Scott Terry. Cowboys,
Armageddon, and the Truth: How a Gay Child was Saved
from Religion. Lethe Press, 2012. PB. 288 p. $18.
978-1-59021-366-7.
Growing up in the Jehovah’s Witness
religion was hard enough for Scott Terry as the unwanted child of a first
marriage; growing up and realizing who he was as a person was harder still. This
memoir is a powerful story not only of dealing with and escaping from abuse but
also about coming to terms with being gay in an atmosphere that regarded it as
both unnatural and sinful. Terry grew up with almost no memory of his mother,
being raised in the home of his father Virgil and his stepmother “Fluffy,” a
woman who despised both Terry and his sister and did everything to make their
lives hell. That Terry did escape in the end is gratifying, but at times
reading through the catalog of horrors that he had to undergo is unnerving in
the extreme, from being forbidden to touch Fluffy’s television or take food
without express permission, to being physically abused and accused of lying
when a school exam revealed that he needed glasses. While certainly there are
happy moments in his childhood, nearly all of them in the company of relatives
outside of his home, he suffered nothing but abuse from his stepmother in the
presence of a father who refused to acknowledge that this abuse happened.
A
constant thread throughout these recollections is the growing consciousness
that he was gay. From praying daily to be attracted to women instead of men,
Terry grew to accept who he was as a person and find happiness and fulfillment
as a gay man. In the process, he had to break away from the faith of his
childhood and from a father and step-siblings who still do not accept him as
gay or as an ex-Witness (one who has left “the Truth”, as the Witnesses would
say). The only flaw with this work, if it can be said to have any, is that in
certain places the reader might like more detail; for much of the work the
reader knows that Terry has two step-siblings but they only rarely appear in
his narrative. Regardless, for those interested in biographies or memoirs this
is a work that is not to be missed, and for many public libraries this work
would represent a valuable addition to their collection.
This review was previously published in the newsletter of the American Library Association's GLBT Round Table. The author wishes to express his thanks to both the book's publisher and the Round Table for the review copy of this work.
Hi Brady....thank you so much for your very kind review of my memoir. I appreciate your reading it, and taking the time to write such a nice review. You might also enjoy my PropH8 sculpture and video on Youtube, which can be seen here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rra4SAdySEk
Thank you!
Scott Terry
I sincerely agree with your review. Being from a similarly religious background, it resonated with me in a powerful way. You finish the book knowing that Scott has to be a very strong person to have become the man he is today.
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