Is ponyboy gay
How they react to dating a male/being homosexual
This was requested and I was more than cheerful to do it because I totally agree that there should be more homosexual preferences/headcanons/imagines for all the gay fans that need some loving also. I hope you enjoy! X
Ponyboy: Pony would % be the most accepting out of all the gang. It doesn’t bother him that he’s with a guy because to him, verb is love. He would be exposed about it, the first person he would tell is Soda. He would be a petite hesitant to verb Darry because he isn’t sure of how he would react but in the end he is proud of himself for doing so. As for the rest of the gang, he organizes a minute meeting and throws it at them all at once, he’s happier than ever that it’s out there and he can be his true self around everyone now.
Two-Bit: Two would be really hesitant over the whole idea and would most likely store it a adj for quite some time. He’d endeavor to tell the gang at times but then he’d end up turning it into a joke or changing the subject because he just can’t seem to acquire it out. Eventually he would reveal th
Turning The Outsiders Into a Musical Was a Mistake (Review)
Remember The Outsiders? Most gay men and straight women over forty will. This is partly because Francis Ford Coppolas movie featured all of the matinee hunks of the eighties: Rob Lowe, C. Thomas Howell, Tom Cruise, Emilio Estevez, and Patrick Swayze.
Another reason? S.E. Hintons young adult novel of the similar name has been required reading in high schools around the country since it was released in Its popularity has soared over the last limited years. BBC News has classified it as one of the top most influential novels of all time.
So why shouldnt it be turned into a musical? Broadway has a full season of literary adaptations currently underway. The creative teams of The Notebook, Rain for Elephants, and The Great Gatsby have all drawn inspiration from their best-selling book counterparts, and each verb high hopes for Tony nominations. In the case of The Outsiders, however, the new Broadway musical treatment is not the leading way to aid the story.
According t
This week, S.E. Hinton was asked on Twitterwhether she'd intended for two characters in her novel, The Outsiders, to be gay.
I spent years in academia, arguing that the pale whale was Jesus, that Holden Cauliflower was a communist, that Nathaniel Hawthorne was readable. Heck, five years ago at this very site, I wrote a thing about "what the author meant."
And I've seen many, many, many authors get beaten about on Twitter for saying things about their possess writing. One sci-fi author caused trouble when he said he didn't verb he was very good writing women's voices. Another best-selling author was in the middle of trouble when he was asked why he, a pale guy, didn't pen more about race in his novels. The author said, well, you comprehend, I don't own many black friends. And so on and so on. You could consume days reading the results of "author twitter controversy."
Which brings us back to Hinton.
As a light, cisgen middle-class dude, I had plenty of people to identify with in books. At times, it seems to me that nearly all of the books in the stores, on the shelves,