"Mad, Stark Mad"
Thirty-five years after "defecting" to the Barbary Coast, the bestselling novelist still loves his city by the bay
- By Armistead Maupin
- Photographs by iStockphoto
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
I was none of those things when I arrived in San Francisco in 1972 to work for the Associated Press. Fresh out of the South and a tour of duty in Vietnam, I was seriously conservative and frightened to death of almost everything, especially my own homosexuality. (It was, after all, still officially a mental illness, not to mention a crime.) But when I worked up the nerve to confess my "condition" to a new friend—a young married woman with children—she stared at me soulfully, took both my hands in hers and murmured a dewy-eyed "big f------ deal." I could hardly believe my ears. Like the city itself, she was telling me to lighten up and get on with the business of my life.
That proved to be my born-again moment, the watershed from which I date my transformation. In San Francisco I found love the way I'd always wanted it. I found friends of every imaginable variety. I found my creativity and a generous audience and a seemingly endless supply of stories to tell. After too many years of searching, I found, in other words, the age-old American promise of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
So I dragged my ship out of the harbor and made it my home for good.
Armistead Maupin's novel Michael Tolliver Lives was published in June.
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Comments (2)
After rereading Maupin's article (for the umpteenth time) I remain tormented that I bypassed my opportunity in '74 to settle in San Francisco at the wonderful age of 22. How refreshing ...... a citizenry that truly doesn't care what the rest of the country thinks about them! Road trip!
Posted by Steve Keim on July 10,2008 | 01:48 PM
Great article. Very well put. Congratulations and keep speaking up, people will listen.
Posted by Raney Weeks alias Christine Rich, colton's sister on March 12,2008 | 08:31 PM