In Entertainment/ Queer Book Club

Inside Giovanni’s Room: A Queer Classic That Changed Literature

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If you love inspiring LGBTQ+ memoirs and novels that explore masculinity and identity, James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room (affiliate link) is essential reading.

As part of my own little Queer Book Club, I’ve been posting my reactions and thoughts regularly on Threads and Bluesky as I read. I fell a bit behind schedule with this one, but I’d love for you to join the conversation.

This was my first James Baldwin novel and I really enjoyed his very conversational almost stream of consciousness style. The story unfolds like a tangle of attraction and guilt, told entirely through the lens of one man trying (and failing) to outrun himself. Let’s get into it.


Uneasy Dreams in Paris and New York

When we first meet David in Paris, it feels almost like a romantic escape, but the illusion doesn’t last. Paris is magical and precarious, a city where beauty and despair live side by side. We find that David’s been scraping by, chasing security through older patrons like Jacques, while pretending not to notice how dependent he’s become on their attention. Even when he recalls his life in New York, the same tension exists. The dream of these cities, and of manhood, can quickly become hollow when you’re living in denial.

Denial and Desire

Then we meet Giovanni. He’s magnetic, charming, and full of life. I was swooning while reading this. He moves through the world with a kind of emotional openness that David can’t handle. Their relationship begins with attraction and slides quickly into a kind of obsession.

David’s guilt over early homosexual experiences still haunts him, and his obsession with “being a man” keeps him emotionally frozen. Even in the safety of queer spaces, he judges effeminate men and distances himself. Baldwin uses this tension to show how toxic masculinity doesn’t just harm others, it devours the self.

The Idea of Masculinity

As David and Giovanni’s relationship deepens, Baldwin begins pulling apart the fragile myths of masculinity that David clings to. Jacques, the older gay man who pursues younger lovers, becomes a mirror for what David fears becoming. David seems to equate love with weakness. When he tells Giovanni that he’s “trying to make him a wife,” Baldwin cracks open the internalized homophobia at the core of David’s fear: to love another man is, to him, to lose his manhood.

The Illusion of Normalcy

David’s fiancée, Hella, is his safety net, his fantasy of normalcy. She represents the version of himself he wants to believe in. A man that’s masculine and accepted by society. But even she’s more complex than what he wants. She’s independent and adventurous, uninterested in being anyone’s symbol of salvation.

Their return to the south of France marks a shift. David seems to have what he needs with Hella and has removed himself from his queer friend group in Paris. We know something’s gone terribly wrong with Giovanni. David sounds concerned while almost detached from the situation, but everything starts unraveling.

Love and Loss

The final chapters are devastating. Giovanni falls from romantic dreamer to prisoner awaiting execution. David begins to realize that he destroys every relationship that could reveal him to himself.

When Giovanni confronts him, it’s brutal honesty: David isn’t leaving him for Hella, but for the lie of being “normal.” Giovanni sees him completely, and that’s what terrifies David most.

By the end, Giovanni faces death, and David faces the mirror. David self sabotages and flees from Hella, throwing himself into his true desires. But without Giovanni, it’s hollow. The story ends in heartbreak without closure and Baldwin intends it that way.

Why Giovanni’s Room Still Matters

For a novel written in 1956, Giovanni’s Room has so much connection to the modern world. Baldwin captures how societal expectations around gender and sexuality twist intimacy into something painful and performative. It’s a queer love story, a tragedy, and even a study in repression. I also think that it’s an emotional blueprint for so many queer people who’ve struggled to reconcile love and identity. And that’s what makes it one of the most enduring and inspiring LGBTQ+ novels of all time.


Queer Book Club Questions 

  • Some questions to explore in your own book club discussion:
  • What is Baldwin saying about masculinity with David’s character?
  • How do you interpret David’s obsession with masculinity?
  • What are your thoughts on the spark between David and Giovanni?
  • How does Baldwin make David and Giovanni’s relationship feel romantic and tragic?
  • What moments in the book feel the most honest about queerness?
  • Do you think David could ever be happy?
  • Did you feel sympathy for David or frustration?
  • What moments hit you hardest?

Have you read Giovanni’s Room? What were your thoughts on this story? Let’s chat about it on Threads or Bluesky.

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