Baby Be-Bop
By Francesca Lia Block and David Diaz
4/5
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About this ebook
Dirk MacDonald, a sixteen-year-old boy living in Los Angeles, comes to terms with being gay after he receives surreal storytelling visitations from his dead father and great-grandmother.
Francesca Lia Block
Francesca Lia Block, winner of the prestigious Margaret A. Edwards Award, is the author of many acclaimed and bestselling books, including Weetzie Bat; the book collections Dangerous Angels: The Weetzie Bat Books and Roses and Bones: Myths, Tales, and Secrets; the illustrated novella House of Dolls; the vampire romance novel Pretty Dead; and the gothic werewolf novel The Frenzy. Her work is published around the world.
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Titles in the series (8)
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Reviews for Baby Be-Bop
105 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5My first Block. Totally stands alone. I will read more, though. Brilliant and beautiful. I'm speechless, sorry.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This book is sort of a prequel to the first in the series " Weetzie Bat". It is told through Weetzie's best friend Dirk and his fear of who he is. It deals with learning to love yourself and accepting who you are.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5With the three deaths that have happened recently, young people driven beyond the brink from being bullied due to their homosexuality, I was glad when I picked up the final book in the Dangerous Angels series. It gave me some hope.Baby Be-Bop is a prequel of sorts to Weetzie Bat and tells the story of Dirk McDonald throughout his childhood and entering into adolescence. This is a coming out story of the first order. Dirk realizes from a very young age that he is different and later realizes that he is gay and the ramifications that is going to have for himself and his family.He agonizes over telling his grandmother Fifi who he worries it will hurt. He struggles with his feelings for his best friend Pup and worries about the effect it will have on their friendship. He gets into trouble, smokes weed, gets a fake ID and sneaks into clubs, dresses as a punk rocker so that no one will mess with him, falls in love and deals with heart break. Baby Be-Bop pulls no punches as Dirk deals with everything from friends that are too afraid to come out of the closet, to finding out that others that are out were not careful and are now suffering from HIV or AIDS.Finally Dirk ends up struggling with thoughts of suicide and has to find a reason to live, a story that will make him want to live. That's when the magic that is in all of the Dangerous Angels books comes to life and the genie in the lamp appears to give Dirk hope. Baby Be-Bop can be read as a standalone book and if you want to read a magical, fantastical GLBT story then I recommend you read this one. It's short, but to the point. It shows someone being driven to the brink by hatred and being saved by love, hope and understanding.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5In Baby Bebop, Francesca Lia Block tells the story of Dirk’s struggle to come to terms with his sexuality and how his love for another boy affects every other love in his life. Baby Bebop continues block’s tell-tale poetic style, but with a darker tone that complements the torment expressed in Dirk’s narration. Unlike the incredibly whimsical Weetzie Bat, Block has decided to dig deep into descriptions in this novel, spending significantly more time relating readers to character insights and motivations, providing relevant settings that genuinely add to each scene, supporting a plot that is clear from the start and easy to follow. Dirk’s pain mixes the tempestuousness of youth with the wisdom of age, combining a sympathetic character with an overall message of self-acceptance. Highly recommended for any school or public library’s young adult fiction collection.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5My least favorite of the Weetzie Bat books. Stop at "Missing Angel Juan" it will leave you with a better impression of the series.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Dirk slowly comes to terms with being gay with the help of stories his family tell him. Evocative, touching and easy-to-read.
Book preview
Baby Be-Bop - Francesca Lia Block
FRANCESCA
LIA BLOCK
BABY BE-BOP
Joanna Cotler Books
Thank you
Irving Block
Gilda Block
Gregg Marx
Fred Drake
Julie Fallowfield
Louise Quayle
Joanna Cotler
Lillian Peel
Geoffrey Grisham
Fred Burke
Autumn Kimble
and Teddy Quinn
Contents
Part I
Dirk and Fifi
Dirk and Pup
Dirk and the Tear Jerks
Part II
Gazelle’s Story
Be-Bop Bo-Peep
Genie
About the Author
Also by Francesca Lia Block
Copyright
About the Publisher
Part I
Dirk and Fifi
Dirk had known it since he could remember.
At nap time he lay on the mat, feeling his skin sticking to brown plastic, listening to the buzz of flies, smelling the honeysuckle through the faraway window, tasting the coating of graham cracker cookies and milk in his mouth, wanting to be racing through space. He tried to think of something he liked.
He was on a train with the fathers—all naked and cookie-colored and laughing. There under the blasts of warm water spurting from the walls as the train moved slick through the land. All the bunching calf muscles dripping water and biceps full of power comforted Dirk. He tried to see his own father’s face but there was always too much steam.
