
Linda Smukler
Author of Normal Sex
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
This author was formerly known as Linda Smukler or Linda (Sam) Smukler and now is named Samuel Ace.
Works by Linda Smukler
Meet Me There: Normal Sex & Home in three days. Don't wash. (Germinal Texts) (2019) 10 copies, 1 review
Associated Works
Gay and Lesbian Poetry in Our Time (Stonewall Inn Editions) (1988) — Contributor — 189 copies, 1 review
Troubling the Line: Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and Poetics (2013) — Contributor — 116 copies, 1 review
Women on Women 3: A New Anthology of American Lesbian Fiction (1996) — Contributor — 112 copies, 2 reviews
Jo's Girls: Tomboy Tales of High Adventure, True Grit, and Real Life (1997) — Contributor — 48 copies
Mom: Candid Memoirs by Lesbians About the First Woman in Their Life (1998) — Contributor — 25 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Ace, Samuel
- Gender
- male
- Disambiguation notice
- This author was formerly known as Linda Smukler or Linda (Sam) Smukler and now is named Samuel Ace.
Members
Reviews
My favorite part of this collection was actually the introduction. It's how I first came to learn of Samuel Ace—he read excerpts from some of these letters at a publishing conference I attended a few years ago, and I was so struck by their beauty and introspection. I loved the concept of writing to a past self and that past self responding back; it was part seance, part love story, part eulogy, and has stuck in my mind since.
The poems in this book are not nearly as tender as the Linda/Sam show more letters that precede them. Or rather, their tenderness is buried under ferocity. If I had to sum up Meet Me There in one phrase, it would be: "the brutality of desire." The running theme seems to be the lengths we go to feel more alive, more connected, and the ways that is thwarted. I really enjoyed how Smukler/Ace writes about sexual dominance and the way gender dynamics play into fantasies about power exchange—it felt visceral, and authentic in how desire becomes tangled up with upbringing and relationships. But I was left bored by the repetition of the other poems about sex: lots of cheating, lots of sensory details about strapons and anal sex, lots of forceful yearning, after a while it felt like I was reading the same poem over and over again.
More than anything, I'm intrigued by this as a deliberate resurrection on Ace's part. And so I'm curious to read his more recent work! show less
The poems in this book are not nearly as tender as the Linda/Sam show more letters that precede them. Or rather, their tenderness is buried under ferocity. If I had to sum up Meet Me There in one phrase, it would be: "the brutality of desire." The running theme seems to be the lengths we go to feel more alive, more connected, and the ways that is thwarted. I really enjoyed how Smukler/Ace writes about sexual dominance and the way gender dynamics play into fantasies about power exchange—it felt visceral, and authentic in how desire becomes tangled up with upbringing and relationships. But I was left bored by the repetition of the other poems about sex: lots of cheating, lots of sensory details about strapons and anal sex, lots of forceful yearning, after a while it felt like I was reading the same poem over and over again.
More than anything, I'm intrigued by this as a deliberate resurrection on Ace's part. And so I'm curious to read his more recent work! show less
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Also by
- 15
- Members
- 59
- Popularity
- #280,812
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 8


