5/19/10

Acts of Intervention: Performance, Gay Culture, and AIDS (Unnatural Acts: Theorizing the Performative)

Acts of Intervention: Performance, Gay Culture, and AIDS (Unnatural Acts: Theorizing the Performative) Review



This book is a valuable source for the variety of performances that have accompanied the appearance of AIDS in the United States. Roman carefully evaluates how theatre and performative events, from the activism of ACT-UP to Magic Johnson's announcement of his HIV status, have shaped the way that AIDS has been portrayed. In his introduction, Roman outlines his positionality within his subject, remaining critically responsible while acknowledging the impossibility of "objectivity." An important aspect of his critical approach is his "generosity" towards the performances he analyzes. He states that his purpose in the book is not to evaluate the performances for their artistic merit, but to show their position within the overall field of AIDS performance. He shows how performances that may have been "bad" nonetheless had an impact on their audience. Roman never succumbs to romanticism or nostalgia, but approaches his subject with reverence and respect. Roman's book leaves room for others to continue within the subject of AIDS performance and will continue to be a valuable source for those working in the field.




Acts of Intervention: Performance, Gay Culture, and AIDS (Unnatural Acts: Theorizing the Performative) Overview


Acts of Intervention examines the ways that gay men have used theatre and performance to intervene in the AIDS crisis. It discusses dramatic texts and public performances -- from cabarets and candlelight vigils to full-scale Broadway productions such as Angels in America and Rent -- that have shaped, and been shaped by, the history of AIDS in national, regional, and local contexts. Román examines mainstream as well as alternative and activist forms of theatre, including solo performance, community-based projects, mixed-media events, activist demonstrations, and AIDS educational theatre initiatives.

Acts of Intervention traces the ways in which performance and theater have participated in and informed the larger cultural politics of race, sexuality, citizenship, and AIDS in the United States during the last fifteen years. The book discusses not only how the theater has provided a forum for gay male response to the epidemic but also the degree to which those responses have in turn shaped the ideological formulation of AIDS. Román offers a new method for mapping the relation between AIDS and representation by combining interpretive strategies from performance theory, gay and lesbian studies, critical race discourse, and cultural studies.

This book is dedicated to writing the history of theatrical interventions in the AIDS epidemic, including performances whose official history has been largely neglected or forgotten. Because many early performances about AIDS left little or no documentation, the task of constructing an AIDS theatre historiography confronts immediate problems and limitations.

Acts of Intervention argues that the history of AIDS performance is located at the juncture of memory and disappearance, of mourning and survival, of representation and its impossibility in the context of epidemic loss.




Acts of Intervention: Performance, Gay Culture, and AIDS (Unnatural Acts: Theorizing the Performative) Specifications


AIDS has had myriad effects on gay culture, and its influence on gay writing and theater have perhaps been the most notable. While novels and poetry by gay men and lesbians have recorded the epidemic, performance art has most closely reflected and embraced AIDS activism. David Roman's Acts of Intervention chronicles the emergence of AIDS as a subject in performance and theater, from the post-modern, high-camp, drag extravaganzas of Lypsinka to the overtly political parody of the Afro Pomo Homos to Tim Miller's playful, nude monologue performances: art as politics. But Roman is as interested in politics as art, and much of Acts of Intervention impressively discusses how public activity protests against government AIDS policy are "performances" themselves. Roman's knowledge of AIDS, art, and gay culture is exhaustive, and his writing is clear, succinct, and informed. Gay culture and art has always been about becoming visible and powerful, and Acts of Intervention charts how this has occurred over the past 17 years.

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5/17/10

Degranon: A Science Fiction Adventure

Degranon: A Science Fiction Adventure Review



I came to Duane Simolke's sci-fi novel, DEGRANON, after first having sampled the author's short stories, as included in THE ACORN GATHERING, Writers Uniting Against Cancer.

DEGRANON is sci-fi that warrants the attention of any serious aficionado, gay or straight, fascinated by alien worlds that mirror our own world -- complete with mind-bending drugs, political machinations, rigid class structures and struggles, cults, small-mindedness, corruption at all levels, loves, hates, aspirations, frustrations -- even bigotry; the planet Valchondria has mainly color-blind societies, long-eliminated prejudices arising from different colored skins having merely evolved into repression of the color-sighted minority by the majority who only see in black and white.

Admitteldy not a breeze-through novel, with its time-travel elements that take the plot from past to present to future to present to past, and its comments upon societal mores and relationships -- experienced through the complications of time travel -- it's nonetheless worth the effort for those who don't mind "food for thought" served up with the dessert of sheer good reading.

NOTE: For those who might prefer an experimental dose of Simolke, before taking on this, his 197-page sci-fi opus, try his and his fellow authors' "shorts" in his non-sci-fi THE ACORN GATHERING which -- all author and editor royalties donated to the American Cancer Soceity -- provides the dual rewards of good reading and benefiting a good cause.




Degranon: A Science Fiction Adventure Overview


The scientist Taldra is one of the few people on the planet Valchondria who can see in color, but a police force called "the Maintainers" won’t let colorsighted people reveal their ability to the public. Duane Simolke explores that "closet" metaphor more in this revised edition of Degranon; he also recreates three of the major characters as gay men. Taldra’s family becomes entangled with a violent religious fanatic from a war-torn planet called "Degranon." The first edition of Degranon received a StoneWall Society Pride in the Arts Award, and Simolke’s publisher, iUniverse, named Degranon one of their Editor’s Choice books.


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5/16/10

Out on Holy Ground: Meditations on Gay Men's Spirituality

Out on Holy Ground: Meditations on Gay Men's Spirituality Review







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5/15/10

A Report from Winter

A Report from Winter Review



This memoir has already received high praise from numerous quarters and after reading the gripping account, I can add that it is all well deserved. This honest account is filled with memories and dreams of the author's childhood, his first date with his partner, and his quiet dysfunctional family. Although the summary calls this book stubbornly unsentimental, I would argue that the narrative is heavily sentimental but written with a brutal, almost painful honesty that yearns for something more than the truth will allow. Either way, this stark and evocative story will grip readers as it shows the love and pain within relationships.

Although the story is about the author's dying mother and coping with her final days, there are several asides included to keep the pace moving. This also serves to lighten the somewhat oppressive tone when recalling the painful death and indignity of illness. Here the author parallels a story of his childhood during a particularly bad snowstorm in Maine and shows how the pattern of his family is already set and not to be altered through the decades. His unhappy, perpetually disappointed mother coupled with an almost absentee father shown in stark contrast to the confused rejection of his brother, this one scene stretched out and told over the course of the book highlights several important factors. The first is the family dynamic, but more importantly, the author's place and ultimately his discovery of his sexuality.

At the same time, the narrative shows the warm and loving relationship with his partner, Ralph, through unconditional acceptance and love. The telling is brutally honest in exposing the author's own perceived weaknesses and faults while acknowledging that Ralph's strength and love is essential to his happiness. If anything, the narrative is almost too stark and open. Often the negative actions, thoughts, and desires are shown blatantly and without any positive context to soften the instinctive thoughts that are all too human. Tempered somewhat by the humor and wit woven into the various remembrances, the empty and cold landscape is often reiterated in the emotions and actions of various people in the book.

The writing itself is engaging and often invites the reader to laugh or cry with the emotions and actions depicted. The honesty of various situations is never in question, as every detail is offered with a painful unveiling from the aching need to be accepted and loved in places that will never happen to relying on the warmth and care of his partner. Although this makes the story difficult to read in places, the pacing and placement of the details keeps the book from being too dark and depressing. Perhaps the saddest detail is not in the unfortunate death of his mother but in lacking that much needed acceptance that was always craved. Such simple need is portrayed in a loving, sentimental, and brutal manner creating a gripping and enthralling story.

This memoir will resonate with many as the dysfunctional, cold family is not a rare experience among readers. The inability of two gay brothers to find common ground, however painfully so, will also be recognizable just as the witty retelling of a first date will evoke emotion in even the hardest hearts. The stunning description of Maine in winter with its beauty, chill, and heart breaking cold is incredible and leaps off the page. While not always an easy book to read, the emotion and context afforded make it well worth the journey.




