Gay
KATHERINE VOLIN [Email address: editor #AT# washblade.com - replace #AT# with @ ]
Friday, December 07, 2007
Kim Powers didn’t publish his first book until a year ago but he quickly received accolades for the memoir, “The History of Swimmin,” from sources that ranged from Diane Sawyer to the New York Times. Last month he was named one of the Out 100.
The gay author’s second book joins the number of Truman Capote works that surfaced over the past few years, which have included two films from 2005 and a new book of essays that was published this month.
“I started this book long before the two Capote movies came out,” Powers, 48, says. “I almost threw it away. I thought, ‘You know, this is done.’ I thought I had wandered into this miraculous story no one knew about.”
But Powers didn’t throw it away, realizing that “Capote in Kansas: A Ghost Story” doesn’t bang the same tired drum. In it, Powers relates his fictionalized rendering of the relationship between gay writer Truman Capote and “To Kill a Mockingbird” author Harper Lee — a relationship he has been “ravenously reading” about since his childhood.
Capote and Lee grew up together in Alabama and worked together in Kansas while Capote explored the real-life Clutter murders that would become the subject of his most prominent book, “In Cold Blood.” After its publication, however, their relationship took a nosedive, a phenomenon Powers set about exploring in “Capote in Kansas.”
“I think he was sort of jealous that he didn’t win the Pulitzer Prize for ‘In Cold Blood’ and Harper Lee did win it for ‘To Kill a Mockingbird,’” Powers says. “That was one of the beginnings of the fractured relationship between them. He certainly trusted her enough to invite her to be his assistant in Kansas. He knew that because he was so eccentric, he needed someone a little more salt of the earth.”
Powers suggests that the friends’ opposite approaches to fame and notoriety may have eventually separated them.
“She ran from fame as fast as Truman sought it, and I thought, based on my reading and research, that kind of sums them up.”
CAPOTE’S GAY SEXUAL ORIENT-ation is well-known, but Lee’s life has always been more private. In his book, Powers lightly touches on the subject of Lee’s orientation, although he’s careful to point out that he’s not trying to claim she is a lesbian. His book is fiction, even if it does have roots in fact.
“I’m by far not the first person to speculate whether she’s gay or not,” Powers says. “In the book, I really meant to represent it as something Truman is exploring and forcing Harper to do more or less to get a reaction from her, and she refuses to give him what he wants. He thinks he can shake anybody into answering him and she doesn’t. She holds that part of her life back. I was fascinated by that.”
Although still alive at age 81, Lee has long been a recluse. Powers’ choice to turn her into a fictionalized character may meet with some resistance from her fans, as he knows.
“I don’t know if people think I’ve done a very audacious or daring or taboo thing by digging into her the way I have,” he says. “The thing that’s always missing has been the emotional heartbeat underneath all of that, and I tried ,maybe somewhat audaciously, to tap into that.”