I Like sands in the hourglass... b y S arah K oehl "L ike sands in the hour glass so are the days o f o u r lives," o r so I th o u g h t as I sat down to read three fictiona l love stories about les­ bians by lesbians. Iris, Janine Veto’s first book is fast paced and violent. It involves tw o w om en w ho meet and fall in love, but find they m ust m urder various aggressors in order to live the ir lives in peace. Veto devotes great tim e and effort in to descriptive repeated rapes perpetrated upon the m ain character called Iris. W hat appears to be an escapist and rom antic captivating fro n t cover o f tw o w om en kissing never is actually characterized throug ho ut the novel. So as you cannot judge a book by its cover, Iris , has been placed am ongst the lesbian love story genre although carrying a distasteful ho m ophobic and m ale-hating un­ d e rc u rre n t Veto had m any opportunities to salvage her lesbian as victim them e. Iris is brutalized to the po int o f being physically disabled and has to prove her power with w itch cra ft over her aggressor and the violent lesbian-hating society that allowed such bru­ ta lity to take place. Sadly, what one would hope to be a victory over the violence against w om en at the end o f the book, becom es the bru ta l m u rde r o f an innocent male child. Iris has one saving grace as it serves to rem ind us as w om en that a th in line exists between our ow n aggressive nature as hum an beings and o u r ow n personal breaking points. Let us hope we can recognize this as a potential only, and not follow in o u r male counterparts footsteps in believing aggression deserves aggression. I do not recom m end Iris fo r the squeam ish o r pacifistic, but perhaps som e lesbian separatists w ill regard it as supportive m aterial. The Price o f S alt, w ritten in 1952, by Claire M organ, was one o f the first lesbian "p u lp ” novels w ritten w ith a realistic life quality and a happy ending. The hom osexual novel thirty years ago was always tragic, male and psy­ ch o lo g ica lly unsupportive. The 1980s reader m ig h t fin d Therese, the m ain character, a little tim id , bu t I’ll adm it her actions rem inded m e o f shy and awakening feelings in all o f us. Therese m eets Carol, a stunning older wo- Just Out February 17-March 2 m an, at the clothing departm ent store where she is a clerk. As their affection for one another grow s into love, Therese realizes she m ust deal w ith m ore than her awakening as a les­ bian, bu t jealousy, and her search o f self. C arol in turn, is faced with a custody battle w ith her ex-husband over her only daughter, and m ust com e to term s w ith her decision to live w ith Therese o r face losing her child. M any w ill identify w ith Carol and Therese. They characterize the struggle fo r fulfillm ent in all o f us and a search fo r love that we all hope to attain. A g a in st the Season, by Jane Rule, written in 1971, was finally published in the United States this spring. Rule’s exquisite w riting style and penetrating insight has created another winner. A g a in st theSeeison is a con­ sciously old fashioned, stylized novel about cycles o f birth, grow th and death. The m ajor­ ity o f its characters are (refreshingly) over forty, som e over sixty, and a few over eighty. Ju st as S ix o f O ne, by Rita Mae Brown, co l­ ored sm all tow n life and its inhabitants. A g a in st the Season revives that same h u m o r and sm all tow n adventure. Dina Pyros and Rosem ary Hopwood, the lesbian couple in the novel are a som ewhat stereotyped "b u tch and fem m e” but are w onderfully am using as they begin to cou rt publicly and privately. (W ith a twist, as it is the fem m e who chases and catches the butch). A particularly sentim ental and m eaningful part o f the novel em erges when an elderly m an and woman both over eighty, lonely and frightened by death, find they love each other, but were never able to make the vulnerable step to ­ wards co m m itm e n t and sharing their feel­ ings. In the face o f public ridicule they make th e ir love apparent and support one another. A g a in st the Season challenges the classic lesbian love story as it incorporates hetero­ sexual love and love between the elderly, a refreshing change. I recom m end A gainst the Season. It’s richness o f detail and thought harm onize and create the continuity o f dignity needed so desperately by all o f us as we age, and m akes the subtle connection between agism and respect, so often lost in our society. th ro u g h o u t the book as Celie’s story unfolds in her letters to God, her only sustaining realty. U ntainted by judgem ental doctrine, she w rites fervently to God o f her love for the flam boyant Shug Avery. It is Shug, Mr. s m istress, w ho becom es aware o f Celie's p lig h t and teachers her that life can be m ore than a daily struggle to survive. N ettie’s story is revealed in her letters to Celie, all o f w hich have been intercepted by Mr. _____. Ju st as C elie’s life is filled with hope and love and laughter, all that is central to her seem s to be stripped away. In the lonely, shocked silence, Celie learns, to her. the m ost im p o rta n t lesson. In the calm ness, the reader is lulled into expecting the last chapter to be an epilogue, but Ms. W alker skillfully raises em otions to a crescendo, the final twist, leaving no lingering questions, leaving passion at its peak. The book is artfully w ritten throughout. Ms. W alker’s econom y w ith w ords and her afflu­ ence o f feeling and insight present a story th a t is abundant in both intellectual and em o­ tio n a l understanding o f basic hum an rights, sexual preferences and what it means to be alive. All o f this is presented w ithout apology, w ith o u t vengeance, couched not in politics, but in the sim ple, natural reality o f who we are. JUST O U T at the rink A roller skating party sponsored by The Color Purple b y H elen Lottridge A lice W alker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The C olor Purple, published by W ashington Square Press, is crystal-clear sym plicity that delivers such pow erful messages and feel­ ings that one is prom pted to turn from the last page back to the first and re-read it im m ediately. Ms. W alker draws the reader into the core o f the oppression o f Black people — and particularly w om en o f color — from the per­ spective o f the innocent Celie. In the m idst of a barrage o f physical and em otional viola­ tio n s bearing no hint o f justice, we relate to Celie on a being level, and find inside her the quiet acceptance o f one w ho has no way to know that change can com e. A survivor o f incest her children taken from her, she finds herself the last-choice bride in an arranged m arriage. C elie’s husband, M r._______ appropriately nam ed, m uch pre­ fers her sister Nettie; but his affections are unrequited and nettie is sent away to an unknow n fate, leaving Celie with the loss o f the on ly person w ho loved her. A subtle but potent spirituality is evident SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 26,5 pm-7pm PORTLAND SKATING CENTER MAIN BETWEEN SE GRAND & UNION $2.00 INCLUDES SKATE RENTAL 11