Song of Myself

Arnie Kantrowitz, Patrick Merla

Book cover for Song of Myself
Book cover for Song of Myself

Song of Myself

Song of Myself

Arnie Kantrowitz, Patrick Merla

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Description

Song of Myself: A Novel is a gay man's odyssey of self-discovery. It is the story of Daniel Dell Blake, a gay man navigating his way through a tumultuous twentieth-century America. His rites of passage, including embracing his identity, garnering self-respect, and living with irrepressible creativity, will resonate for readers confronting today's culture wars. Daniel's struggles against societal norms, infused with wit, celebrate human resilience while offering historical insight, punctuated throughout by quotes from Walt Whitman, whose life and writings serve as a touchstone-to the narrator and to the reader-a testament to how truth and pride, and even humble efforts in the midst of monumental events become (in Whitman's words) "the journey-work of the stars."


Song of Myself: A Novel chronicles the gay experience from World War II through the early AIDS crisis. The novel, deeply influenced by Walt Whitman's work, offers a poignant reflection on the struggles and triumphs of the LGBTQ+ community during a pivotal era of social change.


Dr. Lawrence D. Mass, Kantrowitz's surviving life partner, provides context for the novel's relevance in today's socio-political climate. "What was once a historical chronicle has become a cautionary tale," says Mass. "Arnie's novel resonates strongly with current challenges to LGBTQ+ rights and recognition."


The publication of Song of Myself: A Novel coincides with ongoing debates about the representation of historical figures' sexuality, including that of Walt Whitman himself. Kantrowitz, a devoted Whitman scholar, sought to affirm the poet's identity as gay throughout his career.


Song of Myself: A Novel is described as a picaresque and bawdy novel, filled with adventure, humor, wisdom, and resilience. It stands as a testament to Kantrowitz's role as a sentinel voice in the Gay Liberation movement, advocating for self-realization and resistance against oppression.

Critical Reviews

Arnie Kantrowitz was a gift to gay letters: teacher, scholar, autobiographer, activist. He is sorely missed. But he also left behind this wonderful novel. Song of Myself is not autobiographical fiction, but a spiritual American history where Arnie gave his love of Walt Whitman to a fictional gay Everyman of a different generation and wider experience. Lively, sexy, dramatic and accessible, this is popular fiction at its best."

- Christopher Bram, author, Father of Frankenstein and

Eminent Outlaws: The Gay Writers Who Changed America


Creative inhibitions, the professional demands of teaching, and eventually, failing health, all prevented Arnie Kantrowitz from publishing his only novel, Song of Myself, in his lifetime. But it would be a mistake to dismiss this as a mere archival curiosity. Song of Myself is an entertaining and enlightening novel inspired by Walt Whitman's spiritual, literary, and political legacies, written by a man who was himself a leader in the gay liberation struggle, and a Whitman scholar. Song of Myself, like the poem it is named after, is a celebration of life in all of its exhilaration, pleasure, and confusion. Daniel Dell Blake is a character who lives against the backdrop of twentieth-century America, through wars and political upheaval, through the modern gay rights movement, through tragic losses from AIDS, and survival in its aftermath. Through it all, Whitman's poetry is a constant presence in Daniel's life, as it was in Kantrowitz's own life, and the lives of many queer folks who came to see Whitman as a spiritual icon. This book is an important document of post-Stonewall literary history, and a delightful blend of creative and critical texts. Arnie Kantrowitz has left all Whitman lovers a gift that should be enjoyed and celebrated.

- Lavelle Porter, Distinguished Lecturer, Macaulay Honors College, CUNY, author of The Blackademic Life: Academic Fiction, Higher Education, and the Black Intellectual.


Arnie Kantrowitz made history with his activism and his writing and teaching. He also made knowing and writing our history possible. There's a direct line from the concerns of his activism, his teaching and his writing - the achievement of Under the Rainbow and his re-interpretation and resurrection of a literary history that might otherwise have continued unseen - to the issues we face today. He posthumously points the way to confronting our present-and future--challenges.

- Bill Goldstein, founding editor of the New York Times Books website; author, The World Broke in Two: Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot, D. H. Lawrence, E. M. Forster, and the Year that Changed Literature


I'm always fascinated when novelists do history, vividly imagining the life of their characters through time and social upheaval. So I'm delighted to recommend Kantrowitz's novel. As a leader of New York's Gay Activists Alliance, Arnie inspired me to quit the closet, and now Arnie inspires me again. Thanks, Arnie!

- Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History,

The Daring Life and Dangerous Times of Eve Adams


Publishing Information

Publisher: Sentinel Voices
Pub date: 2024-09-20
Length: 450 pages

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