The Rice Queen Diaries
A Memoir
- Publisher
- Arsenal Pulp Press
- Initial publish date
- Sep 2005
- Category
- Gay Studies, General
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781551521893
- Publish Date
- Sep 2005
- List Price
- $22.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
In this moving autobiography, Daniel Gawthrop writes about the politics and pleasures of being a self-identified "rice queen": a gay man who is attracted to Asians. Navigating through the urban jungles of Western cities like Vancouver and London, as well as the humid streets of Bangkok and Saigon, Daniel explores the multicultural minefields of sexuality and culture as he articulates the manners and contradictions of his desires.
The politics of race, and the unspoken rules of gay Asian culture in both Western and Eastern settings, underscore Daniel's personal journey in which he recalls his teen years spent idolizing Bruce Lee and his fixation on an Asian schoolmate whose hazing becomes a sexual spectacle for him. As he enters adulthood, his desires become manifest as he explores the subcultures of Long Yang Clubs (where gay Asians and "their admirers" can meet) before departing for Asia, where his encounters often become transactions, and he learns the hard way that sexual desire has a human and emotional cost.
Evoking the themes of Edward Said's Orientalism, The Rice Queen Diaries is as much a personal statement about culture and otherness as it is about gay desire. Traversing three continents, these diaries are a personal reckoning, a bold coming to terms with the nuances of sexuality that has relevance for all of us.
About the author
Daniel Gawthrop is the author of five non-fiction books including The Rice Queen Diaries, which was shortlisted for a ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year Award and an Independent Publishers Award, and The Trial of Pope Benedict. He has worked as a freelance writer and journalist in Vancouver, London, and Bangkok, where he was a sub-editor for The Nation newspaper. During a leave of absence from the Canadian Union of Public Employees, where he was hired as a communications representative in 2004, he spent several months living and working in Burma to prepare for writing his debut novel, Double Karma. He and his Burmese husband, a native of Karen State, live in New Westminster, BC, traditional Coast Salish territory of the Qayqayt First Nation.
Awards
- Short-listed, Independent Publishers Awards - Biography / Memoir
- Short-listed, ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year Award
Editorial Reviews
The Rice Queen Diaries has the appearance of an academic tract, with indented quotations from a variety of popular, literary and otherwise sources, while largely reading as a first-person recollection of predominately sexual experiences across three continents. Gawthrop splices the two approaches and The Rice Queen Diaries can be understood as aiming to deconstruct predominant notions of the 'rice queen' in terms of testing personal experience against received ideas and stereotypes.
-Intersections
Intersections:
'Rice queens' is not yet an authorized [library] subject heading, but it may soon be on the way with this worthy literary warrant.
-American Library Association GLBTRT Newsletter
ALA GLBT newsletter
Gawthrop, like Yukio Mishima, is adept at invoking virile beauty.... The book's main journey is toward Gawthrop's fuller understanding of himself.
-Gay & Lesbian Review
Gay and Lesbian Revi
Move over Bridget Jones. This autobiography explores the life of a self-declared rice queen--a gay man who loves Asian men. If this were turned into a movie starring Colin Firth, it might permanently break him out of his rut of onscreen impotent simmering at teenage girls. Oh, dreams.
-Vancouver Magazine
Vancouver Magazine
Vivid and at times jarring, The Rice Queen Diaries, is an eye-opening and challenging read for anyone willing to step into its sticky, bittersweet realm.
-Geist Magazine
Geist Magazine
This insightful memoir about the author's near-exclusive attraction to Asian men covers a lot of sexual, emotional and cultural ground--and growth ... the book comes into its strength when Gawthrop addresses disparate cultures of desire--when he comes to understand, for example, that many of his sexual encounters in Thailand were more financial transactions than romantic interludes.
-Newsweekly
Newsweekly
Well written and thoughtful, Gawthrop's work is bound to engage readers.
-Canadian Book Review Annual
Canadian Book Review Annual
A graceful narrative.
-Vancouver Sun
Vancouver Sun
Daniel Gawthrop's sensitive, troubling and sometimes uncomfortably sexy memoir, The Rice Queen Diaries, finds him simultaneously questioning and celebrating his addictive sexual attraction to Asian men ... in chronicling his travels--as well as his own internal journey--Gawthrop provides fascinating challenges to the tyranny of political correctness while struggling with the dangerously consuming nature of his own desires.
-Travelbound
Travelbound
Daniel Gawthrop's The Rice Queen Diaries is that rare book that has something interesting and provocative to say about both desire and culture. It is personally frank and politically sophisticated. And in these days of moralism on the right and political correctness on the left, it suggests that in our bumbling pursuit of the obscure object of desire, we may be a lot more innocent than we think.
-Stan Persky
Stan Persky
This is no PC guilt fest. Gawthrop ... nicely reveals the complexity of human desire, and there's some great Southeast Asian scenery along the way.
-Vancouver Review
Vancouver Review
An important addition to the gay canon of literature... Gawthrop does a fine job in detailing the narrator's sexual odyssey without overly exoticizing it... (Ricepaper)
Ricepaper
An intriguing variation on the classic coming out narrative, one that attempts to depict not only the emergence of a queer identity, but of a form of queer sexuality that is tangled up with issues or racial and cultural identity as well.
-Bay Area Reporter
Bay Area Reporter