A Report from Winter Overview


A Report from Winter is a death-in-the-family story, a love story, and a meditation on the meaning of ''winter''--as a season and as a metaphor for family relationships.

It's January 1998, and southern Maine is recovering from one of the worst ice storms in history. Into this unforgiving environment comes the author, flying home from Kansas City after a ten-year absence. His mother, Jennie, is dying of cancer. Though receiving excellent care in a nursing home, she has lost the ability to communicate. Needing support, Wayne makes an SOS call to Ralph, his longtime partner. Ralph boards a plane to Portland for his first exposure to a Maine winter, and to Wayne's family as well, including a feisty aunt and an emotionally distant brother. The contrast between a nurturing gay relationship and dysfunctional family bonds is as sharp as the wind sweeping in from the sea.

Stubbornly unsentimental, A Report from Winter weaves childhood memories of winter with the harsh realities of living in a family where there's not enough love to go around. The memoir is a tribute to hard-won relationships built on mutual trust and understanding, defying an uncaring world.


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5/12/10

Tearoom Trade: Impersonal Sex in Public Places (Observations)

Tearoom Trade: Impersonal Sex in Public Places (Observations) Review



This book is the first and one of the few and to study male-male sexual behavior as it occurs between men who do not primarily identify themselves as being homosexual or bisexual. Previous studies had been largely clinical, based on the reports of individuals undergoing psychotherapy, and most ethnographic studies have been of more or less gay-identified communities -- gay bars, gay organizations, gay neighborhoods -- or male prostitutes. This was the first to study men who have sex with men but who mostly have lives as apparently ordinary, married heterosexuals. The study revealed some surprising facts about such men, and fired a controversy over sociological ethics and propriety that continues to this day.

During the course of a year, Humphreys observed male-male sexual activity in certain public restrooms (known in gay slang as "tearooms") in an unidentified city in the US. A year later, after having identified many of the men he had observed, he arranged to interview them as part of a different, general sociological study, which allowed him to ask a number of questions about their backgrounds and personal lives without revealing their clandestine activities; he also approached about a dozen of the men in the tearooms themselves and was able to interview them openly.

Humphreys' findings contradict a number of previously held assumptions about male-male sexual activity, and carry some important recommendations. One is that the "seduction of teenagers" does not occur in these public places, and in fact teenage boys are actively excluded despite their frequent desire to participate. Another is that the chance of anyone being unwillingly approached in a public restroom, unless he is behaving in such a way as to invite sexual advances, is practically nonexistent. Third, the most frequent criminal behavior which results from these practices is blackmail, primarily from the policemen on the vice squad who are assigned to eliminate sex in public places.

Finally, the book devotes a significant space to the ethical issues which were raised by its methodology. At the time, practically nothing was known about homosexual behavior in the general population, despite a great deal of attention from police, clergy, and politicians. The study was carried out with no untoward effects, and several participants stated that they were glad of the opportunity to talk about themselves. However, the study involved potential danger to the subjects in the event that confidentiality had been broken, and the subjects could not be asked for consent without fatally compromising the study. The debate which followed among sociologists, journalists, and ethicists, regarding the balance between society's need for objective knowledge and the individual's right to privacy, has continued to this day. It is a must-read for anyone concerned with the debate over research on human behavior, both for the historical documents it contains (several of the major criticisms and defenses of the study) and for the way in which it is often misrepresented today by its critics.

The book is well written and extremely readable, and gives some interesting insight into both the state of American homosexual behavior and of the political climate in the years immediately before Stonewall. It won the C. Wright Mills Award of the Society for the Study of Social Problems, and the author was later elected to the national board of a homosexual rights organization, in part because of the importance of this research. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in the sociology or history of homosexuality.




Tearoom Trade: Impersonal Sex in Public Places (Observations) Overview


From the time of its first publication in 1970, Tearoom Trade engendered controversy. It was also accorded an unusual amount of praise for a first book on a marginal, intentionally self-effacing population by a previously unknown sociologist. The book was quickly recognized as an important, imaginative, and useful contribution to our understanding of "deviant" sexual activity. Describing impersonal, anonymous sexual encounters in public restrooms - "tearooms" in the argot - the book explored the behavior of men whose closet homosexuality was kept from their families and neighbors. By combining participant observation with structured as well as informal interviews, Tearoom Trade still furnishes a controversial example of recent social science methods.

This enlarged edition of Tearoom Trade includes the original text, together with a retrospect. The material added includes a perspective on the social scientist at work and the ethical problems to which that work may give rise, along with debate by the book's initial critics and proponents.


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5/11/10

Beach Reading

Beach Reading Review



Abramson, Mark."Beach Reading", Lethe Press, 2008.

A Romantic Comic Mystery

Amos Lassen

I just finished reading Mark Abramson's "Beach Reading" and the only word I can think of to describe it is "WOW!". It's a short book--only 193 pages--and each of those pages is a pleasure.
The story takes place in San Francisco and it manages to cover many of the issues of gay life including homophobia, relationships, and S&M (stand and pose) as well as others. "Beach Reading is a "love song to San Francisco" and I felt like singing along as I read it. It seems that city on the bay has been the center of gay life forever and after reading this you will understand why.
Gay male tourists find their way to San Francisco by planeloads for what is to be "the party of the decade", a tribute to Sylvester at the Moscone Center. As it happens at major gay events, it is not only gay men who arrive and the Christian right led by Arlo Montgomery also finds his way there. He and his cohorts have come to protest the event and they have set up camp a few blocks away from the festivities at the Civic Auditorium. Tim Snow, a gay activist, plans to protest the protest and the fun and games begin.
I understand that this is the first in a series of books that Mark Abramson is writing on gay life. I plan to be a major fan and I will be bringing news of them when they are published. I also must commend Steve Berman of Lethe Press for picking up the slack that the folding of Harrington Park Press created.




Beach Reading Overview


Gay tourists are arriving in San Francisco by the planeload for the party of the decade at the Moscone Center, a tribute to a late disco star. On the same night as the dance festival, a infamous evangelist plans to bring his nationwide crusade against gay rights to the Civic Auditorium a few blocks away. Tim Snow finds himself caught in the middle when his activist friends plan a protest. For Tim, the fun and the intrigue are about to begin.

Beach Reading , a San Francisco Chronicle best-seller, is equal parts mystery and romantic comedy set in romantic San Francisco with a taste for adventure, a touch of magic.


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Bending the Landscape: Original Gay and Lesbian Writing: Science Fiction

Bending the Landscape: Original Gay and Lesbian Writing: Science Fiction Review



Bending the Landscape: Science Fiction, is the first of a three-part series of "original gay and lesbian writing" edited by Nicola Griffith and Stephen Pagel (not very coincidentally, a participant in Outworlders, a local Atlanta GLBTQ sci fi / fantasy fan group and the parent group to a book group I belong to.) After choosing Storm Constantine's The Sign for the Sacred as our group's first fantasy selection, we turned to Bending as a book that would cover science fiction but also appeal to a variety of tastes. Also playing into the selection was the fact that the book had been awarded a number of extremely prestigious awards and Stephen Pagel would possibly come to our meeting to discuss it (which he did!)

When I started on Bending, I really didn't quite know what to expect; most of my affection for science fiction comes not from books but from movies and television, so I really didn't know how much of it I would enjoy. I soon discovered that my wariness was unfounded, for not only did I enjoy the science fiction, but the designation "science fiction" didn't really cover what I was reading -- I found a lot of what I considered "fantasy" as well. I also discovered that Griffith and Pagel made some truly excellent story selections.

Bending features stories which, so Pagel told us himself, cover the full spectrum of science fiction -- everything from futuristic private eye stories to time travel escapades to stories of alien worlds to explorations of cyber consciousness and gender identity. Clearly, this was not a book simply thrown together or with the lowest common denominator in mind. Instead, it's a book in which writers of all sexual orientations explore situations that explore one of science fiction's enduring themes, "the Alien, the Not-Self, the Other," with the "other" a lesbian or gay man (interpreted, so the book's introduction admits, "liberally.")

