Solid, cautious Roger Sansarc and flamboyant, mercurial Alistair Dodge are second cousins who become lifelong friends when they first meet as nine-year-old boys in 1954. Their lives constantly intersect at crucial moments in their personal histories as each discovers his own unique — and uniquely gay — identity. Their complex, tumultuous, and madcap relationship endures against 40 years of history and their involvement with the handsome model, poet, and decorated Vietnam vet Matt Loguidice, whom they both love. Picano chronicles and celebrates gay life and subculture over the last half of the twentieth century: from the legendary 1969 gathering at Woodstock to the legendary parties at Fire Island Pines in the 1970s, from Malibu Beach in its palmiest surfer days to San Francisco during its gayest era, from the cities and jungles of South Vietnam during the war to Manhattan's Greenwich Village and Upper East Side during the 1990s AIDS war.
In a book that could have been written only by one who lived it and survived to tell, Picano weaves a powerful saga of four decades in the lives of two men and their lovers, relatives, friends, and enemies. Tragic, comic, sexy, and romantic, filled with varied and colorful characters, Like People in History is both extraordinarily moving and supremely entertaining.
First published to acclaim in 1995, winner of the Ferro-Grumley Award for Best Novel, Gay Times Best Novel of the Year and Finalist for Lambda Literary Award Best Gay Fiction, this 25th Anniversary edition features a new foreword by Richard Bugs Burnett and an afterword by the author.
"Harrowing and sad, and very funny, Like People in History manages to bridge the unnerving chasm between the queer present and the gay past. This heartfelt memorial to a vanished time sees whole, perhaps for the first time, what till now has induced only a tragic sense of disconnection." — Andrew Holleran
"A gay classic. Read it when I was in college and it helped shape my perception of myself as a gay man ... It's a sprawling, propulsive epic that switches back and forth in time, taking the reader on a rollicking journey through gay America, starting around the time of Woodstock and continuing on through the late 1980's, as it charts the tumultuous friendship and rivalry between a pair of gay cousins." — Christopher Rice
"Like People in History is a major accomplishment, a vastly ambitious work not just because of the historical span it bridges, but because of the narrative strands it weaves together. It's a massive cathedral of a work, whose overall structure is graceful, imposing, and solid, but also filled with millions of details, many moving in their delicacy, others hilarious in their grotesquerie." — David Bergman
"This is the big novel we've all been waiting for – the gay Gone with the Wind. It's the heroic and funny saga of the last three decades by someone who saw everything and forgot nothing." — Edmund White