![]() ![]() ![]() She needs to make a life of her own and she’ll do it in San Francisco. Her mother cajoles her and says she’s had her fun but enough is enough: time to come home and never look back at that modern day Sodom and Gomorrah.īut Mary Ann’s made up her mind. She’s made a decision that will drastically change her life: she calls her mother at home in Cleveland and tells her mother to tell her boss she’s not coming home. All places to have intimate, no-strings-attached sex.Ģ4-year-old Midwesterner on vacation, Mary Ann Singleton has been in San Francisco for five days. The city is a haven for gay bars, discos, and bathhouses. The hippies are still around but the up and coming disco era is in ascent. I hit up the bookstore the next day and bought Tales of the City, a book I’ve read 9 times now. Instead, I became infatuated with the characters. PBS airings when insomnia has had its way with you so you watch TV hoping late night TV will work as anesthesia. ![]() I usually read a book before seeing the movie, but this was a fluke one of those 3 A.M. I had seen the six-part miniseries on PBS and wanted more. The first time I read Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the C ity was 23 years ago. ![]()
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