Posted on October 16, 2009 by Leslie
Say To Me Where the Flowers Are
Augusta Li and Eon de Beaumont
World War II draws to a close. Hope and happiness are scarce on the streets of Berlin, but step inside one of the city’s celebrated cabaret nightclubs and one can escape the ugliness of war, if only for a few hours. Heinrich, a young [...]
Filed under: 1 star, 1940's, Leslie H Nicoll, Phaze, World War II | 3 Comments »
Posted on June 30, 2009 by Hayden
A literary cause célèbre when first published more than fifty years ago, Gore Vidal’s now-classic The City and the Pillar stands as a landmark novel of the gay experience.
Jim, a handsome, all-American athlete, has always been shy around girls. But when he and his best friend, Bob, partake in “awful kid stuff,” the experience forms [...]
Filed under: 1940's, America, Fiction, Hayden Thorne, Reviews, World War II, three stars | 1 Comment »
Posted on April 19, 2009 by Erastes
The Private Pictures of Montague Glover.
A Class Apart is a selection of photographs and letters culled from the archive of Montague Glover (1898-1983) documenting the intimate, rarely recorded lives of gay men in Britain from the First World War to the 1950s. The book features Glover’s three obsessions: the Armed Forces, working-class men, and his [...]
Filed under: 1900's, 1920's, 1930's, 1940's, 1950's, Erastes, Essential Reads, Photography, Resources, Reviews, True Life, World War I, World War II, five stars | 9 Comments »
Posted on November 10, 2008 by Erastes
Adam Jackson feels frustrated that he isn’t doing more for the war effort; a liaison job with the War cabinet is hardly as glamorous as being in the forces. Nor is London, in the grip of the Blitz, the sort of place where a young man expects to find love, especially when your ideal partner [...]
Filed under: 1940's, 4 stars, Reviews, World War II | 1 Comment »
Posted on July 26, 2008 by Erastes
Like the comic books that animate and inspire it, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay is both larger than life and of it too. Complete with golems and magic and miraculous escapes and evil nemeses, even hand-to-hand Antarctic battle, it pursues the most important questions of love and war, dreams and art, across [...]
Filed under: 1940's, 1950's, Erastes, Fiction, Reviews, three stars | 5 Comments »
Posted on July 9, 2008 by emmacollingwood
NAPOLEON’S PRIVATES
2,500 Years of History Unzipped
by Tony Perrottet
Harper Entertainment, ISBN 978-0-06-125728-5
From the blurb on the author’s website:
What were Casanova’s best pick-up lines?
(They got better as he got older).
Which Italian Renaissance genius “discovered” the clitoris?
(He could have just [...]
Filed under: 13th Century, 14th Century, 15th Century, 17th Century, 18th Century, 1900's, 1920's, 1930's, 1940's, 1950's, 19th Century, 4 stars, Age of Sail, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece, Early Middle Ages, Reviews, Victorian, history | 3 Comments »
Posted on May 31, 2008 by Erastes
Set in occupied Poland during World War II, this novel is based on the true story of Stefan K., a Polish boy who, at 16, fell in love with a German soldier. When their liaison was discovered by the Gestapo, the teen was tortured and sentenced to a labour camp, eventually escaping during the chaotic [...]
Filed under: 1940's, 4 stars, Erastes, Reviews, True Life, World War II | Leave a Comment »
Posted on March 18, 2008 by Hayden
Review by Hayden Thorne
BOOK DESCRIPTION:
A brilliant, lunatic tale filled with black humor and decadence, The Carnivorous Lamb is a compelling family saga of power, love, and politics. Into a shuttered house, haunted by ghosts of past rebellion and Franco’s regime, Ignacio is born. His mother despises him; his failed father ignores him; his older brother [...]
Filed under: 1940's, 1950's, 1960's, five stars | 6 Comments »
Posted on February 26, 2008 by speakitsname
In 1941 Poland, silence is a way of life. Eighteen-year-old seminary student Koby Bruk has watched for two years as the people of his home town allowed the Germans to move in, displace homes and families, and impose their rule on the people who remain. When Koby is bullied by his classmate Irvine, he chooses [...]
Filed under: 1940's, 4½ Stars, graphic novel | 8 Comments »
Posted on January 26, 2008 by Erastes
It’s 1943 and the world is at war. Reporter Nathan Doyle is just back from the European Theater when he’s asked to cover the murder of a society blackmailer–a man who, Homicide Detective Matthew Spain believes, Nathan had every reason to want dead.
Review by Alex Beecroft
It is 1943. When the body of a [...]
Filed under: 1940's, 4½ Stars, Alex Beecroft, Fiction, Reviews | 6 Comments »