The Lost Language of Cranes

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The Lost Language of Cranes-  book cover
The Lost Language of Cranes- book cover

The Lost Language of Cranes is a novel by David Leavitt, published in 1986. A British TV movie of the novel was made in 1991.

Contents

[edit] Plot introduction

The Lost Language of Cranes was the first novel by David Leavitt, and deals primarily with the difficulties a young gay man, Philip, has in coming out to his parents, Rose and Owen Benjamin, and their subsequent reaction.

[edit] Plot summary

[edit] Voyages

Rose and Owen find out that their apartment is going co-op. Rose visits her son, who lives in a shabby neighborhood; he says he likes to go to the East Village. Of a Sunday, she decides to take a walk, goes to an automat, bumps into her husband. The latter goes to a gay pornographic cinema, where a man leaves him his number.

Philip and Eliot are in bed; Philip gets to doing the dishes. He then thinks back to how they met through Sally. Back to the parents, Owen gets back to his apartment, soaked through. Philip and Eliot then wake up; Philip seems keen on flatmate Jerene's research on lost languages. There is then an account of Jerene's childhood up to her coming out to her parents and being spurned by them. Philip and Eliot then talk about their experiences with men. Philip goes on to remember the way he would masturbate a lot and how he tried to ask girls out - and they refused. Finally, he recalls going to a gay pornographic cinema when he was seventeen.

[edit] Myths of origin

Owen calls Alex Melchor and finds out it was a wrong number.Philip asks Eliot to introduce him to Derek and Geoffrey. Later, he goes to his parent's flat to look at Derek's books. Jerene is getting ready for a date. Philip meets Eliot's foster parents for dinner, then they go to a gay bar and there Philip walks into old acquaintance Alex Kamarov. Outside, Eliot admits to being unsure about their relationship; nevertheless they return to Eliot's and he teaches Philip how to shave properly.

Philip eventually comes out to his parents. His mother is tersely averse; his father says it is fine, though he starts weeping as soon as the young man has left.

[edit] The crane-child

In the library, Jerene reads an article about a child who emulates cranes as this was the only thing he would see out of his window from his cot, and his parents weren't about. He was then sent to a psych ward. To Jerene, his unique way of speaking in the same manner as cranes screech seems like invaluable language.

[edit] Father and Son

Eliot doesn't return Philip's calls; when Jerene meets Philip for a drink, she admits there is not much that can be done. Later, Philip talks to his friend Brad. He then gets really drunk out on the town to forget. A few days later, he meets Rob in a bar and they return to the boy's dorm room where they have sex. Subsequently, Philip does not return his calls.

Owen calls a gay hotline, then hangs up and calls Alex Melchor, then Philip - though Alex tells him to call someone else, and he hangs up before talking to Philip. Later, the latter runs into his parents and tells them he's broken up with Eliot.

Rose says to Philip that she needs more time to ruminate. Owen calls a gay sex phoneline and starts sobbing. He then goes to a gay bar and meets another man named Frank; they go to the man's flat and have sex. When he gets home, it's half past two in the morning, and Rose is hurt.

Owen invites Winston Penn to dinner, and attempts to fix him up with Philip. That night, Rose finally realizes that Owen is gay too. While Philip and Brad get into bed together, Rose and Owen have a big argument. Owen goes off to a Burger King until he calls his son for a place to stay for the night. There and then he confesses to being gay.

