Which book finally dislodged The Horse Whisperer from the #1 spot on Australia's bestseller lists? Basically its opposite: Robert Dessaix's Night Letters was a surprise sensation, an intellectual novel compromised of twenty
letters written in a hotel in Venice in the mid-1990s by an Australian
man newly diagnosed with HIV. Echoing literary travelers from Marco
Polo and Dante to Casanova and Sterne, contemplating life, death, love,
and the passage of time, the narrator R. discourses on cathedrals and
museums, seduction and sex, hell and heaven, Venice and Venetians.
Despite the character's dire future, critics hailed his "wry, chatty,
surprisingly cheerful voice" (NYTBR) finding him "seductive, charming,
and always thought-provoking" (Kirkus). The San Francisco Chronicle called it a "luminous gem" and the Cleveland Plain Dealer "a story exquisitely told." Dessaix's second novel, Corfu, also describes gay ex-pats in Europe and again rings with literary echoes: Homer, Sappho, Chekhov, Cavafy. His nonfiction includes a memoir called A Mother's Disgrace about his own adoption and subsequent wanderlust; Twilight of Love, a book about retracing Turgenev's steps as he followed a married opera star and her husband for years; and an anthology, Australian Gay and Lesbian Writing. This April will see the release of On Humbug, his contribution to the Little Books on Big Themes series.
Before this series of tubes called the internets, single people found one another by killing trees placing ads in newspapers. After a failed marriage to a woman, Dessaix wrote a personal ad in 1982 and met Peter Timms, who is still his partner. As for longevity and dedication, Dessaix created a complex language when he was eleven and continues to speak it to himself even now, as he turns 66 today.
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