For Immediate Release January-June 2004
| LOS
ANGELES—An
internationally revered novel about the love relationship between an
ex-Marine track coach and his Olympics-bound male athlete will mark its
30th anniversary this year with an estimated thirty million readers
worldwide. Landmark
author Patricia Nell Warren will commemorate the third decade of her
most renowned novel, The
Front Runner,
with personal appearances and book signings in select cities across
America, including private celebrations in New York and Los Angeles in
June which will coincide with the author’s 68th birthday. In
addition, Warren anticipates the release this year, through Wildcat
Press, of the 30th Anniversary edition of The Front Runner,
sporting a new
cover, historical retrospective and a new author’s foreword. The
first contemporary novel about gay love to make the New York Times
bestseller list and to appeal to both gay and mainstream readers, The Front Runner is
considered by
most literary experts to be the most popular gay novel in American
history. Published in 21 separate editions and translated
into
ten languages to date, The
Front
Runner has sold an estimated ten million copies over
three
decades, and even now continues to be one of the top selling gay novels
worldwide. Warren,
who has written eight novels and four books of poetry, has attracted an
estimated thirty million readers to date with her diverse literary
subjects ranging from gay life to Native American philosophy.
Her
recent novels, Billy’s
Boy
and The Wild Man,
explore the
coming of age for gay youth in different cultures, and have also won
her critical acclaim for their authenticity and unusual insight. However,
it was Warren's unique novel about openly gay and lesbian athletes
which made literary history and forever sealed her place as a gay icon
by cracking the New York Times best-seller list with what Times critic
Richard Roberts heralded in 1974 as "the most moving, monumental love
story ever written about gay life." The Front Runner,
which has
shepherded countless thousands of gay men and women out of the closet
over three decades and marked the gay rite of passage for many of them,
has unassumingly become what Update
News proclaimed in 1995, “the most important
piece of literature
of the Post-Stonewall era." “Few
books in the gay community have so greatly influenced self-esteem,
political and social perspectives—even fashion,”
declares Warren’s
long-time business partner, Tyler St. Mark, who is co-producing the
long-awaited film adaptation of The
Front Runner. “Most gay
people who came out during
the 70’s and 80’s can tell you exactly where they
were and what they
were doing when they first read this remarkable story,” he
says
emphatically. “Many of them rushed out to purchase
running shoes
and tank tops, inspired by the book’s athletic
theme,” he muses. Perhaps
one of the most evident and lasting legacies of The Front Runner
has been the
establishment of over 100 gay and lesbian running clubs under the
auspices of the International Front Runners (www.frontrunners.org).
Inspired by Warren’s novel, the first Front Runner club was
founded in
San Francisco in 1974, and today there are chapters in most states as
well as ten other countries around the world. Equally
important is the novel’s unusual cross-over appeal.
The Front Runner
has managed to
attract countless thousands of heterosexual readers over the years and
was included as one of the great sport stories of all time in Brandt
Aymar’s anthology, Men
In Sports.
Indeed, it was mainstream film producers like Paul Newman and Frank
Perry who first scrambled to obtain the motion picture rights due to
its mainstream success, and Hollywood has speculated for years which
popular actors would be cast in the roles of Coach Harlan Brown and
Olympic runner Billy Sive, as several productions have attempted to get
past the starting gate amid studio concerns over the first large
budgeted gay-themed motion picture. Over
the years, Warren has received thousands of letters from readers around
the world expressing gratitude for her having enhanced the quality of
their lives with her stories; for having set standards and principles
by which they could live, and for having given them hope—even
for
having turned some away from suicide. According to many
veteran
activists in the gay community, Warren’s novels have inspired
countless
gays and lesbians towards self-acceptance and the courage to face
homophobia with pride, dignity and honesty. Although
born out of the tumultuous civil-rights issues of the 60’s
and 70’s,
Warren’s landmark novel has retained its capacity to inspire
and
influence young people today. While those who first read The Front Runner in
high school and
college are now in their forties and fifties, succeeding generations
have continued to discover this gay classic, including a growing number
of open-minded straight teens. “I
think it resonates so deeply with people regardless of age, gender, or
sexuality because of its universality,” says 19-year-old
Jonathan
Newman, an openly gay college athlete at Vassar College.
“It is a
deeply moving and important story, perhaps even more transformative
today than thirty years ago!” he
explains. Newman, a
distance runner who hopes someday to audition for the film production,
is one of hundreds of new readers who have connected to The Front Runner
legacy. "I
am always pleased to embrace another generation of readers," says
Warren, who now receives more email than hand-written letters from her
newest readers. "It is my earnest hope that The Front Runner
will
continue to inspire people all over the world who, because of their
sexuality, must confront hatred, rejection and prejudice every day of
their lives,” she states fervently.
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