Randy Boyd (born 1962) is an American novelist and essayist.[1] His writings explore the intersections of race and sexuality, pulling from his experience as a black gay man who is HIV-positive.[2]
He tested positive for HIV in 1988 and became an outspoken activist against HIV stigma.[2] "It should not be socially acceptable to use words like 'clean' when describing someone who is HIV-negative," he was quoted as saying in the Bay Area Recorder, "It would also help if gay people today understood more about what gay people with HIV/AIDS had to endure during the AIDS panic. In some ways, longtime survivors are like Holocaust survivors or veterans of a war. Have some sensitivity to our plight, for goodness sake."[3]
Literary career
His novels include Bridge Across the Ocean (2000), Uprising (2001), The Devil Inside (2002), and Walt Loves the Bearcat (2005).[4][5]Uprising was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Mystery.[6]
Of his fiction work, Boyd wrote, "My novels are like my kids. I’m happy with the way they turned out. Each novel is piece of myself set forth into the world, a reflection of my dreams, a part of my soul. The main perspective is that of a black gay man living with HIV/AIDS. Go figure."[4]
He founded West Beach books to publish his works as well as others.[1]
^Drewey Wayne Gunn - The Gay Male Sleuth in Print and Film: A History 2013 0810885883 Page 40 "Randy Boyd's The Devil Inside (2002) uncovers a plot to brainwash selected individuals through virtual technology in order ..."