Dirk knew that there was something about this train that wasn’t right. One day he heard his Grandma Fifitalking to her canaries, Pirouette and Minuet, in the teacup-colored kitchen with honey sun pouring through the windows.
I’m afraid it’s hard for him without a man around, Pet,
Fifi said as she put birdseed into the green dome-shaped cage.
The canaries chirped at her.
I asked him about what the men and ladies on his toy train were doing, Mini, and do you know what he said? He said they were all men taking showers together.
The canaries nuzzled each other on their perch. Pet did a perfect pirouette and Mini sang.
I guess you’re right. It’s something all little boys go through. It’s just a phase,
Fifi said.
Just a phase. Dirk thought about those words over and over again. Just a phase. Until the train inside of him would crash. Until the thing inside of him that was wrong and bad would change. Until he would change. He waited and waited for the phase to end. When would it end? He tried to do everything fast so it would end faster. He got A’s in school. He ran fast. He made his body strong so that he would be picked first for teams.
That was important—being picked first. The weak, skinny, scared boys got picked last. They got chased through the yard and had their jeans pulled up hard. Sometimes other kids threw food at them. Sometimes theywent home with black eyes, bloody noses or swollen lips. Dirk knew that almost all the boys who were treated this way really did like girls. It was just that girls didn’t like them yet. Dirk also knew that some of the boys that hurt them were doing it so they wouldn’t have to think about liking boys themselves. They were burning, twisting and beating the part of themselves that might have once dreamed of trains and fathers.
Dirk knew that the main thing was to keep to himself and never to seem afraid.
Every Saturday afternoon his Grandma Fifi took him to see a matinee, where he could hide, dreaming, in crackling popcorn darkness. They saw James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause. That was who he wanted to be. He practiced squinting and pouting. He turned up his jacket collar and rolled his jeans. He slicked back his hair, carefully leaving one stray piece falling into his eyes. James Dean was beautiful because he didn’t seem afraid of anything, but when Dirk looked into his eyes he knew that he secretly was and it made Dirk love him even more.
Grandma Fifi had two friends named Martin and Merlin who were afraid in a way Dirk didn’t want to be. They were both very handsome and kind and always brought candies and toys when they came over for tea and Fifi’s famous pastries. But as much as Dirk liked Martinand Merlin he knew he was different from them. They talked in voices as pale and soft as the shirts they wore and they moved as gracefully as Fifi did. Their eyes were startled and sad. They had been hurt because of who they were. Dirk didn’t want to be hurt that way. He wanted to be strong and to love someone who was strong; he wanted to meet any gaze, to laugh under the brightest sunlight and never hide.
Dirk especially didn’t want to hide from Grandma Fifi but he wasn’t sure how to tell her. He didn’t want to disturb the world she had made for him in her cottage with the steep chocolate frosting roof, the birdbath held by a nymph and the seven stone dwarfs in the garden. There were so many butterflies in that garden that when Dirk was a little boy he could stand naked in a crowd of them and be completely covered. Jade-green pupas hung from the bushes like earrings. Fifi showed Dirk the gold sparks that would later become the butterflies’ orange color. Then the pupa darkened and stretched and finally a fragile monarch bloomed. Fifi and Dirk put flower nectar or a mixture of honey and water on their fingertips and the newborn butterflies crawled onto them, all ticklish, and practiced fanning wings that were like amber stained glass in the sun. In the garden there were also little butterflies that looked like petals blown from the roses with the almond scent. There were peaches with pits that alsosmelled and looked like almonds when you cracked them open. Fifi showed Dirk how to pinch the honeysuckle blossoms that grew over the back gate so that sweet drops fell onto his tongue. She showed him how to pinch the snapdragons’ jaws to make them sing. If Dirk ever cut himself playing, Fifi broke off a piece of the thick green aloe vera plant she called Love and a gel oozed out like Love’s clear, thick blood. Fifi put the gel onto Dirk’s cut and stuck a Peanuts Band-Aid over it; the cut always healed by the next day, skin smooth as if it had never been broken.
Fifi had a cat named Kit who had arrived through the window one evening while an Edith Piaf record was playing and never left. Kit had pinkish fur like the tints Fifi put in her white hair. If Dirk or Fifi ever had an ache or a pain, Kit would come and sit on the part of the body that hurt them—just sit and purr. She was very warm, and after a while the soreness would disappear.
Kit is a great healer in a cat’s body,
Fifi said.
Kaboodle the Noodle was Fifi’s dog. He had a valentine nose, long Greta Garbo lashes and a tiny shock of hair that stood straight up. When you were sad he kissed your hand and winked at you.
Dirk and Fifi and Kaboodle went shopping at the fruit stands on Fairfax that were covered