56 pages • 1 hour read
Justin TorresA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Blackouts’s gay Puerto Rican narrator is known as “Nene,” a Spanish nickname akin to “baby.” Nene spends the novel tending to Juan Gay, an elderly friend whom he knew for 18 days at a psychiatric hospital. While Nene was nominally committed for chronic “blackouts”—dissociative episodes where he loses track of time, one of which led him to run his sink to the point of flooding his landlady’s apartment—the novel implies the true rationale behind this commitment to a psychiatric hospital was medical racism and pathologizing queerness.
Nene’s history is vague, but he characterizes himself as a “chronic loser.” Though he recounts various episodes from his life as he sits with a dying Juan, these stories are mediated through memory, innuendo, and implication. Furthermore, he sometimes presents himself through analogues—including the character Sal, and by extension, his use of the name “Salvatore” in Part 5 (which may connect to Sex Variants: A Study of Homosexual Patterns participant Salvatore N.)—the former of whom appears in his “film” (“STARVE A RAT”) in Part 4. In the decade since Nene and Juan met, Nene worked as a sex worker, which led to the end of his one long-term relationship with Liam.
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