There were a lot of stories in Bending that I loved and several which actually reminded me strongly of Storm's stories. For example, "The City in Morning" by Carrie Richardson reads like a chapter from a lost Storm Constantine novel. "On Vacation" is a subtly hilarious tale of aliens living on earth a la Men In Black. Far and away my favorite story, which I must have reread a dozen time the day I first read it, was the beautiful, elegant and sweetly heart-rending "Silent Passion" by Kathleen O'Malley. Set in A.C. Crispin's StarBridge universe, to which O'Malley has contributed two books), the story is one I summed up to a friend as featuring "giant gay, signing, alien crane-creatures" and their interaction with gay human couple, whose relationship turns a new corner when the narrator is finally able to move beyond the pain of human intolerance. It's a beautiful, life - and love-affirming story which I doubt I will ever forget and which I plan to lead me on to O'Malley's two StarBridge novels, which, so Pagel tells me, feature these same amazing crane-aliens.

Knowing there are two more Bending anthologies (fantasy and horror), I am sure I have many more great tales ahead of me.




Bending the Landscape: Original Gay and Lesbian Writing: Science Fiction Overview


Volume II of the award-winning collection of gay and lesbian short fiction exploring the horror genre.

On the heels of the phenomenal success and acclaim of Volume I (Science Fiction), Bending the Landscape: Horror brings together a tantalizing slew of truly "horrific" tales guaranteed to provoke, entertain and inspire fear. Nicola Griffith and Stephen Pagel have, once again, compiled an exciting array of never-before-published stories both from talented newcomers and award-winning genre veterans. In Kraig Blackwelder's Coyote Love, a man wakes up in a stranger's bed, not knowing how he got there. Terror ensues as the reader is shown just how far a person is willing to go to deny reality. In The WereSlut of Avenue A, Leslie What shows us that change is not always a good thing as we witness what may or may not be a physical transformation into something inhuman. These stories, written by writers both gay and straight, incite fear and spur thought. Contributors include Brian A. Hopkins, Holly Wade Matter, A.J. Potter, Carrie Richerson, Mark Tiedmann, Alexis Glynn Latner and more.


Bending the Landscape: Original Gay and Lesbian Writing: Science Fiction Specifications


This second volume of Nicola Griffith and Stephen Pagel's Bending the Landscape anthology series focuses on science fiction stories (the first book covered fantasy, and the third will cover horror). The editors asked contributors to "imagine a different landscape... some milieu that had not happened" and then address the theme of Alien or Other, with the Other being a lesbian or gay man. Since the writers include men and women, gay and straight, the results are fascinating and kaleidoscopic.

One of the best stories in this stellar bunch is Ellen Klages's "Time Gypsy," a "lesbian time-travel-romance-revenge story" about a scientist who discovers love in an unlikely way. L. Timmel Duchamp's "Dance at the Edge" is a heartbreaking story of visibility and strength, and Richard A. Bamberg looks at what it might be like to be the last gay person on Earth in "Love's Last Farewell."

Big name authors like Charles Sheffield, Nancy Kress, Stephen Baxter, and Elizabeth Vonarburg contribute stories as well. The science fiction volume, like all the Bending the Landscape anthologies, addresses universal themes of otherness, love, and loss. Great reading for the 21st century. --Adam Fisher

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5/10/10

Gay & Lesbian Atlas

Gay & Lesbian Atlas Review



Gary Gates and Jason Ost have presented a carefully crafted volume, filled with gist for tremendous insights. Their methodology is clearly explained, and they have done an admirable job of trying to portray cartographic imagery of the gay and lesbian population of the United States.

This volume certainly belongs in every public and school library in the country.

And yet, I experienced a certain amount of frustration while poring over the state-by-state and city-by-city maps portrayed in this volume. This frustration does not stem from the admirable work of the authors, but rather from three sources largely beyond their control.

First among these sources of frustration is that the census data collected on same sex coupling, enticing as it is, leaves much to be desired. The census methodology makes the imputation of lesbian and gay populations difficult, at best. The only enumeration is of co-habiting "unmarried" partners of like gender. Left out are couples where neither is the 'head of household', couples not living in the same residence, or who are living in group quarters (such as housing complexes, nursing homes, and correctional facilities). Also left out are single gay & lesbian people, those who do not declare their relationship as an "unmarried partnership", and those who are currently cohabiting with a partner of dissimilar gender, or are in some other form of less traditional relationship status.
The limitation of our knowledge base to cohabiting couples of similar gender is frustrating when trying to imagine the exhuberant diversity of our communities as displayed across geographic space.

My second frustration stems from the difficulty in displaying information that is highly dependent on population density. In the maps these authors portray, the vast majority of the country looks as though there is a paucity of gay and lesbian couples. This is chiefly due to the fact that rural settings take up a lot of "space" on the map, while urban clusters are often barely visible, let alone the small-area variation in the prevalence of couples across the urban landscape.
The authors have tried to overcome this difficulty somewhat by displaying blow-ups of various cities (such as San Francisco, Houston, Boston, etc.), but often these maps of cities are so de-contextualized from their surroundings that it is difficult to visualize the residential patterns of similar gender couples. For example, Boston is displayed without the integrally linked cities of Cambridge and Somerville that (at least anecdotally) contain a large proportion of Boston's gay and lesbian community.

My third frustration stems from the fact that the authors have presented only one measure of gay & lesbian residental patterns (to be fair, three measures: one for gays, one for lesbians, and one combined). This is a relative measure, which is a bit more difficult to interpret than an absolute measure, such as the proportion of similar gender couple-headed households, would have been, because the 'normal' reference for each state is different, making parts of rural North Dakota look as queer-friendly as Manhattan.
Furthermore the authors have limited themselves to a single gay/lesbian index, presumably because of the prohibitive cost of producing a volume with multiple indices. The drawback to this is that a variety of audiences will be interested in more than the relative concentration of lesbian and gay households to all households. The census, for instance, has elected to present data on same sex households as a proportion of all coupled households, rather than including single person households, or households in which the adults have no stated relationship. Other viewers may wish to consider only those households where the head is over a given age.

Much of these difficulties could be overcome by creating an accompanying website which would allow a reader/viewer to zoom in and out according to their own particular preferences, and to display the index of lesbian/gay residential density of greatest interest to them.

All in all, this volume is a tremendous effort and acheivement, hampered not by the authors' originality or effort, but by inescapable quirks of census data collection, and the ability of our minds to grapple with spatial information.

Bill Jesdale, Providence RI (by the way, the finest queer community in the country...)



Gay & Lesbian Atlas Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780877667216
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.



Gay & Lesbian Atlas Overview


While the words "we are everywhere" can be frequently heard at gay and lesbian political events, The Gay and Lesbian Atlas provides the first empirical confirmation of this rallying cry. Drawing on the most recent data from the U.S. Census, this groundbreaking work offers a detailed geographic and demographic portrait of gay and lesbian families in all 50 states plus the top 25 U.S. metropolitan areas. These results, presented in more than 250 full-color maps and charts, will both confirm and challenge anecdotal information about the spatial distribution and demographic characteristics of this community. It is probably no surprise that San Francisco, Key West, and western Massachusetts all host large gay and lesbian populations, but it might surprise some that Houston, Texas, contains one of the ten "gayest" neighborhoods in the country, or that Alaska and New Mexico have high concentrations of gay and lesbian couples in their senior populations. The Atlas is a unique and important resource for the political and public policy communities, public health officials, social scientists, and anyone interested in gay and lesbian issues.


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Sexual Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men

Sexual Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men Review



I am amazed that I missed this book until a couple months ago. Indeed, it amazes me how few people have been motivated to write a review of it.

Rotello really explains in a simple sensible understandable fashion how the AIDS epidemic resulted from changes in technology , sexual role changes among gay males , social patterns of IV drug users (those in NYC shared needles in galleries while on the West Coast most used their own works at home and escaped the epidemic) and finally how hyperpromiscuity in large cities were the core centers for spreading this epidemic.

Most importantly, Rotello sees a continuing disaster in the gay community if old patterns of multi-partner 1970s promiscuity are reverted to by today's generation.

