Nick Burd

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Photo: Eric Luc

Great news! Last week, hN contributor/friend Nick Burd won an American Library Association, Stonewall Book Award, for his beautifully-written debut novel, “The Vast Fields of Ordinary.” We reviewed his novel last summer and we’ve supported Nick every step of the way.

Nick, from the bottom of our rotten little hearts: “You rock and you deserve that award!” Incidentally, 2010 marks the first year that the ALA Committee is giving an award for children’s and young adult literature—which makes the prize so much more special.


HN caught up with Nick Burd this week about making the OUT 100 List and meeting poetry legend Mark Doty.

How did you react when you found out you’d made the list this summer?
I was very excited to find out I was part of the OUT 100. As they say, it’s for people who have “made an impact on queer culture in the past year.” It’s quite bizarre to think that a story that had been rattling around my head eventually made an “impact” of any sort. Bizarre, but also very cool.

Tell us about the photo shoot. What was it like meeting New York Times bestselling author and National Book Award winner, Mark Doty?
We shot the photo up at Columbia on an insanely hot day in August. I always knew that Mark Doty had a reputation for being an extremely kind person, and he more than lived up to that. They gave us these random books to hold for the shoot, and he kept opening his and reading inadvertently hilarious lines from them. It was an honor to be photographed with him.

You look so dapper. What are you wearing in the shot?
It was a black suit from the J Crew Men’s Store, a purple and white checked Steven Alan shirt, and a black tie.

TEEN NOVELTY // At homo-neurotic we don’t really fall into the target audience for young adult novels anymore. Despite that, it has not stopped us from bringing to your attention Nick Burd’s debut novel ‘The Vast Fields of Ordinary.’ While not the first to replace the love starved heroine of the genre with a homosexual on the verge of manhood, it certainly is a work worth taking notice of. [Full disclosure: Burd frequently writes for HN.]

vastfieldsofordinary2009Dade Hamilton, our reluctant hero, is trapped in that magical last summer after graduating high school, before escaping to the literary halls of college. Not quite a boy, not quite a man. Between fighting parents, a part-time job at a grocery store, and being a social pariah, Dade represents a large part of the life that current gay teens live, along with stirring up similar memories in many of us grown gentlemen.

Summer starts with Dade mooning over his “straight” fuck buddy Pablo. Yet a fateful run in with gay drug dealer, Alex Kincaid, and a new lesbian neighbor Lucy, soon sets Dade’s last truly free summer alight. Add in the mysterious disappearance of a local child and a bit of tragedy and the book truly encompasses the young adult genre, while still maintaining a completely original voice.

Burd’s quality of writing, which surpasses its genre’s peers, is truly noteworthy. Lacking the typical “dear diary” teen angst bullshit, Vast Fields represents the teen I remember: too smart for my own good, yet not a complete jerk. Burd should also be commended for not writing a tragic cliché after school coming out special and for writing a story where the character just happens to be gay. Filled with some amazing one liners (“His room smells like a rap video”) and a host of made-up bands that sound so cool (the Vas Deferens — a reference to the male anatomy), you find yourself feeling out of the loop (Is that band I should know about?), Vast Fields of Ordinary is not only a great summer read, but an overall entertaining and beautifully observed coming of age story.