logo
The Guardian view on coming-out tales: from A Boy's Own Story to What It Feels Like for a Girl

The Guardian view on coming-out tales: from A Boy's Own Story to What It Feels Like for a Girl

The Guardian08-06-2025
'What if I could write about my life exactly as it was?' the teenage narrator of Edmund White's A Boy's Own Story wonders. 'What if I could show it in all its density and tedium and its concealed passion, never divined or expressed?' Published in 1982, A Boy's Own Story was hailed as one of the first coming-out novels, and its author, who died aged 85 last week, as a great pioneer of gay fiction.
This auto-fiction relates White's privileged adolescence in 1950s Chicago, his struggles with his sexuality and search for a psychoanalytical 'cure'. In its extraordinary candour about sex – a hallmark of White's prodigious career – the novel remains startling today. It arrived at a pivotal moment in gay history: after the hope of the Stonewall uprising and just before the devastation of Aids, both of which White documented in what became an autobiographical trilogy with The Beautiful Room is Empty (1988) and The Farewell Symphony (1998).
Lancashire in the 1970s might seem a world away from the American midwest two decades earlier, but Jeanette Winterson's account of her miserable childhood in Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit was similarly groundbreaking when it was first published in 1985. Forty years later, plans are under way for an RSC musical version next year. 'Why be happy when you could be normal?' her adoptive mother, Mrs Winterson, an evangelical Pentecostal Christian, demands, when she catches the teenage Jeanette in bed with another girl.
It doesn't get much more mainstream than a musical. But, as Winterson told the audience at the Hay literary festival last weekend, the BBC's Bafta-winning 1990 adaptation was a 'very brave' move after Section 28. 'It really shook up TV at that moment,' she said.
Now another BBC adaptation is shaking up TV. What It Feels Like for a Girl (the title is a 2000 Madonna song), based on Paris Lees' 2021 memoir, powerfully shows what it meant to be a transgender teenager in the Midlands in the noughties. This personal story has once again landed at a time of intense public reckoning over LGBTQ+ rights.
What It Feels Like for a Girl might be recent history, but, with ominous nods to a nascent internet, it is still a period piece. It is pre-social media and what Jonathan Haidt, in his book The Anxious Generation, has called 'the great rewiring of childhood'. Where once young people read to discover they were not alone, now they scroll.
Each of these coming-out stories is rooted in a specific time and place. They are about class as well as sex, the salvation of books and music as well as romance. They are about loneliness, desire and a longing for escape – being a teenager, in short. Despite heartbreaking scenes of abuse and pain, they are also bursting with excitement. One of the conditions of youth is that one's 'own story' feels like the only story. This is why the coming-of-age narrative endures.
In our digital age of toxic masculinity and intolerance, these memoirs call for truthfulness and compassion. They are reminders of the fragility of progress. 'If gays have gone from invisibility to ubiquity and from self-hatred to self-acceptance,' White wrote in his last book, The Loves of My Life, published in January, 'we should recognize we're still being pushed off cliffs in Yemen – and from the top fronds of Florida palms, for all I know.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Georgia Love takes a swipe at ex-husband Lee Elliott in shock post with another man
Georgia Love takes a swipe at ex-husband Lee Elliott in shock post with another man

Daily Mail​

timea minute ago

  • Daily Mail​

Georgia Love takes a swipe at ex-husband Lee Elliott in shock post with another man

Georgia Love has thrown subtle shade at her ex-husband Lee Elliott in the wake of their divorce announcement. The Bachelorette Australia star took to Instagram on Friday to share a snap cuddled up with her 'soulmate' Abir Ahmed. Abir, Georgia's best friend since she was 14 years old, could be seen with his arm wrapped around her shoulders as they looked out at the New York City skyline. Georgia, 35, opted for a bright red frock while her platonic significant other donned a simple white t-shirt. 'Who says a soulmate has to be a romantic partner?' she captioned the post, which appeared to be a burn aimed at Lee and their nine year marriage. Georgia and Abir recently vacationed in the Caribbean together in the same week her ex, 44, moved out of their marital home. The former reality TV star has shared a number photos from her luxury getaway on Instagram, including a snap in which she and Abir locked lips. The duo were posing for a friendly photo when Abir embraced Georgia and pulled her in for a comically open-mouthed kiss. 'I came, I saw, I conquered,' he captioned the three-way picture, which also saw him laughing as he walked away from a stunned Georgia. Georgia has posted several more photos with her best pal since then, enjoying some fun in the sun with their other friends during the island escape. The friends had been living it up on a Carnival cruise sailing around the Caribbean before heading back to New York City, where Abir is based. Georgia and Abir have been friends for a while, with the Bachelorette star leaning on him for support after her split from Lee. She has even replaced a photo of herself and Lee in her home with a picture of her male best friend in a brutal move post-breakup. The journalist took to her Instagram a few weeks ago to reveal her new home setup, which included a photo with Abir. The image showed the pair warmly embracing and smiling for the camera at her real-life bachelorette party in 2021. Abir was also there with Georgia when she jetted off to the US over the New Year amid rumours she and Lee had split. It comes after Lee sparked speculation that he has been enjoying a romance with radio star Carrie Bickmore. According to Woman's Day, the pair have been spending a lot of time together at Carrie's home in recent weeks. The publication claimed they were introduced by mutual friends and the relationship is 'heating up quickly'. 'They've been trying hard to keep things under wraps,' a source told the magazine. 'But there's definitely something romantic going on. They're a beautiful couple!' Lee and Georgia, who first met on the 2016 season of The Bachelorette, announced their separation with identical posts to Instagram in May.