This is a must read book for anyone touched by this disease. It should get 50 stars.




Sexual Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men Overview


ntensively researched, passionately argued, and intellectually rigorous, Sexual Ecology sounds a clarion call for the controversial revision of the gay male community's beliefs about and approaches to AIDS. It is widely agreed that Sexual Ecology is the first book since And the Band Played On to fundamentally challenge social perceptions of this virulent modern plague. Gabriel Rotello argues that a series of accepted views, such as "there are no such things as risk groups, only risky behaviors," the product of well-intentioned attempts to combat social stigma are fallacies that have hampered our attempts to study the disease. From the false security of condoms to the seeming magic bullet of protease inhibitors, simplistic ways of looking at AIDS have allowed thousands of gay men to become infected each year. Weaving together the intertwining threads of sexual politics, science, and survival, Sexual Ecology constructs an incisive, even-handed discussion that has been debated by activists and affirmed by scientists and epidemiologists, and that is relevant to all our lives.
The extremely strong response to the hardcover and wide media coverage confirms the timely nature of the subject.
Includes a new afterword by the author.



Sexual Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men Specifications


There was a time, before AIDS, when gay male culture was often synonymous with multiple partners, bathhouses, and an emphasis on youth and physical beauty. Monogamy was identified with "straight" culture and therefore something to be resisted. Even when the AIDS epidemic was at its height, the gay community promoted condom use but did little to discourage risky behavior. In his groundbreaking book Sexual Ecology, author Gabriel Rotello views the epidemic in a new way: as part of an ecological system. Rotello's approach, while unique in the study of AIDS, is one familiar to the environmental movement. He sees the disease not as a discrete element, but as part of a system of "behaviors, thoughts and feelings that made gay culture so susceptible to AIDS."

Although Rotello aims his book primarily at a gay audience, Sexual Ecology has a wider appeal. His chronicle follows the growth of promiscuity among homosexual men through its promotion by bathhouse owners and the gay media. Equally fascinating is the current trend toward more mainstream values among many gay men. Finally, his suggestions for making gay culture sustainable (in the words of environmental science) instead of self-destructive provide serious food for thought and for debate.

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5/8/10

The Gay Detective

The Gay Detective Review



Originally published in 1961, The Gay Detective by Lou Rand is a highly recommended "pulp fiction" gem that combines the "hard-boiled" detective genre with a brightly flaming twist. Set in a fictional city that mirrors San Francisco, and set among a scene populated by handsome thugs, vituperous drag queens, remorseless businessmen and cops and politicians on the take, The Gay Detective paints a sometimes shocking, sometimes flamboyant, often over-the-top, but consistently engaging and entertaining noir picture which is certain to be relished by hard-boiled mystery fans for its irony, camp, and deftly written plot turns.




The Gay Detective Overview


Before there was Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City, vintage pulp writer Lou Rand delivered this high-camp masterpiece. Set in Beat-era gay-mecca-in-the-making San Francisco, the 1961 novel stars a sissy gumshoe, his butch ex-Marine assistant, a nymphomaniac on the make, and plenty of dishy humor. This flamboyant whodunit is now available for the first time in three decades.


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5/7/10

Jane Eyre - My Brother James (Gay Classic)

Jane Eyre - My Brother James (Gay Classic) Review



Generally, loved it, will be passing to the book club for review. The conclusion to Weathering Heights is great, the ending very haunting, loved it, loved the end, very romanic.
Ok so not everyone is in to the old stuff, we recommend the Sinbad and Tarzan series by Arius.
I've read most of the classic, they imply sex, and male glances at one another. HOney your not glancing in these books, your apart of it it. Love the story telling, the romance between the men and the hidden hardships of the era, have passed to the book club for review, the book club gives this one 5 stars.




Jane Eyre - My Brother James (Gay Classic) Overview


Jane Eyre - My Brother James - Is the retelling of the classic with a gay twist.
This book is illustrated with gay sex, male one on one sex and illustrations, if this offeneds you, do not buy this book.
This is the classic tale of love, passion, male lust and greed that end as no one will guess, or maybe you have. Yes, there is sex, and illustrations of sex, I cannot state this strongly enough.
Cum, take a journey into the days of old, into the country side that once was and into the lives of the manor house and find in the end the result of the adventure.
Other titles by this Author are:
Ride Em' Cowboy - Train Robbers
Tarzan's First Love
The Making of A Gay American Spy
Ride Em' Cowboy - The Store Clerk
Growing Up Gay
Soldiers - Prisoner of War
Islam - Religon of Hate
The Islamic Wars
Ride Em Cowboy-Cum Ride My Phony
Soldier-Prisoner of War
Soldier-Prisoner of War - New Edited
Frankenstein - For the Love of a Man
The GAY Vampire
The Cliff House Vampire
These Are My Children
Finding Simon
Ride Em' Cowboy – Dodge City
The Gay Vampire – The Journey Home
A Romance in the Wilderness
From Boys to Men
Ride Em’ Cowboy – The Grizzly
Sinbad – The Balloon Kingdom
Tarzan – The Awakening
Alien Encounter
Cum Ride My Pony
Drag Queen – Alice in Wonderland
Edward
Ghosts and Nightmares
Jane Eyre – My Brother James
Weathering Heights – Conclusion
Ride Em Cowboy – The Dude Ranch
Ride Em Cowboy – He Lived to Tell the Tale
Ride Em Cowboy – Indian Affairs
The Cliff House Vampire
Sinbad the Gay Sailor
Whispers in the Night




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5/6/10

Modern Homosexualities: Fragments of Lesbian and Gay Experiences

Modern Homosexualities: Fragments of Lesbian and Gay Experiences Review






Modern Homosexualities: Fragments of Lesbian and Gay Experiences Overview


This collection of nineteen original essays by activists and academics both documents and analyzes the dramatic changes taking place in lesbian and gay experience over the last twenty years. It charts the growth of lesbian and gay studies and examines key issues for gay communities, identities, relationships, sexualities and politics. Edited by a leading author in the field, these essays mark a new confidence and maturity for the growing field of lesbian and gay studies.


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A Gay American Spy - What would you do for your country? How far would you go? (Gay Spy)

A Gay American Spy - What would you do for your country? How far would you go? (Gay Spy) Review






A Gay American Spy - What would you do for your country? How far would you go? (Gay Spy) Overview


What is real, what is not? What can be seen, what can not? Who is a Spy? Who Is Not?

This is the true story of just such a spy, an, American,and gay. This is a very odd story, one that many will not believe, many will question and others will outright dismiss it. Frankly, I don't care. This book was not written for anyone but the person who lived this unquestionably remarkable life. Justification, truth, its all here. Many will not want to hear it, others will not want to read it. The response is simple: then don't. Justification is not needed. The events in this book are real, they happened. Many of the places, names of people, and events have been alterned to protect the living, the nation, and the author. This is the story of Morris, the Gay American Spy who has seen it all, been a part of the spy world since 1975 and lived this remarkable life which had an impact on the United States and in some cases, the world. Here is that life.
Other titles by this Author are:
From Boys to Men
Ride Em' Cowboy - Train Robbers
The Making of A Gay American Spy
Ride Em' Cowboy - The Store Clerk
Growing Up Gay
Soldiers - Prisoner of War
Islam - Religon of Hate
The Islamic Wars
Ride Em Cowboy-Cum Ride My Phony
Ride Em' Cowboy – Dodge City
Ride Em’ Cowboy – The Grizzly
Weathering Heights – Conclusion
Ride Em Cowboy – The Dude Ranch
Ride Em Cowboy – He Lived to Tell the Tale
Ride Em Cowboy – Indian Affairs
The Cliff House Vampire
Sinbad – The Balloon Kingdom
Sinbad the Gay Sailor
Sinbad & The Diamond King
Sinbad and Mendor theMonster
Whispers in the Night
Tarzan – The Awakening
Tarzan's First Love
Tarzan His Own Kind
Tarzan and the Lost Empire
Alien Encounter
Cum Ride My Pony
Drag Queen – Alice in Wonderland
Edward
Ghosts and Nightmares
Jane Eyre – My Brother James
Soldier-Prisoner of War
Soldier-Prisoner of War - New Edited
Frankenstein - For the Love of a Man
The GAY Vampire
The Cliff House Vampire
These Are My Children
Finding Simon
The Gay Vampire – The Journey Home
A Romance in the Wilderness





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5/4/10

Fresh Men 2: New Voices in Gay Fiction (v. 2)

Fresh Men 2: New Voices in Gay Fiction (v. 2) Review



I read a lot of these collections having followed the Men On Men series Penguin did for years. I read the first of these and wasn't all that gung ho for it, but it didn't really deter me from trying this one out. This one is better than the first one, there is a story here and there that just doesn't work, as there are with most collections, but the majority of these stories are well done and many of these writers have or should be well on their way to full fledged novels by now. It is a good way to test out new writers to decide if you will like their stuff before committing to a full novel.




