The Read: Don’t Explain by Jewelle Gomez
By Stephanie A. Allen
Don’t Explain is a collection of short stories by Black lesbian author, activist, and philanthropist Jewelle Gomez. Most widely known for her Black lesbian vampire novel The Gilda Stories, with Don’t Explain Gomez employs rich, sensual language to introduce her readers to several carefully constructed characters that set our minds and bodies afire. Although the collection is not new, the stories are as poignant and relatable as they were when they were written fifteen years ago.
For example, “Water With the Wine” is a new take on an old trope, the May-December romance. Gomez carefully deconstructs the most commonly held notions about romance between older and younger lesbians, and posits another reality for the women in her story. Alberta and Emma meet and become involved at an academic conference; however, differences in age, class and race threaten to destroy their budding relationship. Gomez deals sensitively and honestly with these issues and deepens our understanding of what it means to fall in love after the blossom of youth.
“White Flower” is a chronicle of desire, not quite erotica, but pretty close. Luisa and Naomi “can’t have a relationship, it’s too consuming too everything,” so their meetings are infrequent but filled with all of the lust and passion that two women can share. This story will leave you panting, it will also leave you wondering at what point the unbridled desire turns to obsession and manipulation.
In “Lynx and Strand,” the longest story in the collection, Gomez forays into speculative fiction, (not quite science fiction, not quite fantasy, but an imaginative blend of the two genres), and explores what it means to live in a future where same-sex relationships are still policed by the state. Here, Gomez tackles issues of futuristic state governments, homophobia, body art, and what it means to truly become one with your partner. The story is timely as LGBT persons’ right to bodily autonomy is still being challenged in 2013.
For those familiar with Gomez’s The Gilda Stories, Don’t Explain offers a new chapter into the life of her Black lesbian vampire and offers a provocative look at what it means to be humane when you actually aren’t human at all.
All of the stories in this collection are sensitive, sensual and offer a pleasant alternative to “mainstream” lesbian fictions. The collection also focuses on Black women’s experiences, and this is what truly sets it apart from most of the lesbian fiction on the market today. The collection is short, only 168 pages long, but each of the stories offers entrée in to the life of Black women, mostly lesbian, that illuminates the complexity of our lives and the power of our loving. If you have not had an opportunity to read any of Jewelle Gomez’s work, start with this collection and I am certain that you will want to read more.
Stephanie A. Allen is a native southerner, out Black lesbian blogger, writer, activist, instructor, and Ph.D. candidate at a large Midwestern university, working on a dissertation about Black lesbian representation in film and literature. Follow her on Twitter @sisoutsiderBLF and you can subscribe to her blog at sistaoutsider.com.
-
Ms Allen,
Thank you for the write-up on Ms Gomez collection. Although I had never heard of her fiction your write-up has prompt me to want to check-out series. I am happy to find a series in which I can relate too, so I am looking forward to my new discovery of material to read.








Comments