AND THE RED DEATH HELD DOMINION OVER ALL! Christopher Coe’s I Look Divine is a slender, self-consciously perfect little poison gem of a book. It’s a novel about two brothers in the 1960s through the 1980s: the narrator is obsessed with his brother Nicholas, and Nicholas is enraptured by himself. The book begins as the narrator is preparing to clean out Nicholas’s apartment after his untimely death, and so a lot of the glassy humor has a dark tinge.
This may be the actual gayest book I’ve ever read, which is really saying something. It deploys the imagery of homosexuality as narcissism. And yet in its final paragraphs this claustrophobic, folie-a-deux novel opens up into a kind of Dance of Death in which we see that Nicholas’s ideal of personal victory through style and sexual conquest is not an exclusively gay pursuit. Across time and culture, humans assert and exalt themselves in the teeth of death.
This book is a perfect combination of brittle witticisms and haunted memorial. Like I said, the gayest thing I’ve ever read.