George K. Ilsley's first novel ManBug is a fragmented and tragicomic exploration of a gay relationship between a former entomologist, Sebastian, who has researched the development of pesticides, and Tom, a left-handed, dyslexic "spiritual bisexual,"; who may or may not be recruiting Sebastian for a cult led by the "Kardapa Lampa."; Sebastian suspects Tom is "wasting his spiritual capital on that tantric mind control prosperity cult."; Tom suspects Sebastian is not fully advancing his sexual nature. The relationship between the two men is complicated by the fact that Sebastian suffers from Asperger's Syndrome (similar to autism). Ilsley explains: "A thread that runs through ManBug is who lives and who dies and who makes the decision. Many of us, for example, do not think twice before we kill an insect. Maybe we'll throw a lobster in the pot. But what else will we kill? Where do we draw the line?"; The novel is mostly about sexuality.
"Tom does not date the kind of gay boys who are determined, silly, aggressive bottoms, overfed and undernourished, maturing into fruition as streaked, puffy, too-tanned, frantic clichés of the sort one is not allowed to mention, it's so embarrassing and so true. "The type Tom goes for is sensitive and in transition (in the classical sense, meaning a lifestyle and/or self-concept metamorphosis, but not a gender reassignment). What attracts Tom beyond all reason is a manboy exploring the boundaries of a gentle, proud, fierce, but uncertain masculinity. Young and naive enough to believe in his essential spiritual nature."; Particularly focussed on the state of being bi-curious, Ilsley quotes from a biographer of Alfred Kinsey: "For Kinsey, then, labels such as 'homosexual' and 'heterosexual' did not make sense. People engaged in homosexual acts; they were not homosexuals. Therefore, the only proper use for the word 'homosexual' was as an adjective, not as a noun. Pressing this point vigorously, he declared, 'It would encourage clearer thinking on these matters if persons were not characterized as heterosexual or homosexual, but as individuals who have had certain experience and certain amounts of homosexual experience.'"; Like Kinsey, it would appear Ilsley's design is to encourage clearer thinking about sexuality. His title ManBug is derived from a common occurrence in entomology studies when a student, upon viewing ladybugs in a slightly sexualized context, invariably wants to ask, "Male ladybug? Shouldn't that be manbug?"; Clearly the labels we ascribe to both other creatures and ourselves do not always satisfactorily explain behaviour.
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[BCBW 2006]