Edmund White, a groundbreaking gay author, dies at 85
[June 05, 2025]
By HILLEL ITALIE
NEW YORK (AP) — Edmund White, the groundbreaking man of letters who
documented and imagined the gay revolution through journalism, essays,
plays and such novels as “A Boy’s Own Story” and “The Beautiful Room is
Empty,” has died. He was 85.
White’s death was confirmed Wednesday by his agent, Bill Clegg.
Along with Larry Kramer, Armistead Maupin and others, White was among a
generation of gay writers who in the 1970s became bards for a community
no longer afraid to declare its existence. He was present at the
Stonewall raids of 1969, when arrests at a club in Greenwich Village led
to the birth of the modern gay movement and for decades was a
participant and observer through the tragedy of AIDS, the advance of gay
rights and culture and the recent backlash.
A resident of New York and Paris for much of his adult life, he was a
novelist, journalist, biographer, playwright, activist, teacher and
memoirist. “A Boy’s Own Story” was a bestseller and classic
coming-of-age novel that demonstrated gay literature’s commercial
appeal. He wrote a prizewinning biography of playwright Jean Genet,
books on Marcel Proust and Arthur Rimbaud. He was a professor of
creative writing at Princeton University, where colleagues included Toni
Morrison and his close friend, Joyce Carol Oates.
“Among gay writers of his generation, Edmund White has emerged as the
most versatile man of letters,” cultural critic Morris Dickstein wrote
in The New York Times in 1995. “A cosmopolitan writer with a deep sense
of tradition, he has bridged the gap between gay subcultures and a
broader literary audience.”

Childhood yearnings
White was born in Cincinnati in 1940, but age at 7 moved with his mother
to the Chicago area after his parents divorced. His father was a civil
engineer “who reigned in silence over dinner as he studied his paper.”
His mother was a psychologist “given to rages or fits of weeping.”
Trapped in “the closed, sniveling, resentful world of childhood,” at
times suicidal, White was at the same time a “fierce little autodidact”
who sought escape through the stories of others, whether Thomas Mann’s
“Death in Venice” or a biography of dancer Vaslav Nijinsky.
“As a young teenager I looked desperately for things to read that might
excite me or assure me I wasn’t the only one, that might confirm my
identity I was unhappily piecing together,” he wrote in the 1991 essay
“Out of the Closet, On to the Bookshelf.”
As he wrote in “A Boy’s Own Story,” he knew as a child that he was
attracted to boys, but for years was convinced he must change — out of a
desire to please his father (whom he otherwise despised) and a wish to
be “normal.” Even as he secretly wrote a “coming out” novel while a
teenager, he insisted on seeing a therapist and begged to be sent to
boarding school. One of the funniest and saddest episodes from “A Boy’s
Own Story” told of a brief crush he had on a teenage girl, ended by a
polite and devastating note of rejection.
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Author Edmund White appears at his home in New York, Tuesday, Aug.
27, 2019. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, file)
 “For the next few months I grieved,”
White writes. “I would stay up all night crying and playing records
and writing sonnets to Helen. What was I crying for?”
Early struggles, changing times
Through much of the 1960s, he was writing novels that were rejected
or never finished. Late at night, he would “dress as a hippie, and
head out for the bars.” A favorite stop was the Stonewall, where he
would down vodka tonics and try to find the nerve to ask a man he
had crush on to dance. He was in the neighborhood on the night of
June 28, 1969, when police raided the Stonewall and “all hell broke
loose.”
“Up until that moment we had all thought homosexuality was a medical
term,” wrote White, who soon joined the protests. “Suddenly we saw
that we could be a minority group — with rights, a culture, an
agenda.”
White’s debut novel, the surreal and suggestive “Forgetting Elena,”
was published in 1973. He collaborated with Charles Silverstein on
“The Joy of Gay Sex,” a follow-up to the bestselling “The Joy of
Sex” that was updated after the emergence of AIDS. In 1978, his
first openly gay novel, “Nocturnes for the King of Naples,” was
released and he followed with the nonfiction “States of Desire,” his
attempt to show “the varieties of gay experience and also to suggest
the enormous range of gay life to straight and gay people — to show
that gays aren’t just hairdressers, they’re also petroleum engineers
and ranchers and short-order cooks.”
His other works included “Skinned Alive: Stories” and the novel “A
Previous Life,” in which he turns himself into a fictional character
and imagines himself long forgotten after his death. In 2009, he
published “City Boy,” a memoir of New York in the 1960s and ’70s in
which he told of his friendships and rivalries and gave the real
names of fictional characters from his earlier novels. Other recent
books included the novels “Jack Holmes & His Friend” and the memoir
“Inside a Pearl: My Years in Paris.”

“From an early age I had the idea that writing was truth-telling,”
he told The Guardian around the time “Jack Holmes” was released.
“It’s on the record. Everybody can see it. Maybe it goes back to the
sacred origins of literature — the holy book. There’s nothing holy
about it for me, but it should be serious and it should be totally
transparent.”
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