By Julie Tarney. $24.95; University of Wisconsin Press; 213 pages
The first day your toddler said he could dress himself was a day you'll never forget.
He tried, you have to hand it to him. When he was done, part of his outfit was out of season and the other part was out of style, the colors were painful together, and nothing matched except his bright eyes and proud grin. You figured he'd learn and, as in the new book "My Son Wears Heels" by Julie Tarney, so would you.
Though Tarney had known since he was born that her son, Harry, was a unique little guy, she was still taken aback when he asked how she knew that he was a boy.
Harry was just 2 years old then, and Tarney thought it was a normal question for a child that age. But his next commentthat he was a girl "inside my head"sent her to her parenting books.
Tarney had no real frame of reference, other than a well-used copy of Dr. Spock. She was the eldest of two girls, born in Wisconsin to a mother who was controlling and distant; even if she could have asked her late mother about parenting concerns, Tarney probably wouldn't. Instinct told her that there was nothing to worry about, though she fretted that Harry was gay; she also worried that she'd somehow ruin him if she didn't completely support his free-spiritedness.
As he grew up, Harry's creativity grew, too; he loved to play dress-up and experiment through pretend. Wigs and shoes were his passion, but he also liked skirtsall of which Tarney successfully prevented him from wearing in public. Even so, by time he was ten years old, Harry had his own fashion sense and had gotten bullied for it. He knew he was different, but he was too young to articulate how.
At 14, Harry came out as gay.
Through the years, while Harry worked to understand more about himself, his mother went through a period of personal acceptance, too. She discovered that she could be a single mom, and survive. She learned that loving herself wasn't a bad thingand that she could never "screw up" her son by loving him.
At its very basic, My Son Wears Heels is a good book. It showcases how one mother encouraged her son to openly explore who he was, and how his journey allowed understanding within hers. And if that was all there was in this book, you'd probably be very happy; instead, there's a lot of plumping-up in this tale.
Author Tarney drops product names like she's in a grocery store, sometimes right down to the ad tagline; that's often followed by minute details that seem inconsequential, as though they're merely filling conversational silence. Add re-created dialogue, quoted from more than 20 years ago and, well, continuing can be a challenge.
Again, great premise, good story, too much fluff, and if that bugs you, too, then take a pass. Unless you can overlook its padding, "My Son Wears Heels" is no shoe-in.
Want more? Then look for Always My Child: A Parent's Guide to Understanding Your Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgendered, or Questioning Son of Daughter, by Ken Jennings and Pat Shapiro; or Oddly Normal, by John Schwartz.