February 2015
Miami, Florida.
Miami-based Max-Arthur Mantle debut novel BATTY BWOY taps Jamaica’s homophobia
In Jamaica, being gay is a death sentence. “Boom bye, bye inna batty bwoy head” has replaced the country’s motto “Out of many, one people.”
Time magazine noted Jamaica the worst place in the Americas for LGBT people and one of the most homophobic places in the world.
BATTY BWOY is a semi-fiction bildungsroman set in Jamaica and America. The title is a reappropriation of the derogatory Jamaican epithet used to describe gay, bisexual and effeminate men or those presumed to be gay or bisexual.
BATTY BWOY is a chronological narrative covering the life of a gay black Jamaican as he battles harsh socio-economic conditions, overcoming some and defeated by others then finds hope.
Max-Arthur Mantle is a Jamaican-born writer. He migrated to America in 1992. He studied journalism and photography at Howard University in Washington, DC and served in the US military (Navy). For ten years, he had been an internationally published fashion photographer, garnering editorials, covers and a photo book, BEACH BOYS, published in 2012 by Bruno Gmunder Verlag GmbH (Berlin, Germany). After a three year hiatus from shooting to focus on writing, BATTY BWOY is the first of a trilogy. Max-Arthur Mantle lives in Miami, Florida.
BATTY BWOY will be published in April 2015. The autographed hardcover edition will be available exclusively at www.maxarthurmantle.net, where you can order via email at maxarthurmantle@yahoo.com. The cost is US$29.95, plus US$5.95 for shipping in the USA and additional charges for international shipping. The paperback and ebook editions will be available thereafter at Amazon.
For additional information please visit www.maxarthurmantle.net.
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