Fresh Men 2: New Voices in Gay Fiction (v. 2) Overview


Fresh Men 2 collects the best new writing by emerging gay authors from around the nation. With equal parts sensitivity and irreverence, the anthology speaks to the broad range of gay experiences. From stories of coming out, coming of age, self-representation and family to sex and love in the time of AIDS, from living in the closet to loving in a post-gay world, this book highlights the complexities of gay life. Fresh Men 2 is a groundbreaking collection that also embodies a wide spectrum of literary tastes, from works rich in experimental, transgressive elements to more conventional, traditionally crafted stories.


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5/3/10

Spartacus International Gay Guide 2007

Spartacus International Gay Guide 2007 Review



I travel often and around the globe. Spartacus will bump out underware (or anything else for that matter) from my suitcase if needed. The previous review of only 4 stars is strange....this is the guide which all others are rated against. It's 5 out of 5 for global usage. Spartacus is truely the only guide you'll need. And at around 20 bux, why are we even talking about it? The cost is under 2 drinks at a bar cost-wise. This is one of my annual purchases. Buy it and you'll not regret it.




Spartacus International Gay Guide 2007 Overview


SPARTACUS INTERNATIONAL GAY offers rapid orientation to all the most important locations for the gay tourist: addresses, tips, and information for more than 160 countries worldwide. With over 22 000 addresses the SPARTACUS covers all the highlights for the gay man, Whether you are looking for an extraordinary hotel, the hottest clubs the most exciting gay beaches or the most popular bars, you will find all this and much more. Hot off the press!


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5/1/10

Fatherhood for Gay Men: An Emotional and Practical Guide to Becoming a Gay Dad

Fatherhood for Gay Men: An Emotional and Practical Guide to Becoming a Gay Dad Review



REVIEWED BY: Francis A. Martin, Ph.D.
Department of Counseling and Human Resource Development
South Dakota State University, Brookings.

APPEARED IN: THE FAMILY JOURNAL: COUNSELING AND THERAPY FOR COUPLES AND FAMILIES / July 2004

In my heart I knew that I was a natural dad, but intellectually I had to convince myself that I could do it?

Mr. McGarry's comment may seem to be a little odd to many of us. Most of us don't have to convince ourselves that we can do it when it comes to deciding to be a parent. Generally, we just do it, because we know that we can and because we want to. For many of us, finding an answer to the question about whether to become a parent is just a little more challenging than breathing.

But what if the person who wants to be a parent is a gay man? How does he enter the psychological and social zones of existence that allow him to know that his desire to be a parent is OK? And beyond the turmoil of sorting through the complex inner map that shows no clear roads to gay parenthood, how does a man become a gay father? What does the lawsay that he can do? How does he get a child? How much is it going to cost?

Among all of the questions and challenges, he must, in his own way, settle for himself the rightness of becoming a gay father. As McGarry reveals, this is no easy process. But as he also reveals, it is extraordinarily fulfilling and life affirming.

And then, he gets to work. Among many things, McGarry finds a way to complete a home study to show that he is capable of caring for a child, knowing that as he seeks to get it done, he may find a social worker who rejects the possibility of a man becoming a gay father. Then, of course, he must find a child within a limited time or he must have another home study done. This, however, is mostly easy stuff. Finding a child is the hard part. Paying for the whole process is another hard part, with costs of approximately U.S.,000, according to McGarry.

Luckily, for those who are interested in getting information about these matters, McGarry provides it. He gives details about home studies, locating children, the relevant laws in each of the United States, the costs involved in adoption, and much more. So, as McGarry invites his readers to share his search, with its uniquely internal and external aspects, its emotional and practical aspects, he gives insights and information that every prospective gay father needs. In response to this, the reader is likely to feel as much gratitude as intimidation, as much eagerness as dread, and as much real expectation as confusion.

McGarry traveled to Vietnam to adopt his children. He uses some of the sections of his book to describe his experiences that are associated with his Vietnam connections. Fortunately, he uses other sections to share the diary that he kept, revealing much of the substance that may be important for those who want to become a gay father and understanding for those who care about them. As opposed to seeing a picture of it, reading his diary entries is akin to smelling a rose and touching it.

In some important ways, this book does not comport with the standards of well-written books. The diary entries are not very efficient, although they are insightful and truly moving experiences to read. The discussion of state laws and practices
that may help an explorer to decide in which state he wants to become a gay father leaves the reader knowing a great deal but not enough. Sometimes, its ideas seem to be lacking in detail, as if the story should contain more than the author knows. Sometimes, its promise of being a significant resource for its readers exceeds the reach of possibility. However, if these few features of this book are the ones to which a reader gives significant attention, the importance of this book will have been missed. Serious and competent readers often discover that the author who has something important to say is more important and more influential than the author who writes well but has nothing of importance to offer. McGarry is a writer who has something important to say.

As a writer,Mr. McGarry has produced a reasonably good product. Frankly, though, evaluating him as a writer misses the significance of what he has accomplished. More than being a writer, he is a man who presents the experience of seeking to adopt a child and doing it and then writes from the experience of repeating the process. He reveals his sometime torment and sometime ecstasy, with serious swings of mood in between these two extremes, along with true grit and ingenuity in overcoming huge barriers. Because of his passion to disclose his experience to others, he attempts to provide a somewhat encyclopedic document, falling short in this short document, of course. Falling short in this way, however, matters very little when compared with his attempt to accomplish something that is deeply personal and newas a fundamentally important contribution to a major social change.

Given all that this book appeared to promise, I was skeptical of it. After reading it, I concluded that it is an important book that many parents should read. Clearly, men who aspire to be gay fathers must read it. Its importance, though, is bigger than this. Surely, it is a gift to these men as well as being a gift to the rest of us. The gift is that it helps men who want to be gay dads and helps the rest of us to understand our parenting a little better, but its larger gift is that it helps to initiate, legitimate, and facilitate major social change. Long after some of its shortcomings are forgotten, this book will be remembered because McGarry eased the way for many men who want to be gay ads and eased theway for the rest of us to be more understanding, fulfilled, and effective human beings. What better gift could a writer give? What better incentive for social change could we need?




Fatherhood for Gay Men: An Emotional and Practical Guide to Becoming a Gay Dad Overview


Get the inside story on a single gay man's struggle to adopt!

Fatherhood for Gay Men: An Emotional and Practical Guide to Becoming a Gay Dad is the story of one man's journey down the road less traveled—a single gay man adopting and raising his two sons. Author Kevin McGarry recounts his passage into parenthood after years of having his natural fathering instincts stifled by the limits—real and perceived—of being gay. This unique book details the emotional, financial, practical, and social realities of the adoption process for gay men.

From the author: "We take risks by coming out of the closet as gay men and at the end of the day, we are emotionally happier because we took those risks. By coming out, we are being true to who we are. The same goes for anyone, gay or straight, who has gut instincts for parenthood. I knew over the years that I had parenting instincts because I had this incredible envy of other dads. I would watch them with their kids and wish that somehow, I could have that role. It was painful at times because being gay, I didn't think parenting was in my life plan. Had more role models been available to me, the process would have been a little less difficult."

