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WH Chong

The coffin sat on a chrome trolley at the front of the pews. In the end we only need a box six feet by two, and how small it looks ... the imagination falters.

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Published in November 2011, no. 336

W.H. Chong reviews 'The Park Bench' by Henry von Doussa

W.H. Chong
Saturday, 01 April 2006

To prove the fairyness of tales, this world’s relationships start at ‘Happily’ and only then progress to their trials. The Park Bench tells what happens when hope of the ‘ever after’ fades into that space bordered by numb disappointment and the aggressive need to regain sensation. In gay fiction, that place is no man’s land.

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Published in April 2006, no. 280

W.H. Chong reviews 'The Summons' by David Whish-Wilson

W.H. Chong
Wednesday, 01 February 2006

The past is not dead. In fact, it’s not even past; it keeps coming back as different novels, and writers do things differently there. Nazi Germany remains history’s prime hothouse from which to procure blooms for fiction’s bouquet. All those darkly perfumed spikes – drama and tragedy intrinsic, memory within recall.

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Published in February 2006, no. 278