Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Existential Isolation

Queer

Queer 

“Writers, like elephants, have long, vicious memories. There are things I wish I could forget.”
― William S. Burroughs


Queer is a harrowing, darkly comic, and raw exploration of unrequited desire and existential isolation. The manuscript was deemed too explicitly homosexual for the era and languished unpublished until 1985. Acting as a vital bridge in the author's bibliography, it captures the exact moment where Burroughs begins to transition away from straightforward, gritty realism into the hallucinated, avant-garde style that would define his masterpiece, Naked Lunch. The narrative is a circular seduction set against the backdrop of a corrupt and spectral 1950s Mexico City. The novel functions as a heavily autobiographical self-portrait.

The reader follows William Lee, Burroughs's recurring literary alter ego—who is stranded in a sordid expat community while suffering from acute heroin withdrawal.Lee becomes frantically obsessed with Eugene Allerton, a detached, younger American military veteran.Lee drags Allerton from bar to bar in a painfully circular attempt at seduction.To keep Allerton anchored to him, Lee concocts an expedition in search of yage, a mythical, telepathic, mind-altering vine.

Fiction can take you to places that are completely outside of your own personal experience. This novel from the pen of William S. Burroughs does just that with its litany of addicts in the thrall of eros. It is exciting and visceral in its realism. Through the back streets and nights filled with haunting images of men with sexual drives that determine their fates. Powerful and comic yet sad -- a brilliant narrative from a literary genius.

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