Much more than a "how-to" guide to adoption, Fatherhood for Gay Men is the personal account of a single gay man's struggle to become a father despite the real and imagined limitations of being a gay man. The book looks at the adoption process (domestic and international) from the inside, providing unique insight into:

conducting a homestudy
costs (fees and expenses)
what countries allow men to adopt
alternatives to adoption
life as a new parent
online resources
and a state-by-state review of adoption laws, categorized by "Completely Legal," "Favorable Climate," "Mixed Success," and "Illegal"

The book also includes results of the 2000 study by Gillian Dunne, senior researcher for the London School of Economics Gender Institute, of 100 gay fathers and fathers-to-be. "Fatherhood for Gay Men: An Emotional and Practical Guide to Becoming a Gay Dad is a heartfelt and heartwarming story of a father's refusal to be denied a family.


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4/29/10

Gay TV and Straight America

Gay TV and Straight America Review



Becker, Ron. "Gay TV and Straight America", Rutgers University Press, 2006.

Ending the Silence

Amos Lassen


As we learn in Steve Capsuto's fascinating study on gays on TV and radio, Ron Becker takes us one step further as the looks at the 1990's and the increase in programming that incorporated and/or centered on gay material. So many shows dealt wih gays--"Friends", "Seinfeld", "Homocide", "Ellen", "Will and Grace, "Party of Five" and so on. Gay and lesbian relationships were explored and often in detail. Becker looks at the politics and the culture of the age and explains the new trend in gay iamages and representation on the little screen. He shows Supreme Court rulings and the media coerage of civil rights as well as debates, political correctness and so much more to explain how we got to be where we are today. He looks at the business strategies of the networks as they targeted a new section of society and consifered the limits of how far they could go. He also looks at mainstream anxiety and the audiences that embraced the new GLBT material.
There are stil controversies over what is broadcast yet millions turn on their TVs to see the new programming. We cannot really take this as a sign that we have arrived but it is a lot better than it was.




Gay TV and Straight America Overview


After decades of silence on the subject of homosexuality, television in the 1990s saw a striking increase in programming that incorporated and, in many cases, centered on gay material. In shows including "Friends", "Seinfeld", "Party of Five", "Homicide", "Suddenly Susan", "The Commish", "Ellen", "Will & Grace", and others, gay characters were introduced, references to homosexuality became commonplace, and issues of gay and lesbian relationships were explored, often in explicit detail. In "Gay TV and Straight America", Ron Becker draws on a wide range of political and cultural indicators to explain this sudden upsurge of gay material on prime-time network television. Bringing together analysis of relevant Supreme Court rulings, media coverage of gay rights battles, debates about multiculturalism, concerns over political correctness, and much more, Becker's assessment helps us understand how and why televised gayness was constructed by a specific culture of tastemakers during the decade. On one hand the evidence points to network business strategies that embraced gay material as a valuable tool for targeting a quality audience of well-educated, upscale adults looking for something "edgy" to watch. But, Becker also argues that the increase of gay material in the public eye creates growing mainstream anxiety in reaction to the seemingly civil public conversation about equal rights. In today's cultural climate where controversies rage over issues of gay marriage yet millions of viewers tune in weekly to programs like "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy", this book offers valuable insight to the complex condition of America's sexual politics.


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4/28/10

Ragged Angels

Ragged Angels Review






Ragged Angels Overview


A gay vampire romance novel that is both erotic and philosophically compelling.

When the book was first published in 1997, a print-reviewer stated: ...if you enjoyed Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles, you will surely love Ragged Angels for its bold depiction of love, sex and death: the three most profound experiences every human being must face. Ragged Angels takes the vampire mythos out of the Hollywood nonsense and brings to it a gritty realism mixed with some of the most erotic and sensuous writing in the genre of male/male fiction. This is one I'll read again for the dark philosophical look at immortality, as well as the resplendent and emotionally mature love story...


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4/26/10

Latin American Writers on Gay and Lesbian Themes: A Bio-Critical Sourcebook

Latin American Writers on Gay and Lesbian Themes: A Bio-Critical Sourcebook Review






Latin American Writers on Gay and Lesbian Themes: A Bio-Critical Sourcebook Overview


Homoerotic themes and undercurrents in Latin American literary works have been largely ignored. This reference explores the importance of gay and lesbian themes in Latin American literature by providing entries for more than a hundred authors. Each entry assesses and analyzes homoerotic elements in the work of a particular author and closes with a bibliography of primary and secondary material. Entries are arranged alphabetically for ease of use.


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4/24/10

Lost Gay Novels: A Reference Guide to Fifty Works Ffrom the First Half of the Twentieth Century

Lost Gay Novels: A Reference Guide to Fifty Works Ffrom the First Half of the Twentieth Century Review






Lost Gay Novels: A Reference Guide to Fifty Works Ffrom the First Half of the Twentieth Century Overview


Searching for an introduction to the shadowy, intriguing world of early 20th century gay-themed fiction?

In Lost Gay Novels, respected pop culture historian Anthony Slide resurrects fifty early 20th century American novels with gay themes or characters and discusses them in carefully researched, engaging prose. Each entry offers you a detailed discussion of plot and characters, a summary of contemporary critical reception, and biographical information on the often-obscure writer. In Lost Gay Novels, another aspect of gay life and society is, in the words the author, “uncloseted,” providing you with an absorbing glimpse into the world of these nearly forgotten books.

Lost Gay Novels gives you an introduction to:
  • authors who aren't usually associated with homosexuality, including John Buchan, James M. Cain, and Rex Stout
  • the history of gay publishing in the US and abroad
  • gay themes in novels published between 1917 and 1950—with entries from nearly every year!
  • the ways in which the popular culture of the time shaped the authors' attitudes toward homosexuality
  • the difficulty of finding detailed biographical information on little-known authors
If you're interested in gay studies or history, or even if you're just looking for a comprehensive guide to titles you've probably never heard of before, Lost Gay Novels will be a welcome addition to your collection. The introduction from author Slide—called by the Los Angeles Times “a one-man publishing phenomenon”—provides you with an overview to the basics of this landmark collection. Themes found in many of the titles include death, secrecy, and living a double life, and in reading the entries you will discover just why these themes are so common.

As Slide says in his introduction: “The approach of the novelist toward homosexuality may not always be a positive one… but the works are important to an understanding of contemporary attitudes toward gay men and gay society.” Lost Gay Novels will help you further your own understanding of the dynamic relationship between literature and culture, and you will finish the book with a greater appreciation of modern American gay fiction.


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4/22/10

Queer Japan: Personal Stories of Japanese Lesbians, Gays,Transsexuals and Bisexuals

Queer Japan: Personal Stories of Japanese Lesbians, Gays,Transsexuals and Bisexuals Review



People will stumble upon this book, I think, from their interest in other areas, gay and lesbian studies, or Japanese culture for example. The area of gay and lesbian studies in Japan is still so new and relatively small compared to the United States, for example, that as a discourse it does not quite have the independence and stature to attract wide notice or sympathy.

That said, this is an excellent introductory book, one-of-a-kind, in fact, of Queer Japan. In every story, translated by a trio of non-Japanese academics who have spent several years apiece in Japan and are active in gay-lesbian-bisexual-transexual groups, the author is awash with gratitude, to be allowed finally to speak in one's own voice, of the struggles, pain, and yes, the joys experienced. In such an oppressive culture, where candid, direct speech is not encouraged, or even actively discouraged as being childish and selfish, these essays are all the more remarkable.

My only complaint, which prevented me from giving 5 stars to the book, is technical: there are numerous grammatical errors, as well as careless word use. Sorry, I was an English major in college. I was trained to spot misuse of transitive/intransitive verbs, for example. It makes me sad that such errors suggest to me a lack of attention on the part of the publisher; in other words, this makes me feel that those involved in editing the book did not take as much pride in their own book as their subjects, which conflicts with the heartfelt call for those in the book, and others like them who struggle in Japan, to take pride in themselves, their essential beings.

In short, an excellent, though technically flawed book, for those looking to expand their understanding of modern Japan.





