John Stewart Wynne
John Stewart Wynne is an American author of novels, short stories and poetry, as well as a Grammy-nominated producer of spoken word recordings.
His writing often depicts characters in extremis, outsiders adrift in a conformist landscape, in plots that juxtapose the surreal and naturalistic. He has been hailed as the heir apparent to the tradition of "outsider art" exemplified by Tennessee Williams, Carson McCullers and Truman Capote.
Wynne's first published fiction was the 1978 short story The Sighting, where flying saucers and Bela Lugosi rub up against an archetypal 1950s drive-in while counterpointing the blossoming relationship of two teen-age boys. Gordon Montador in The Body Politic enthused: "There is nothing else quite like it, for no other writer has experimented with gay experience in the context of our adolescence in straight America in such a direct, sensual and imaginative manner." The Sighting was further praised by Hubert Selby Jr., 1980 Prix Goncourt winner Yves Navarre, Rita Mae Brown, James Purdy and Charles Palliser. The story was selected by Ian Young as one of the seminal works of gay literature in his The Male Homosexual in Literature: A Bibliography.
Wynne's first novel Crime Wave details the unexpected love affair between a photojournalist and a woman living in a Manhattan brothel. Jake attempts to make Renee respectable by moving her into the country with his aunt's family where her presence turns out to be a risk not only for her but for them as well. It was praised by author Barbara Trapido in The Spectator as a "disturbing, well-written and impressive work whose genre is Manhattan lumpen Gothic...the book has a terrible and compelling beauty." Author Jenny Uglow in The Times Literary Supplement wrote "Crime Wave is about personal and social sado-masochism. The author's challenging aim is to show there is no such thing as 'mindless violence', whether directed towards the self or towards others. Each aggressive act is the result of a long cycle of action and reaction, continued through generations. Crime Wave is an ambitious first novel."
Wynne's short story collection The Other World, peopled with circus performers, sociopaths, cross-dressing teenagers and God-fearing families, was hailed as "one of the best books of the decade" by The James White Review. Details magazine wrote, "Wynne's prose is chiseled and precise. And in pages that tremble with beauty, Wynne gracefully reveals the darker side of human possibilities." Booklist called it "startling, outrageous, frightening and sometimes even funny." National Book Award-winner Paul Monette wrote, "With so much tepid and sentimental fiction coming out, Wynne's stories are like a plunge in cold water. With a near-Brechtian intensity of focus and an infallible ear for dialogue, Wynne casts a laser eye on the things we say, so different from what we mean. A book to handle with asbestos gloves, but well worth the walk through fire." Lambda Award-winner Rebecca Brown called it "an incredibly powerful book."
Wynne's other short fiction and poetry have appeared in The Paris Review, The American Poetry Review, Christopher Street and High Risk 2, among other publications.
Wynne has also produced and directed over one hundred audio books, including The Phantom of the Opera performed by F. Murray Abraham, William Styron reading his Darkness Visible, Christopher Reeve performing F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and John F. Kennedy, Jr. reading his father's Pulitzer Prize-winning book Profiles in Courage. The latter was nominated for the 1991 Grammy Award as Best Spoken Word Album. Wynne himself was nominated for the Grammy Award in 1995 as producer of Best Spoken Word Album for Children for The Magic School Bus: Fun with Sound, featuring Lily Tomlin.
In 1995 Wynne authored the first popular guide to spoken word recordings, The Listener's Guide to Audio Books.
Magnus Books published Wynne's second novel The Red Shoes in July 2013. "The Red Shoes, set in contemporary New York City, is a beautifully dark queer re-visioning of the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale of the same title. Wynne immediately engages the reader with finely detailed descriptions, nuanced character development, and an air of mystery that makes the 428-page text read like a novella,” wrote Jamie Jones in Lambda Literary.
Narrator John Laith is mourning the untimely death of his partner Frank while trying to move on with his life. An active participant in a Twelve Step grief recovery group, he has a loving, supportive network of friends. Yet he feels something is missing, an ability to put aside his sorrow and once again feel the full force of life, its promise of excitement and abandon.
When Laith helps a young man who has been the victim of a brutal rape and provides him with clothing, shelter, and a bus ticket back to his hometown, the young man gives Laith the only thing he has—–a pair of red shoes. And Laith commences a journey, through both the affluent and seedy sides of Manhattan, into obsession, lust, and uncertainty, spiraling downward into a dark world of escalating drug use and sexual oblivion. Is it because of the malevolent power of the pair of red shoes? Or is he acting on his own hidden desires? Laith becomes locked in a fierce battle between the sacred and the profane until a shattering revelation finally forces him to choose between them.
Kate Christensen, winner of the PEN/Faulkner Best American Work of Fiction Award for The Great Man, said: "I read this so fast I got blisters turning pages. The Red Shoes is so astonishingly good, original, beautiful and amazing...I love the Gothic feeling of impending doom and the counterbalancing elements of light. Wynne's writing is free of compromise, fear. He has the rare ability to write on a plane floating just above life, or below it. And his voice doesn't sound like anyone else's. I think The Red Shoes is a great work of art." Ben Schrank, president and publisher of Razorbill, a Penguin imprint, and author of the novel Love Is a Canoe, wrote that "The narrator is as fully realized and endearing a character as I've ever known."
Stephen D. Adams, author of The Homosexual as Hero said, "I loved the mysteriousness of everything and everybody in The Red Shoes and the way its preoccupations with loss, danger and safety would loom in and out of view in the surreal fog of drugs, sex and dark humor. I found it quite haunting and didn't want it to end."
In 2014 The Red Shoes was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award in the Gay Fiction category.
In 2018, the author announced on his website that he has finished a new novel.
Audiography
Produced and directed over 100 audio books including:Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby, Durkin Hayes, 1992. Performed by Christopher Reeve.
Kennedy, John F. Profiles in Courage, Caedmon, 1990. Read by John F. Kennedy, Jr.
Leroux, Gaston. The Phantom of the Opera, Caedmon, 1988. Performed by F. Murray Abraham.
Styron, William. Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness, Random House Audio, 1990. Read by William Styron.
Waters, John. Shock Value, Caedmon, 1989. Performed by John Waters.