Bound To Stay Bound

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 No way, they were gay? : hidden lives and secret loves (Queer History Project)
 Author: Wind, Lee

 Publisher:  Zest Books (2021)

 Dewey: 306.76
 Classification: Collective Biography
 Physical Description: 296 p., ill., 22 cm

 BTSB No: 955988 ISBN: 9781541581586
 Ages: 14-18 Grades: 9-12

 Subjects:
 Gays -- Biography
 Gays -- Identity

Price: $15.57

Summary:
History has often ignored men who loved men, women who loved women, and people who lived outside gender boundaries. Lee Wind examines primary source letters, poems, and more to rethink the lives and loves of historical figures.




Full Text Reviews:

Booklist - 03/15/2021 What’s that you say? Abraham Lincoln was gay? No way! Uh, way! declares Wind, asserting Lincoln was, indeed, gay, as were 11 others he profiles: 3 men, 4 women, and 4 individuals who lived outside gender boundaries. Some of them are well-known—Shakespeare, Eleanor Roosevelt—others, not so: for example, M’E Mpho Nthunya and We'wha. How does Wind know all of them were gay when none of them is living? That can be difficult, since sometimes homophobic history has, Wind points out, erased evidence of some people’s sexual identity. Happily, to correct that, he has searched out primary-source materials—letters in the cases of Lincoln, Gandhi, and Roosevelt; autobiographies (Catalina de Erauso and Sarah Churchill); anthropological field notes (We'wha)—and a clutch of secondary sources, usually books by those who weren’t present, like, Wind acknowledges, this one. Nevertheless, his book is solidly written, well-documented and organized, and illustrated with period photos and portraits. On the whole, it's a modest, well-intentioned contribution to gay history. It's also going to inflame passions, so be prepared for controversy. - Copyright 2021 Booklist.

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