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4/20/10

Heat: Gay Men Tell Their Real-Life Sex Stories (Transworld)

Heat: Gay Men Tell Their Real-Life Sex Stories (Transworld) Review



"Jack Hart, the editor of My First Time and The Day We Met, is back with a brand-new collection of true gay sexual encounters that reads like the best of erotic fiction. Among the highlights in this group of over 60 stories: A man gets turned on by his physician during his yearly physical exam; a lieutenant has sex aboard ship with a Marine guard in 1967; a physical education assistant at a university has sex in the showers with a workout stud; two gay pledges discover each other in a frat house; the coach of a company softball team gives a player a 'special session'; two horny reserves bunk together during annual training exercises; and a guy gets caught trying to steal a blond neighbors briefs from their condo's laundry room. Covering experiences from first-time encounters to three-ways in tearooms, from military maneuvers to unexpected seductions, Heat is one book that won't cool down."--© zebraz




Heat: Gay Men Tell Their Real-Life Sex Stories (Transworld) Overview


Jack Hart is back with a brand-new collection of true gay sexual anecdotes that reads like the best of erotic fiction.From first-time encounters to three-ways in tearooms, Heat is one book that won't cool down!.


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4/13/10

Always My Child: A Parent's Guide to Understanding Your Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgendered or Questioning Son or Daughter

Always My Child: A Parent's Guide to Understanding Your Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgendered or Questioning Son or Daughter Review



Kevin Jennings, Executive Director of GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian, Straight Education Network) has co-authored the definitive book on guiding, understanding, and - hopefully - accepting in love your GLBTQ child. It is primarily targeted toward parents struggling to help and deal with their questioning or coming out teenage child.
This book is not specifically about dealing with transgender children, although there are about 30 pages devoted to dealing with issues and problems of Trans teens. It also talks to people of color and includes young peoples' input to parents. Cultural messages of gender and sexuality are discussed and techniques of dealing with these messages are offered for consideration.
Many of the popular myths about homosexuality and transgenderism are analyzed, with facts presented to aid in accepting and understanding. Suggestions are provided for dealing with friends, your teen's friends, neighbors, and coworkers. Signs of trouble are discussed, along with suggestions for helping your teen deal with them.
While the advice is directed toward sexual and gender diversity, the advice applies to dealing with any youth. The principles of dealing with children apply globally.
So what is the secret? The title says it best - "Always My Child." Your child's needs come first, no matter what. Love your child; don't pressure them, but encourage them to discus their feelings, fears, and problems.




Always My Child: A Parent's Guide to Understanding Your Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgendered or Questioning Son or Daughter Overview


The first book to focus on the day-to-day experiences of adolescents dealing with sexual identity issues, Always My Child provides the insights and practical strategies parents need to support their kids and cope themselves.


Parents whose children are gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or who are going through a "questioning phase" are often in the dark about what their children face every day. As a result, offering support that will comfort and fortify them feels like solving a puzzle with missing pieces.

In Always My Child, Kevin Jennings supplies the missing pieces by guiding parents through the world their child inhabits. He explains what these teens often encounter -- teasing and harassment -- and offers solutions for parents who want to better understand their LGBTQ children and learn how to protect their self-esteem. He offers advice, including how to:


  • Initiate constructive communication with their child
  • Respond effectively to frequently asked questions
  • Recognize depression and signs of drug abuse and harassment
  • Successfully advocate for their child's well-being outside the home


    Always My Child makes it possible for parents to create the kind of relationship with their children that allows them to grow into emotionally healthy adults.


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  • 4/11/10

    Gay and Lesbian Historical Fiction: Sexual Mystery and Post-Secular Narrative

    Gay and Lesbian Historical Fiction: Sexual Mystery and Post-Secular Narrative Review



    I have had the priveleg to have Norman as a professor and I can tell you that is very well informed, articulate, kind, and funny. I imagine this would be a wonderful read...but ? I guess I'll wait for a while...just one tip if you read this Proff. You're more likely to sway people to your point of veiw if they read the book :)




    Gay and Lesbian Historical Fiction: Sexual Mystery and Post-Secular Narrative Overview


    The first extensive study of gay and lesbian historical fiction, this book demonstrates how the highly popular genre helps us understand gay and lesbian history. It shows not only why the genre should be taken more seriously by historians but also how it implicitly works to ameliorate divisions between Christianity and homosexuality. The book contends that gay and lesbian historical fictions model ways of approaching sexual and historical mystery not as a threat to understanding but as its ground. These fictions thus implicitly undermine the supposed dichotomy between secular and sacred ways of knowing, thereby expanding the resources for ethical debate about homosexuality.



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    4/9/10

    Body, Remember: A Memoir (Living Out: Gay and Lesbian Autobiographies)

    Body, Remember: A Memoir (Living Out: Gay and Lesbian Autobiographies) Review



    Fries, Kenny, "Body, Remember: A Memoir", University of Wisconsin Press, 1997, 2003.

    A Moving Memoir

    Amos Lassen and Literary Pride

    Kenny Fries in "Body, Remember" has written a memoir that moves one to tears As we embark on a journey from sympathy to admiration, we read a book without a false note in it. When Fries wrote his memoir he was 36 years old and a noted poet, an essayist, and a critic. He writes what it is like to be disabled--he was born with two malformed legs as a result of a congenital birth defect and he endured many operations to correct. There is no "pity me" in his memoir--he uses honesty and even allows those he is or has been at odds with to maintain their dignity. With extreme patience Fries looks back on his life and explores family documents, medical records and memory (his own and his parents') to try to understand how he got to be where he is. He discovers that the details of his early life were unspoken but he was able to map out his sexual identity and sexual desire. As he comes to terms with himself, he also writes about what it is like to be different.
    Fries is a man very concerned with identity.
    Being gay and Jewish help him form a self image and as a person with a defect, he uses his memoir to help discover who he is. It is his disability that rules his life and it cannot be ignored as the most important facet of his life--in fact, it claims most of his attention. He has a complex self image, especially regarding his gayness by which his disability is not a part. He explores where he stands in terms of his religion concerning his homosexuality. These three personas--disabled, gay, and Jewish are the issues that concern him most and he reaches no conclusion--at least none that I could see. He seems to be able to balance the three. This lack of perspective is the only fault I can find with otherwise a beautifully written memoir.
    The beauty of the writing is the way that Fries interweaves memories and fragments from his life. It is almost hard to read when he writes of his brother who abused him both sexually and physically. Likewise his meetings with men in Israel and his ill-fated relationships with two other men are sad and heart-rending. He finally, after the publication of his poetry and years of psychotherapy, manages to achieve happiness with another man, Kevin, with whom he is still partnered.
    Fries wars scars on his body and on his mind and his self awareness of his physical deformity is examined in great detail. The book is deeply personal and is not a history but a memoir. He takes us on a journey from the shallow end of life where he could barely use his own legs to where he is able to achieve a rich and happy life.
    As I read, I thought how lucky I was that I only had to endure two of Fries problems--being Jewish and being gay. I can't imagine how much a physical disability can even make life that much harder.




    Body, Remember: A Memoir (Living Out: Gay and Lesbian Autobiographies) Overview


    In this poetic, introspective memoir, Kenny Fries illustrates his intersecting identities as gay, Jewish, and disabled. While learning about the history of his body through medical records and his physical scars, Fries discovers just how deeply the memories and psychic scars run. As he reflects on his relationships with his family, his compassionate doctor, the brother who resented his disability, and the men who taught him to love, he confronts the challenges of his life. Body, Remember is a story about connection, a redemptive and passionate testimony to one man's search for the sources of identity and difference.


    Body, Remember: A Memoir (Living Out: Gay and Lesbian Autobiographies) Specifications


    Kenny Fries, noted poet, critic, and essayist, has produced a moving and memorable memoir of what it is like to live with a body you are told is less than perfect. Fries was born with incompletely formed legs, a congenital birth defect that had no scientific name but entailed multiple surgeries just to partially correct. In Body, Remember, Fries, with patience and forbearance, travels back through his life--examining medical records, family papers, his own and his parents' memories--to uncover how he became who he is today. Fries's search is, in part, a mystery not simply because he uncovers many details of his early life unspoken within the family, but through its charting of the discovery of his sexual desire and identity. While much of Fries's memoir is a beautifully written elucidation of what it means to be "different," its fire and heart comes from its author's growing sense of self and dignity as he examines and learns to understand the scars on his psyche as well as on his body. --Michael Bronski

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    4/8/10

    Flesh: True Homosexual Experiences (v. 2)

    Flesh: True Homosexual Experiences (v. 2) Review







    Available at Amazon Check Price Now!




