<p><strong>Small town boy journeys from Ponce Puerto Rico to Manhattan:</strong>&nbsp;a riff on many famous movies and books. Except in this case the boy is gay confused frightened and trying to find where he will fit in and be happy.</p><p>The story has a happy ending&mdash;of sorts. Boy from Ponce finds companionship happiness and his proud gay identity in the Big City. But it also has a sad ending&mdash;of sorts. Boy from Ponce finds out he has HIV almost dies gets almost well then meets another illness&mdash;Inclusion Body Myositis. He is confined to a wheelchair. And yet&mdash;</p><p>In the same year he becomes wheelchair-bound the man rediscovers an old love: writing poetry. He begins to write. He writes more. He becomes adept. His poetry soars. &quot;This&quot; he says &quot;is what I should have been doing all along.&quot;</p><p>As you read the poems of F&eacute;lix Garmend&iacute;a you will say to yourself &quot;This is what I should have been reading all along.&quot; You will discern influences from Whitman from Neruda and also from the art of Frida Kahlo with whom Felix feels a particularly strong kinship as a disabled artist. After all he says they both fly on invisible wings.</p><p>In this book you will discover poems light as the summer art in Fort Tryon Park poems as down and raunchy as a honky-tonk on Canal Street poems as pensive and stately as the Statue of Liberty and her pedestal. For in many ways this book also pays homage to New York F&eacute;lix&#39;s fiercely loved home since 1988.</p><p>Happy sad frightened soaring ecstatic loving. Moods galore and then some. Images that magic you from deep anguish to utter excitement and bliss. Come fly with F&eacute;lix. You will never read anything quite like these poems. You may even find your own invisible wings.</p>
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