"The central photo was taken by Laura Rubin a long time ago, and the ones on the far right were taken even longer ago: Jimmy McCourt in Central Park the summer before we met at Yale in '64 and me getting on a boat in Amsterdam in '65." Vincent Virga
James McCourt (born July 4, 1941) is an American writer, known for his "extended fictions" featuring an overlapping, recurring cast of often camp and bizarre characters. His notable works include his debut fiction Mawrdew Czgowchwz (1975), Kaye Wayfaring in "Avenged": Four Stories (1984) and nonfiction Queer Street (2003).
McCourt is best known for his extravagant debut Mawrdew Czgowchwz (1975), about a fictional opera diva. Regarding his first book, he once told the New York Times Book Review: "Nowhere on the book does it say it's a novel. In a novel, something is wrapped up, it finishes. But my stories just stop. Sure, Mawrdew Czgowchwz is an extended fiction, but it never wraps up." McCourt went on: "A novel is something I don't get around to doing or don't want to do. I'm writing about this extended tribe of people, instead of writing about a family as J.D. Salinger does." His Now Voyagers (2007) is the first in a series of projected sequels to Mawrdew Czgowchwz.
McCourt has garnered praise from critics Susan Sontag and Harold Bloom and has been championed by author Dennis Cooper. Sontag directed McCourt's Mawrdew Czgowchwz to her publisher's attention,[2] while Bloom named a later work, Time Remaining, to his influential Western Canon.[4][5]
"Strange Attraction: Exaltation and Calculation in the Poetry of James Schuyler." Review of Contemporary Fiction 8.3 (Fall 1988): 131-37.
"Summer Buses, Summer Fugues." In Summer, ed. Alice Gordon and Vincent Virga. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1990, pp. 229-38. [short fiction set in California in the 1950s]
“Come Back, Harry Fannin!” Review of Contemporary Fiction 10.2 (Summer 1990): 184-86. [on David Markson's early novels]
"Duet with a Diva: Opera Rhapsodist James McCourt Talks with Legendary Victoria de los Ángeles, Who Is Celebrating Her 50th Year Onstage." Los Angeles Times, 6 November 1994.
“Introduction.” Severo Sarduy, “Cobra” and “Maitreya.” Normal: Dalkey Archive Press, 1995, pp. xi-xviii.
“Not Some Brainless Beauty” [book review of Faye Dunaway’s Looking for Gatsby]. New York Times Book Review, 10 December 1995, p. 39.
“Prima Donna” [book review of Kim Chernin’s Cecilia Bartoli]. New York Times Book Review, 16 March 1997, p. 16.
"Gass's Hamlet." In Into "The Tunnel": Readings of Gass's Novel. Edited by Steven G. Kellman and Irving Malin. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1998, 21-29.