52 pages • 1 hour read
Two Boys Kissing opens with the words, “You can’t know what it is like for us now—you will always be one step behind. Be thankful for that. You can’t know what it was like for us then—you will always be one step ahead. Be thankful for that, too” (1). Levithan writes from the perspective of the gay men of the past who did not survive the AIDS epidemic. Their voices become an omnipresent narrator to the lives of the young gay boys whose stories are the book’s central narratives. Levithan presents the chorus as ancestral watchers over the lives of the queer youth of the present day. The chorus’ pains, triumphs, struggles and joys are inexorably intertwined with the current generation’s.
Sexual orientation and gender identity are separate branches of a person’s identity. Unlike race, religion, and culture, sexual and gender minorities don’t have the built-in culture and community that comes with those other aspects of identity. Queer people tend to find each other during adolescence or even adulthood, and have historically formed new communities and families, especially when their families and communities have rejected them. The voices of the past in Two Boys Kissing represent a lost generation that was building the kinds of communities and cultures for queer people that they didn’t have growing up.
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By David Levithan