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AVOIDANCE by Michael Lowenthal

AVOIDANCE

by Michael Lowenthal

Pub Date: Nov. 1st, 2002
ISBN: 1-55597-367-1
Publisher: Graywolf

Gay angst at summer camp in Lowenthal’s second (after The Same Embrace, 1998).

Jeremy Stull makes a habit of investigating strange worlds. From an ordinary suburban family in northeastern Maryland, he has drifted farther and farther from the Beltway, both geographically and psychologically. As a boy, he went to a summer camp called Ironwood in the wilds of Vermont. Later, he enrolled as a graduate student at Harvard and went to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to study the Amish communities. Rootless and disconnected from his family, Jeremy admires the social cohesion of the Amish, who depend upon the fellowship of their congregations for protection from the larger world. The closest comparable sense of belonging Jeremy ever had was at Camp Ironwood, where he still spends his summers, but now as a counselor. This year, however, Ironwood isn’t quite the same. A strange boy in Jeremy’s group named Max has an air of mystery about him. A New Yorker, Max comes from a broken family and lives with his grandparents. He has that cheap sophistication that Jeremy associates with city kids, but there’s a vulnerable side to him—which becomes more pronounced when Jeremy discovers that much of Max’s history is a fiction (right down to his name). Long before Jeremy unravels Max’s secrets, it’s apparent he’s in love with the boy, but the ensuing trouble isn’t quite what you would expect. Jeremy discovers that another counselor is abusing the campers, using drugs as an inducement, and Max is implicated. The scandal is dealt with, and Max seems to take it in stride, but Jeremy—who never laid a finger on him—is shaken all the same. “Do you understand?” he asks Max. “I wanted to. I still do.” Sometimes, it seems, the fantasy can be as real (and as disturbing) as the deed.

Less heavy breathing than one might expect, though still a trifle overwrought.