[edit] Characters

  • Rose Benjamin, a copy editor. She likes order and cooking. She reads the New York Times and is gullible to their stories regarding AIDS. She also likes to do crosswords and acrostics.
  • Owen Benjamin, a teacher. He is said to be quiet. He lives on Second Avenue with his wife Rose.
  • Philip Benjamin, Rose and Owen's son, he is twenty-five years old and lives on the West Side. He works in publishing as does his mother. His voice is once compared to that of Greta Garbo. He is gay, likes to go out in the East Village and lives on his own.
  • Mrs Lubin, a widow who lives in the same building as Rose and Owen.
  • Arnold Selensky, a friend of Owen's. He runs a video rental business.
  • Carole Schneebaum, a co-worker of Rose's.
  • Bob Haber, a man Owen meets at a gay pornographic cinema. He confuses him with Alex Melchor.
  • Eliot Abrams, Philip's boyfriend, who does freelance work. He then breaks up with Philip and goes to live in Paris, where he moves in with a depressed young man.
  • Derek Moulthorp, a gay man writing children's books. He brought up Eliot with his partner.
  • Geoffrey Bacon, Derek's partner, who brought up Eliot with Derek.
  • Sally, a friend of Philip's. She is a tax analyst.
  • Jerene, Eliot's black roommate. An early bird and a workaholic. She works in a library and does research on lost languages. She grew up in Westport and was adopted by foster parents.
  • Mr Samuel J. Parks, Jerene's father. He is a lawyer.
  • Margaret, Jerene's mother.
  • Jessica, Jerene's girlfriend at high school.
  • Cornelia Patterson, a black lesbian Jerene looked up to for inspiration while in college.
  • Timmy Musseo, Eliot's first boyfriend, at age eleven.
  • Ben Hartley, Eliot's first real lover, at age seventeen.
  • Dmitri Kamarov, Philip's first lover. He later went to MIT.
  • Alex Kamarov, Dmitri's brother, gay too.
  • Gerard, Philip's straight childhood friend.
  • Maxon, the head of the English department at a college in New York City, who dislikes Owen's marxist psychoanalytic stance.
  • Karl Mutter, an American archaeologist, in Rome.
  • Rhea Mutter, Karl's wife, an archaeologist too, though specialized in Mexico and without a fellowship.
  • Mira, Karl and Rhea's daughter.
  • Brad Robinson, a friend of Sally and Philip's from college, with whom he eventually sleeps.
  • Rob, a young man from Columbia University, whom Philip sleeps with after his break-up with Eliot.
  • Roger Bell, a co-worker of Rose's.
  • Penelope, a co-worker of Rose's. Her seventeen-year-old son is gay, and she is questioning her own sexual identity.
  • Darryl, Penelope's husband, whom she left after she found him in bed with three Indonesian prostitutes.
  • Nick, a co-worker of Rose's, with whom she had a five-year affair seven years ago.
  • Nadia, Nick's wife.
  • Winston Penn, a co-worker of Owen's. Owen thinks he is gay. He lives in Hoboken. He likes to listen to Bruce Springsteen. Although he is fine with Philip's homosexuality, he has a girlfriend, though she lives in Dallas. He is also very aggressive with other drives and likes to drive fast.
  • Brad, co-worker of Owen's, who is openly gay. Winston likes him, thus niggling Owen.
  • Frank, a man Owen meets in a gay bar. He is older and married like Owen, and the latter intends to see him again, as he confesses to his son in the last few pages.
  • Laura Finley, Jerene's new girlfriend. She likes to cook.
  • Nellie, Jerene's grandmother. She lives in an old people's home and watching soap operas is her day's highlight.

[edit] References to other works

[edit] References to real life and actual history

  • Skyscrapers make Rose think of John Glenn.
  • Jerene's father was a supporter of Richard Nixon during the 1968 elections.
  • Billie Jean King is mentioned through Rose having read about her lesbianism in a newspaper.
  • Colleen Dewhurst would read to Eliot when he was a child.
  • The Watergate trials are mentioned in passing, about the way the 'Watergate conspirators had wept at their trials', after Owen hears Philip's coming-out story.

[edit] Main themes

  • Homosexuality
  • Coming out : Philip comes out to his parents; Jerene came out to her parents and was disowned; Owen eventually comes out to his wife and his son.
  • Gay father : Owen explains his unquestionable sense of filial love, but admits he grew up at a time when homosexuality was regarded as a disease and feared his son would spurn him if he found out he was gay.
  • Homophobia : Rose spurns both her son and her husband after she finds out they are gay.

[edit] Critical reception

It has been said that 'the novel sums up the history of gay books themselves.', that is from the pangs of opprobrium (Owen) to self-acceptance (Philip).[1]

[edit] References