short alternating chapters. The author recounts these parallel struggles in colorful detail: he describes his "gay porno magazine obsession" as a "deep, dark dungeon of delicious, honey-dipped immorality fondue." This type of dry, self-deprecating humor is emblazoned throughout and helps the reader keep apace as Anderson relays his emotional and physical instability. Staying true to his experiences, Anderson evokes the juvenile tendency toward self-destruction in a way that is simultaneously funny and frustrating. The combination gives readers a visceral taste of the rollercoaster ride that was his young adulthood. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.