Tag Archives: #Memoir

Wanderslut 1996: A Gay Road Trip Across America

Kindle cover for Wanderslut 1996: A Gay Road Trip Diary by Jim Arnold

Just published November of 2020. Out now!

Wanderslut 1996 is a mostly true, gay nineties road trip diary. After losing his job, Joe Tobin takes his severance money and heads across the country on a solo trip – seeing the sights, getting laid, eating bad food, and perhaps, finding some enlightenment along the way. A snapshot of one American man’s gay life in the mid ‘90s. (Click on book cover or here for link to Amazon page.)

Sick of the creepy, sad fat orange loser tweeting? Sick of the pandemic? Looking for a diversion? Find out just how slutty Jimbolaya was back in the ’90s, at the youthful age of 40! Surprised even myself, actually. “Joe Tobin” is a stand-in for me, Jim Arnold.

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So far only available in ebook format – Kindle (always remind folks that Kindle is not just a physical device, it’s also an app so you can read a Kindle book on any computer, tablet, phone – as long as you have the app downloaded).

Hope you enjoy the memories — anything to get away from 2020 for even a couple of hours! (A quick read at 120 pages.)

More to come. . .

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I Went to the LA Times Festival of Books

and all I got was this lousy. . . No seriously folks, no t-shirts, just a lot of immersion into the world of writing and books on a perfect Los Angeles day. And Metro was FREE, cause, you know, it was also EARTH DAY.

The Festival was held at USC, and for me, it’s always a bit weird going back there, where I went to grad school in 81-82. Which was aborted, by myself, the reasons why don’t really make a great deal of sense but they seemed to then. All I’ll say is I regret not finishing the MFA, but USC is where a lot of my first impressions of Southern California come from and were formed. It’s a beautiful campus and good to go back on occasion – and it’s changed tremendously since the early 80s, so there’s that. Sigh

On to the fair. I went just on the Sunday (though the festival was both weekend days) for a few panels which interested me – wanting to pick up secrets on how to approach Memoir in a creative way – which I didn’t really get from this panel but it was interesting to find out about their process, their stories, and their books.
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Also went to two Crime Fiction panels — one which I thought would probe the darker side, and one that was LA Crime-focused. The second of these – the Crime Fiction-City of Angels panel actually covered both topics well. The interesting thing about LA is that it’s so big and diverse, the books these writers wrote are versions of LA I am totally unaware of. So that by itself was a revelation. As to the darker side, well, both Ryan Gattis (in particular) and Joe Ide shared how they write and research violence, which I’d have to say was new territory for me. I found it all inspirational, and a good kick in the pants.

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