Number of Pages: 288
Genre: Social Science
Sub-Genre: LGBT Studies
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Books
Book theme: General
Author: Tom Fitzgerald & Lorenzo Marquez
Language: English
"As a longtime, devoted reader and admirer of Tom and Lorenzo's writing, I couldn't be more thrilled to have such a detailed, comprehensive analysis of the best reality television show ever made on Planet Earth (
RuPaul's Drag Race). I adore
Legendary Children, not just because I am in it, but for its thoroughly entertaining catalogue of television, drag and queer history."
--Katya Zamolodchikova, co-author of Trixie and Katya's Guide to Modern Womanhood "Using
Drag Race's prominence as a mirror to reflect drag brilliance through the ages, this must-read book articulately celebrates the icons--both well-known and under-appreciated--who made magic with a mascara wand and whose finely glossed lips were always worth reading. Like this book!"
--Michael Musto "Informative, entertaining, melodramatic in its obsessiveness, and written with equal amounts of insight and wit, the book serves as a commemorative archive of drag in American life."
--Kirkus
"It's officially been a decade since
RuPaul's Drag Race aired its first season, and a groundbreaking queer phenomenon was born. In celebration of this milestone, Tom Fitzgerald and Lorenzo Marquez wrote
Legendary Children, which explores queer history and culture and talks about how RuPaul's hit reality show contributed to this rich tradition."
--Cosmopolitan
"Part loving homage to the show, part history lesson, think of it as the queer education you didn't get in public school."
--Evan Ross Katz, Paper "
Legendary Children arrives at just the right time -- both because season 12 of 'Drag Race' just premiered and because the world needs authenticity in its stories. Fitzgerald and Marquez deliver that, giving readers an insight into the important but overlooked people who made our current moment possible."
--Ryan Carey-Mahoney, The Washington Post
"[
Legendary Children] turn[s] 'Drag Race's' challenges and recurring elements (the Pit Crew, Snatch Game, etc.) into a deceptively simple framing device for a nuanced exploration of the gender-bending figures, insider lingo and significant milestones in queer history to which the show owes its existence...For a book about reality television,
Legendary Children is unusually ambitious -- an obsessively detailed portrait of modern LGBTQ life and how it came to be."
--Katie Wudel, The Los Angeles Times "It's a delightful and important look at the way past queens and other queer folk have shaped not only drag but also queer life as we know it. Fitzgerald and Marquez have crafted a world in which drag queens are heroes - fighting for equality and looking fierce and fabulous while doing it. It's a history well told, one that is approachable and enjoyable for all to digest. The prose is upbeat and makes a reader as excited about the history as the authors so clearly are."
--Molly Sprayregen, Associated Press "The sharp, smart playfulness...encapsulates the tremendous appeal of
Legendary Children great seriousness of purpose set off by a mischievous, even lascivious wink. Using
Drag Race as a framework to explore many, many corners of LGBTQ+ life is something of a stroke of genius, making this an excellent piece of TV criticism as well as an exploration of history."
--Allison Shoemaker, AV Club "The book seamlessly weaves LGBTQ history into the 'Drag Race' present, and gives readers a deep dive into the background of the show's challenges, and what they mean in the history of queer life."
--Carole Horst, Variety "
RuPaul's Drag Race fans will salivate over this definitive deep-dive and ultimate guide to all-things
Drag Race and how the hit show has influenced modern LGBTQ culture."
--Queerty "Legendary bloggers Tom and Lorenzo trace the last century of queer revolutionary activity through the art of drag. The history of acceptance of queer people has waxed and waned, and they guide us through the big cultural moments that allowed greater visibility and took rights away at the same time."
--Julia Rittenberg, Book Riot