Town Square

Post a New Topic

The gay heart of San Francisco

Original post made on Jan 28, 2015

With "The Days of Anna Madrigal," the ninth book in his "Tales of the City" series, beloved San Francisco writer Armistead Maupin has penned his last novel starring the motley cast of characters from 28 Barbary Lane. Tomorrow, Wednesday, Jan. 28, Maupin will appear at Kepler's Books in Menlo Park to discuss the cult series and talk about what comes next for him as a writer.

Read the full story here Web Link posted Tuesday, January 27, 2015, 1:26 PM

Comments (2)

Posted by Exasperated reader
a resident of another community
on Jan 28, 2015 at 12:24 pm

I wish this article had (as Peter Canavese's film reviews do) gone beyond fan-club questions into real examination of Maupin's WORK. For it's a regrettable reflection on Maupin's SF fan base that they take as somehow representative a writer also widely received here in the Bay Area, from the start, as self-indulgent and glib.

I followed "Tales of the City" when first serialized in the Chronicle in the 1970s, enjoying it initially. But its limitations had nothing to do with anything the "Religious Right" vilifies. The problem was, its pop-culture sensibilities and shallow melodrama had many local readers cringing. Starting with an off-the-rack storyline, Maupin sets up a villain who, after extravagantly showing how sleazy he is, is "burned alive" in a car crash. How tidy; how comic-book. That set the tone of much of what followed.

Why not contrast Maupin with Cyra McFadden, whose own 1970s serialized story "The Serial" satirized aspects of the Bay Area that badly needed it (Herb Caen dubbed McFadden's subject "phonies, consciousness-raising variety, Marin-County division"). McFadden at least had depth of local knowledge.

Maupin in the 1970s showed the particular and self-absorbed instinct, common to recent transplants, that presumes everyone else in the Bay Area is new here too. Casually viewing the PBS "Tales of the City" mini-series I found it entertaining. Later I saw a recording, paying more attention to dialog. The Innocent Girl new to SF asks her neighbor if their landlady is "from here." "No one's 'from here,'" answers the neighbor smugly. (I switched it off.)

Maupin was unwittingly showing an attitude as clichéed as it was annoying to the literally millions of Bay Areans who grew up here -- only to see recently-arrived writers, with little insight, thinking it useful to "explain" the Bay Area to its residents, from the perspective of whatever corner of the country they left behind. As if such an exercise made any sense; as if it were all really about the Bay Area, rather than just themselves.

In the 1980s I mentioned to another native the trend of recent writers doing that.

"Oh, I know," she answered. "Aren't they obnoxious?"


Posted by Native 1955
a resident of Cuesta Park
on Jan 28, 2015 at 3:13 pm

This native of the bay area does not agree with you and finds you.
I guess different people actually do have different tastes. That means nobody is right or wrong.


Don't miss out on the discussion!
Sign up to be notified of new comments on this topic.

Email:


Post a comment

On Wednesday, we'll be launching a new website. To prepare and make sure all our content is available on the new platform, commenting on stories and in TownSquare has been disabled. When the new site is online, past comments will be available to be seen and we'll reinstate the ability to comment. We appreciate your patience while we make this transition..

Stay informed.

Get the day's top headlines from Mountain View Online sent to your inbox in the Express newsletter.