Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Artist and filmmaker Tourmaline debuts with an illuminating biography of Marsha P. Johnson, a central force in the Stonewall uprising and nascent LGBTQ+ rights movement. Tourmaline recreates Johnson's lesser-known early years, from her childhood in racially segregated Elizabeth, N.J., with a "revered" mother who still wouldn't let her "wear girls' clothes" to her youth spent hustling in Times Square, "where trans people came to survive and thrive together." Tourmaline depicts the 1969 police raid on the Stonewall Inn with cinematic intensity, portraying Johnson as akin to "a woman fighting the British in the Revolutionary War." The uprising galvanized Johnson's activism, leading to her participation in other protests, her caregiving for those with AIDS, and her cofounding of STAR (Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries). The book masters the complex balance of "joy alternating with... profound sadness" inherent in Johnson's life, which, despite the defiant resilience of her own statements ("I'm like a cat... I've been almost killed a million times now"), was rife with struggles with housing, medical care, disability, loss, and violence. Her still-unresolved death--Johnson was found in the Hudson River in July 1992 and her death was quickly ruled a suicide--was "emblematic of the way... trans lives have been seen as disposable by the state," Tourmaline sharply observes. It's a poignant portrait of a figure whose "greater sense of freedom" still inspires. (May)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A queen's legacy. Drawing on interviews and archival sources, Tourmaline, an artist, Black transgender activist, and Guggenheim Fellow, celebrates trans icon, sex worker, and activist Marsha P. Johnson (1945-92). Born Malcolm, she grew up in Elizabeth, New Jersey, where she first tried on her sister's and mother's clothing at age 5. In high school, she escaped to New York City on weekends, finding a thriving community of trans people in Times Square and the West Village. She said, "That's what made me in New York, that's what made me in New Jersey, that's what made me in the world: when I became a drag queen, I started to live my life as a woman." She finally moved to New York in 1963 and changed her name to Marsha. It was a tense time to be queer: Cross-dressing and homosexuality were criminalized, making trans people victims of persecution and violence. In 1969, this oppression erupted in the Stonewall Riots, at which Marsha stood in the forefront of defiance. She joined the Gay Liberation Front and co-founded STAR: Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries, dedicated to advocating for young trans people. Tourmaline charts Marsha's transition, which involved hormone replacement therapy, and her successful career as an entertainer. With makeup, beaded jewelry, flowered crown, and glitzy fashion, she cut a memorable figure. Her "groundbreaking commitment to queer glamour and performance," Tourmaline writes, "paved the way for Black gender-bending, sexually transgressive superstars like Prince and RuPaul." She was a caring friend, devoting herself "to small, daily acts of beauty," but she was also troubled: Besides recurring depression, she was HIV positive and suffered from chronic pain from a bullet in her back that could not be removed (a client--a shame-filled taxi driver--shot her after their encounter). Her death at age 47 may have been suicide or murder. In a well-researched biography, Tourmaline makes a persuasive case for remembering her. A warm homage to a pioneering activist. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.