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    4/7/10

    Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Myths from the Arapaho to the Zuni: An Anthology (American Indian Studies, V. 13)

    Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Myths from the Arapaho to the Zuni: An Anthology (American Indian Studies, V. 13) Review







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    4/6/10

    A Gay Synagogue in New York

    A Gay Synagogue in New York Review



    Shokeid, Moshe, "A Gay Synagogue in New York", University of Pennsylvania Press, 1995, 2003.

    Beit Simchat Torah

    Amos Lassen

    For some reason for the longest time, spirituality and homosexuality did not mix. In recent years however many homosexual men and women are reaching out to religion with hopes of finding their place in it. "A Gay Synagogue in New York" tells us of Beit Simchat Torah in New York City. It is a real synagogue with a membership of real men and women and it is a fascinating story---for me especially because I can put faces with the names that I read about.
    The book examines the beginnings of the synagogue and its history and then looks at the need for separatist facilities for gay Jews. He examines the holy writings to find rustication for the existence of a gay synagogue and he looks at gender in general. One of the most rewarding chapters is how Simchat Torah reacted to the AIDS epidemic and how it survived when so many of its members did not. Finally we look at Simchat Torah as a safe place, as a gay place and as a Jewish place.
    This is an example of modern ethnography and it is wonderfully written. Here is an easy read that has a lot to say and it is not just for Jews but for anyone who wants to be included.




    A Gay Synagogue in New York Overview


    A Gay Synagogue in New York recounts the communal experiences and personal dilemmas of the congregants of Beth Simchat Torah, the largest gay and lesbian synagogue in the United States.




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    Muscle Men: Rock Hard Gay Erotica

    Muscle Men: Rock Hard Gay Erotica Review






    Muscle Men: Rock Hard Gay Erotica Overview


    Muscle Men is a celebration of the body beautiful, where men who look like Greek gods are worshipped for their outsized attributes. Editor Richard Labonté takes us into the erotic world of body builders and the men who desire them. These uninhibited stories are by the masters of the genre, including Jack Fritscher, Jeff Mann, Steven Bereznai, Tom Fuchs, and Ryan Field. At the gym, in the locker room, and especially in the steam room, the hunks who look hard, work hard, and play hard inspire fantasies the world over. Visit the masculine studs of Muscle Men to enjoy a taste of their strength and power.



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    4/5/10

    Looking at Gay and Lesbian Life

    Looking at Gay and Lesbian Life Review



    A great many exceptionally astute, historically accurate, ethically sound, and sexually accurate books have been written on the subjects of "Homosexuality", "Gay or Lesbian" attitudes, lifestyles, and sexual practices, Blumenfeld and Raymond quote or repeat the core of actual information previously presented and do it well and clearly.

    What is remarkable and new is that there presentation has incredible simple clarity. This clarity goes beyond the actual presentation of thinking and ideas. These authors have actually made the words "Gay" and "Lesbian" words of reasonable behaviour, reasonable lifestyle, and reasonable sexuality.

    Through their presentation they have clearly defined and (more importantly) emotionally presented the Gay and Lesbian world as an arena or paradigm of Normalcy, and this is something which has been crying out to be accomplished ever since the late 19th century published brilliance of Edward Carpenter and the incredible energy, courage, and insisting writing of One Magazine in the 1950s and 1960s. It is a tour de Force of Demonstrated Normalcy for an aspect of our civilization which has been called every negative name known to all of us. As such, in its very quite way, it is a very revolutionary book.




    Looking at Gay and Lesbian Life Overview


    The most reliable and comprehensive source of information about every major aspect of te lives of gay men and lesbians.


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    Homosexuality and Male Bonding in Prenazi Germany: The Youth Movement, the Gay Movement, and Male Bonding Before Hitler's Rise : Original Transcript

    Homosexuality and Male Bonding in Prenazi Germany: The Youth Movement, the Gay Movement, and Male Bonding Before Hitler's Rise : Original Transcript Review






    Homosexuality and Male Bonding in Prenazi Germany: The Youth Movement, the Gay Movement, and Male Bonding Before Hitler's Rise : Original Transcript Overview


    This is a landmark publication featuring English translations of selections from the early gay German journal, Der Eigene. This collection, previously scattered and difficult to read in the original German, allows readers direct access to primary source material on the early gay movement. Neglected for years, these articles provide insight into the early gay movement, particularly in its relation to the various political currents in pre-World War II Germany. Simultaneously, the essays are relevant to current discussions and debates in contemporary gay, women’s, and youth movements. Masterly introductory and concluding essays add additional insight by placing the articles in their historical context, discussing their past and current significance, and drawing lessons for the future. Readers of all levels of sophistication will find this anthology a fascinating look at homosexuality in early years.


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    4/4/10

    Best Gay Romance 2010

    Best Gay Romance 2010 Review





    Best Gay Romance 2010 Feature


    • ISBN13: 9781573443777
    • Condition: NEW
    • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.



    Best Gay Romance 2010 Overview


    Best Gay Romance 2010 covers every romantic possibility with first love, true love, wake-up sex, makeup sex and everything in between. Richard Labonté has gathered a sensational collection of stories about finding love at home, at work, at any age, and often in the most unexpected places. Contributor David Holly's "meet cute" hook-up in "Guy Sydney," is a thoroughly modern love story, while Elazarus Wills's dramatic "A Companion for the Road" shows that many things get better with age. Trebor Healy's New Orleans star-crossed lovers in "Trunk" encounter voodoo, hoodoo, and an unexpectedly sweet surprise. Each story is redolent with romance, great sex, and characters who are fully fleshed out in more ways than one. Sometimes rowdy, always randy, and surprisingly tender, these tales celebrate the coming together of souls as well as bodies. Whether happily ever after or just a happy ending, Labonté continues to raise the bar on gay love stories.



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    Current Issues in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, And Transgender Health

    Current Issues in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, And Transgender Health Review






    Current Issues in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, And Transgender Health Overview


    Learn what resources are needed for lesser-recognized LGBT health issues

    Most literature that explores LGBT health issues concentrates on HIV/AIDS while leaving research studies on other vital issues lacking. Current Issues in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Health addresses this inadequacy by presenting a broad range of LGBT health issues from an interdisciplinary and mixed-method perspective. Leading experts present both quantitative and qualitative descriptions of health issues among various population groups, focusing on those topics poorly represented in present-day literature. This book is a strong start to fill in the blanks about unrealized health issues of LGBT individuals and offers insights into the resources needed to address them.

    Methods to assess sexual orientation and gender identity are not normally found in most population-based research. Because of the diversity within the relatively small LGBT population, research has been forced to generalize, making it less likely to effectively contribute to quality health issue data for these individuals. The research presented in Current Issues in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Health takes particular care to specify how the orientation and sexual identity of study participants was measured. This book carefully mines previously unrevealed health disparities among LGBT populations across a broad spectrum of diseases—beyond the standard focus on HIV/AIDS. The most current and important studies are presented, including rare research on transgender health issues. The chapters are extensively referenced, and several include figures and tables to clarify and enhance understanding of the information.

    The wide range of topics in Current Issues in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Health include:

    the inclusion of sexual orientation questions in research studies

    comparison of mental health issues between women of different sexual orientations

    mental health issues among men of different sexual orientations and HIV status in Australia

    the impact of sexual identity distress and social support in GLBT youth issues

    transgender youth health issues

    female-to-male (FTM) transexuals’ experiences accessing health care

    research on LBT domestic violence survivors

    health needs of male-to-female (MTF) transgenders of color

    Current Issues in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Health is crucial, thought-provoking reading for researchers working in LGBT health, public health professionals working in community health and LGBT health, policymakers, advocates, public health and community health faculty, and students interested in LGBT health issues.


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