Reviews of Identity Envy
Van Allen's Ecstasy cover image
While this EXCELLENT COLLECTION ... allows the short, dark-haired Jewish writers a chance to fantasize about being a tall, blonde WASP or a Canadian to become an American, the ache to be someone else, in the hope to feel “happy and safe” or loved, eventually makes the subject more self-aware ... Readers may not identify with every writer/story in “Identity Envy,” but there is nary a dud in the book; each memoir/essay is POIGNANT AND REVEALING.
Gary Kramer
Philadelphia Gay News


What could have become a tedious collection of class writing exercises is instead A PROVOCATIVE DISPLAY OF EXPERIENCES AND INFLUENCES. The editors are blessed, in fact, by the diversity of their contributors.
Jameson Currier
Lambda Book Report


[A]n eclectic anthology of engaging essays and memoirs whose message is that the desire to be someone other than who we are is an integral and universal aspects of coming of age... WILDLY DIVERSE AND ACHINGLY HONEST, the essays that make up this original anthology offer new perspectives on the reasons and rewards for wanting to be who we are not.
Patricia R. Payette
Gay and Lesbian Review Worldwide


This may be among the most radical [book] in recent publication, not because of its politics, but because it takes its stand without relying on either polarization or feel-good superficialities. Instead, the editors have compiled a collection that is characterized by its complexities. This is not so much a book about queer identity as it is about identity itself, about what it feels like to not fit in. And it is about the fantastic alternate selves that can make everyday life a little bit easier... More than anything, it is the true diversity of its voices that sets Identity Envy apart as a DEEPLY MEANINGFUL text.
Courtney Arnold
 ForeWord Magazine


AN ENTERTAINING AND ENLIGHTENING COLLECTION of personal essays about the desire to be someone other than who we are.  The writers take on matters of class, race, religion, regional differences--and so much more--all with intelligence, insight, and compelling honesty.
Stephen McCauley,
Author of The Object of My Affection and
Alternatives to Sex