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A handsomely repackaged version of an award-winning debut novel that won the 1990 Lambda Literary Award for Best Lesbian Fiction and was a Finalist for the American Library Association Gay and Lesbian Book Award.

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4 reviews
Lesbian ghosts have been haunting Susan ever since she felt compelled to make off with a 1920s photo album from a New York City antiques store. The ghosts--the women featured in the album--whisper in Susan's ear, titillate her with gossip about their love lives and literally seduce her.
Martinac's Out of Time is cute-ish. What exactly is "cute-ish"? It is both compliment and criticism.

In Out of Time, lost soul Susan stumbles upon an old scrapbook chock full of lesbian goodness. She becomes obsessed by the four women who populate the album to the point that she becomes haunted by them. And we're not talking haunted in a freaky Exorcist sort of way (though I did worry for a second when a Ouija board made its appearance toward the end of the book); we're talking haunted in a lesbian-ghost-gets-frisky-with-the-lesbian-protagonist sort of way. Who these women were of themselves and to each other is a mystery to be sure, and Susan is determined to get to the bottom of it.

This book speaks to anyone who has ever connected with show more something from the past and was intent upon discovering its [implicitly felt] influence on the present. It is also the sort of book that takes an appealing general concept, in this case nostalgia and happy ghost hauntings, and adds lesbianism to the mixture in order to give the whole thing some panache. (Ellen Galford's The Dyke and the Dybbuk is another such example, and probably a more successful one at that.) It's a gimmick, and like I said, it's kind of cute. If you've ever connected to an object from the past and filled in its unknown history with the contrived workings of your imagination, you will be able to see the appeal of Out of Time. Therein also lies the problem--the story is very contrived. Its shift in perspective between the present protagonist and writings from the ghosts of the past are also predictably clumsy. Still in all, Out of Time is an entertaining idea even if it is somewhat silly in its execution. show less
½
Books about antiquing, old photos and researching the history of the antiques and photos are strong favorites. I was very pleased to find that Out of Time added to my enjoyment of these topics.

Susan Van Dine's life is changed when stopping at a NYC antique shop she happens upon an old photo album of 4 women living and working in the New York of the 1920's. She is as enthralled by "the gang" as they are with her; she develops a special connection with Harriet.

A phenomenally well-crafted, well-paced book that understands the details that make a life rich and real. Full of womanly passion in the past and present, the timing is just right for Susan who seeks direction in her life. The gang help her determine her life's priorities.
½
Great novel about a woman who becomes obsessed with a scrapbook of lesbians from the 1920s. Compelling.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Out of Time
Epigraph
Quite suddenly, some moment of the past has become totally real, as real as the present, and we realize that it is as real as the present - or rather, that the present does not have some special status of super-reality, just ... (show all)because it happens to be here and now. -Colin Wilson, Afterlife
First words
For a long time, I forgot the date that I walked into the antiques shop, but now I remember it again. For months, I was not even sure which shop it was. I could see the inside clearly - the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves lining... (show all) one wall, the homey scattering of bric-a-brac over creamy lace doilies, the black silk evening grown trimmed with jet beads draped casually across a velvet-upholstered settee. But when I tried to find it again, I always ended up in the wrong place, with concerned salesclerks asking if I was looking for something in particular. No, I answered, because I was not sure what I was looking for, or what I thought I would find by being in the shop again. I ended up apologizing to them for my confusion and standing helplessly out on the sidewalk, looking north and south, and wondering if it was Sixth Avenue I was on that day and not Eighth. -Chapter 1
Canonical DDC/MDS
813.54
Canonical LCC
PS3563.A7298 O9

Classifications

Genres
LGBTQ+, Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Romance, Historical Fiction, Mystery, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3563 .A7298 .O9Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
200
Popularity
163,120
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.31)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3
ASINs
2