Jeffrey Buchanan The Birds Began to Sing review, recensie en informatie queer roman van de schrijver uit Nieuw-Zeeland. Op 26 augustus 2025 verschijnt bij Text Publishing de roman van de Nieuw-Zeelandse schrijver Jeffrey Buchanan. Winnaar, Michael Gifkins Prize, New Zealand in 2024 Een Nederlandse vertaling van het boek is niet verkrijgbaar.
Jeffrey Buchanan The Birds Began to Sing review en recensie
- “Heartbreaking, hilarious and boldly written. A bona fide page-turner about the importance of living your own truth.” (Nigel Featherstone)
- “A novel filled with humanity, warmth and humour.” (Lloyd Jones)
The Birds Began to Sing
- Auteur: Jeffrey Buchanan (Nieuw-Zeeland)
- Soort boek: Nieuw-Zeelandse roman
- Taal: Engels
- Uitgever: Text Publishing
- Verschijnt: 26 augustus 2025
- Omvang: 352 pagina’s
- Uitgave: paperback / ebook
- Prijs: $A 34,99
- Boek bestellen bij: Amazon / Bol
Flaptekst van de roman van Jeffrey Buchanan de Nieuw-Zeelandse schrijver
Reggie was still missing after five days, and Gladys Harris was saying things about him that quivered in my mind, which now, four years later, I see as being that opening sentence leading me to this burden of what happened to Reggie Kingsley.
In the harbour city of New Plymouth in the 1960s there’s a fizz of seedy sexuality beneath a veneer of respectability. Godfrey’s world is the Balmoral Hotel his parents own, where visiting sailors drink and local fringe-dwellers congregate.
When Reggie, the openly gay barman, goes missing Godfrey senses something sinister. There’s a prevailing attitude of inevitability. Godfrey doesn’t get it, but he’s hungry to understand. Guided by his daytime-television and pulp-fiction detective heroes and a very active imagination, he attempts to solve the mystery—in the process stumbling into his own sexual adventures and discovering a new-found power in a perplexing adult world.
The Birds Began to Sing delves into a world of shadows, nods and unspoken understandings with a warmth and humour that make this novel a delight.
Jeffrey Buchanan has written five novels concerned primarily with LGBTQI+ issues, Sucking Feijoas being his first. He worked in international development for thirty years and lives with his husband on a remote stretch of beach in North Canterbury in New Zealand’s South Island.