WNBA's hottest star Sophie Cunningham reveals her true thoughts on league's sex toy scandal
WNBA's hottest star Sophie Cunningham reveals her true thoughts on league's sex toy scandal

Daily Mail​

timea minute ago

  • Daily Mail​

WNBA's hottest star Sophie Cunningham reveals her true thoughts on league's sex toy scandal

WNBA superstar Sophie Cunningham has lifted the lid on the shocking moment she was hit by a sex toy thrown from the stands. The league spent a week embroiled in controversy after fans repeatedly threw multi-colored sex toys onto various courts, with Indiana Fever star Cunningham perhaps the most affected by it when one struck her in the foot. She laughed it off in the moment, but has now spoken in depth about the incident, which forced security to be stepped up across the entire WNBA. On her new podcast alongside influencer West Wilson, Cunningham said: 'I feel like I brought that onto myself because I tweeted,' referencing the post in which she told her followers: 'stop throwing dildos on the court… you're going to hurt one of us.' 'Dude, that tweet got over 40 million views,' she continued. 'I tweeted it like, joking, but also a little bit serious. 'We were playing against LA, I was at the free throw line, the girl shot and then I felt something hit my foot and I thought someone had kicked me or whatever. I looked down and it was a dildo and it scared me, I jumped up and everyone was like, "why are you freaking out?" My mind just wasn't expecting that. Cunningham was seen visibly flinching after the erotic item was thrown onto the court 'The game stopped, my train of thought just went... I just got hit by a dildo! It was like a bounce-hit, it scared the s**t out of me. At least it didn't hit me in the face or anything.' To conclude, she insisted: 'We don't [support it]. We have to [move on].' The controversy now appears to have dried up, with over a week now having passed since one was thrown. Multiple fans were arrested for their parts in the prank, and security had to be increased throughout the league, with bags even banned from being allowed into arenas.

'The Traitors' is opening its doors to everyday people. Here's how you can join the TV competition
'The Traitors' is opening its doors to everyday people. Here's how you can join the TV competition

The Independent

time31 minutes ago

  • The Independent

'The Traitors' is opening its doors to everyday people. Here's how you can join the TV competition

The U.S. version of ' The Traitors ' has brought a group of public figures to a castle in the Scottish Highlands for a game of deceit, with hundreds of thousands of dollars up for grabs. Now, the Emmy award-winning competition will open its doors to everyday people. NBC is now casting for a civilian version of the popular Peacock series, the network announced Thursday. The competition reality series, an American spin-off to its British counterpart, had only cast celebrities for its first three seasons, the last of which aired early this year. The new version will bring a group of everyday people together to play what the host, Alan Cumming, called his 'treacherous game' in a video announcing the public casting. Cumming is set to host the new version as well, with production for the show starting in 2026, according to the network. Those who are interested in participating can apply now on the show's website. The fourth season of the celebrity version is set to launch next year, and a fifth season has already been confirmed. The star-studded cast for season 4, announced in June, includes reality stars from 'Love Island,' 'Big Brother' and 'Survivor.' 'We're thrilled to be working with NBC to open up the experience to a new group of civilian players, whose stories and strategies will make the gameplay even more unpredictable – and, we hope, even more addictive for viewers,' Stephen Lambert, CEO of Studio Lambert, the producers of both the Peacock and NBC versions, said in a statement. The show features a group of contestants who participate in a murder mystery game similar to Clue or Mafia. A subset of the cast are secretly labeled as traitors and must work together to eliminate the other contestants, who are considered faithfuls. On the line is a prize fund worth up to $250,000. If the faithful manage to eliminate all the traitors, then they share the money. But, if a traitor makes it to the end, they take it all. The British version uses the same location and has used civilian contestants from the start. Casting everyday people will allow complete strangers to meet for the first time, a 'unique opportunity' that 'will be an incredible watch,' said Sharon Vuong, the executive vice president of unscripted programming at NBCUniversal Entertainment. "This new version for NBC offers a unique opportunity for the cast and audience to meet each other for the first time and we know it will be incredible to watch,' Vuong said in a statement. The psychological adventure has found reality TV gold, and its third season premiered as the No. 1 unscripted series in the U.S., according to a release by NBC. The show also recently received five Emmy nominations for season three and previously took home two of the awards for season two.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store