Charles Henri Ford Books
Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->F-->Ford, Charles Henri-->1
Related Subjects:
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Related Subjects:
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Charles Henri Ford Books sorted by
Average customer review: high to low
.
View: Parade of the Avant-Garde : An Anthology of View Magazine (1940-1947)
Published in Paperback by Thunder's Mouth Press (1992-11)
List price: $17.95
New price: $17.00
Used price: $8.98
Used price: $8.98
Average review score: 

Tomorrow & Tommorrow & Tomorrow
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-18
Review Date: 2003-11-18
This book is a gem of Mid-Century Avant Garde, Surrealist, Fabulist & more writing. Pieces by Man Ray, Henry Miller, Paul
Bowles, Camus, Borges. Stuff about Ernst, Breton, Durrell, Leger. 60 or more similar items. A fascinating short article
that gives the `40s perspective on "Les chants de Maldoror;" really an underground book then. A time capsule or doorway through
to a long gone, fertile period in the arts from a participant's perspective.
The Young & Evil
Published in Paperback by Richard Kasak Book (1996-09)
List price: $12.95
New price: $8.00
Used price: $2.64
Used price: $2.64
Average review score: 

I wouldn't say 'dreadful'
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-01
Review Date: 2006-10-01
I read this book during a binge of early 20th century gay fiction and I wouldn't say it was 'dreadful.' If you're talking
esoterics, Ronald Firbanks is the bloke you want! Wyndham Lewis was equally unrewarding. There was at least some humor in
The Young and Evil, when the protag pukes on the straight woman! I laughed. The copy they interlibrary loaned me was printed
in Paris on handmade paper--you probably won't find anything so opulent on Amazon . . . I digress, I caught more of a Joycean
feeling than Stein but I can't stand that woman!
The banal and fascinating
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-10
Review Date: 2004-01-10
A dreadful novel, pretentious, arty and clearly indebted to Gertrude Stein in its alliterative passages of nonsensical phrases.
The characters are cardboard, the plot non-existent and good chunks are completely unintelligible. Saying all that, I found
the book fascinating as a historical document of gay life in New York of the early 30's. Village Bohemia, gay bars, the drag
balls, cruising on Riverside Drive, gay bashing, rent parties are all here, and written by those who lived it. Those looking
for sex scenes will be deeply disappointed because none exist...just the fact that the male characters went to bed or paired
off with each other was risqué enough to put terror in the hearts of potential publishers. But as an illustration of George
Chauncey's Gay New York none better could be found, an authentic document of the times. Worth every affected paragraph.

The Young And The Evil
Published in Paperback by Olympiapress.com (2005-01-31)
List price: $11.95
New price: $6.68
Used price: $8.11
Used price: $8.11
Average review score: 

Young, yes. Evil? Naaaah.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-14
Review Date: 2007-01-14
By this time, there's a fairly sizeable American sub-genre of "Bohemian" novels that deal with young artists and their sex-drug-and-alcohol-crazed
friends. This is the fourth of this sub-genre that I have read. The others are Kerouac's THE SUBTERRANEANS (1950s San Francisco),
Viva's SUPERSTAR (the Warhol crowd in the late 60s) and of course, Henry Miller's Parisian classic TROPIC OF CANCER. Several
years ago I was showing some visiting German friends around New York and they asked me, "When did Greenwich Village become
a gay neighborhood?" After a little thought, I said that I didn't know, but would guess after World War II when the young
men came home from the war. Well, Charles Henri Ford and Parker Tyler's THE YOUNG AND EVIL shows that I was wrong. This
book was published in 1933 and depicts a Greenwich Village with a well-established gay scene, so the Village must have gone
gay decades before then. Like the other books I mentioned, this one is virtually plotless and an obvious roman-a-clef, with
false names attached to real people. Like THE SUBTERRANEANS, it is written in the present tense. Unlike any of the others,
this one has been influenced by Gertrude Stein, much to the book's detriment. One pretentious sentence treads upon another's
heels. Most of the time this oblique way of storytelling just gets in the way. However, there's in an interesting sequence
of non-sequiturs jumbled together from about a dozen simultaneous conversations at a drag ball that struck me as rather exhilarating.
But most of the time the book is a gay soap opera about the tangled emotional lives of mascara-wearing poet boys and the masculine
ethnic youth of the neighborhood. Some of it is quite funny. But toward the end, there's a shocking scene in which the boys
are attacked and beaten by sailors. Fortunately they are all arrested and taken to jail before they can be too badly beaten,
but the episode does bring home vividly the terrors that could be in store for those whose only crime was being effeminate.
Fortunately, the book is brief. As literature, I'd say this book's value is minimal. But as an historical artifact I found
it quite worthwhile. I'll give it two and a half stars rounded up to three.
The Banal and the Fascinating
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-20
Review Date: 2005-01-20
A dreadful novel, pretentious, arty and clearly indebted to Gertrude Stein in its alliterative passages of nonsensical phrases.
The characters are cardboard, the plot non-existent and good chunks are completely unintelligible. Saying all that, I found
the book fascinating as a historical document of gay life in New York of the early 30's. Village Bohemia, gay bars, the drag
balls, cruising on Riverside Drive, gay bashing, rent parties are all here, and written by those who lived it. Those looking
for sex scenes will be deeply disappointed because none exist...just the fact that the male characters went to bed or paired
off with each other was risqué enough to put terror in the hearts of potential publishers. But as an illustration of George
Chauncey's Gay New York none better could be found, an authentic document of the times. Worth every affected paragraph.
7 poems (Starstreams poetry series)
Published in Unknown Binding by Bardo Matrix (1974)
List price:

ANDRE KERTESZ: THE MANCHESTER COLLECTION
Published in Paperback by Andre Kertesz and The Manchester Collection (1984)
List price:
Used price: $109.15

Biography - Ford, Charles Henri (1913-2002): An article from: Contemporary Authors
Published in Digital by Thomson Gale (2003-01-01)
List price: $9.95
New price: $9.95
Blues: A Magazine of New Rhythms. Vol. 1, Nos. 1-5
Published in Paperback by Blues (1929)
List price:
Blues: The Magazine of New Rhythms: Vol I-II
Published in Hardcover by Johnson Reprint Company (1967)
List price:
Used price: $1,000.00
Charles Henri Ford: Interview
Published in Unknown Binding by New Art Publications (1987)
List price:
Charles Henri Ford: Photographs, 1930-1960
Published in Hardcover by Arena Editions (2003-11)
List price: $65.95
Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->F-->Ford, Charles Henri-->1
Related Subjects:
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Related Subjects:
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11