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I don't think everybody's gay. But I think a lot more people are than the world knows about.
Kevin Sessums
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Kevin Sessums
Age: 68
Born: 1956
Born: January 1
Author
Writer
Mississippi
United States
Kevin Howard Scott Sessums
Think
Thinking
World
People
Gay
Everybody
More quotes by Kevin Sessums
Shoe just meant you were a big jock on campus no matter what field you were in.
Kevin Sessums
I find myself applying the addict's impulse to how I cruise. I don't look at the ass. If I see a hot guy walking towards me I look at his arm, and if he has a vein I fantasize about shooting up with him.
Kevin Sessums
Hollywood needs peripheral people like me. You're not of that world, but you're needed.
Kevin Sessums
Is it easier for you to have straight friends, Larry [Kramer], since you seem so often disappointed in your gay friends who can't live up to what you expect of them as gay people?
Kevin Sessums
Larry [Kramer] had already experienced so much loss by then from the AIDS epidemic. But I don't think it changed anything between us.
Kevin Sessums
I'm not denying Christ by not being Christian. I'm a theist, which involves expanding on the Christ narrative.
Kevin Sessums
When one person mentors, two lives are changed.
Kevin Sessums
The first time I remember our being socially in the same place was after we graduated and [author, investment counselor, philanthropist, and fellow 1950s Yalie] Peter Wolf had a party at his house in the Hamptons.
Kevin Sessums
I was raped: I said no and he wouldn't stop. I also had a scar on my back and blood coming out of my ass. To some that's just rough sex. Some would read that sentence and be turned on by that: the 51st Shade of Gay.
Kevin Sessums
If someone had come up to me at Yale and asked me how many homosexuals there were in my class, I would have said I don't think there are any. There may have been a few who were shy with girls. You have to understand, this was the 1950s.
Kevin Sessums
I just so desperately wanted to be published in New Yorker, and I'd so desperately try to get something in it. But I'd always get nice letters back telling me that Mr. Shawn [William Shawn, the New Yorker's editor from 1952 to 1987] just didn't like this or didn't like that about what I submitted.
Kevin Sessums
Weenie was definitely a word we used at Yale back then. But I'm not sure you were one, Larry [Kramer]. Also, you were going by a different name.
Kevin Sessums
I think I just felt a sadness at some points in my career that what is available to a straight writer is not available to a gay writer.
Kevin Sessums
I talked to [Larry] Kramer a little bit about it while I was writing 'Remembering Denny' . Denny was one of those people who took a long time to come out.
Kevin Sessums
I wasn't a [gay] activist, really.
Kevin Sessums
I don't write poetry for the New Yorker. My poems appear in the Nation, mostly.
Kevin Sessums
[Calvin Trillin] was very shoe, which means he was a big jock, a big deal.
Kevin Sessums
I was not shoe. That's a misuse of the term shoe, which is derived from white shoe.
Kevin Sessums
I could appear in this million-word book [Larry Kramer] are working on. Nobody would even notice me.
Kevin Sessums
That's why I tried to kill myself when I was a student [in Yale]. I thought I was the only one there.
Kevin Sessums