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A charming, witty and wide-ranging collection of brief biographies
of closeted gay men in modern and early modern history, Hidden: The
Intimate Lives of Gay Men Past and Present includes colorful
snapshots of such well-known men as Horatio Alger, Thomas Eakins,
King Edward II, Alfred C. Kinsey, and Siegfried Wagner. Readers
will find joy and sorrow and pleasure and pain in these 400
biographies of men who were forced to live hidden lives. All were
caught in the tension between the torment of secrecy and the
calamity of revelation. How did they manage their difficult lives?
How indeed did they survive? One who did was James Brooke. He
turned his inheritance into a 142 ton schooner, sailed for the East
Indies, seized the northern part of Borneo and proclaimed himself
Rajah of Sarawak. Among those who did not survive was Jan Quisthout
Van der Linde, a soldier in New Amsterdam (not yet New York). He
was stripped of his arms, his sword broken at his feet. He was then
tied in a sack, thrown into the Hudson River and drowned until
dead. While illuminating individuals, the book also provides rich
cultural and historical content, including the trial of those
over-the-top transvestites Ernest Boulton 'Stella of the Strand'
and Frederick 'Fanny' Park; and a delightful description of the 5th
Marquess of Anglesey as he parades along the boulevards of Paris
rouged, powdered and perfumed, cradling an equally perfumed poodle
festooned with pink ribbons. Written in clear, concise, and lively
prose, Hidden offers a substantive and extensive look at men who
lived their lives in conflict with their sexuality.
A charming, witty and wide-ranging collection of brief biographies
of closeted gay men in modern and early modern history, Hidden: The
Intimate Lives of Gay Men Past and Present includes colorful
snapshots of such well-known men as Horatio Alger, Thomas Eakins,
King Edward II, Alfred C. Kinsey, and Siegfried Wagner. Readers
will find joy and sorrow and pleasure and pain in these 400
biographies of men who were forced to live hidden lives. All were
caught in the tension between the torment of secrecy and the
calamity of revelation. How did they manage their difficult lives?
How indeed did they survive? One who did was James Brooke. He
turned his inheritance into a 142 ton schooner, sailed for the East
Indies, seized the northern part of Borneo and proclaimed himself
Rajah of Sarawak. Among those who did not survive was Jan Quisthout
Van der Linde, a soldier in New Amsterdam (not yet New York). He
was stripped of his arms, his sword broken at his feet. He was then
tied in a sack, thrown into the Hudson River and drowned until
dead. While illuminating individuals, the book also provides rich
cultural and historical content, including the trial of those
over-the-top transvestites Ernest Boulton 'Stella of the Strand'
and Frederick 'Fanny' Park; and a delightful description of the 5th
Marquess of Anglesey as he parades along the boulevards of Paris
rouged, powdered and perfumed, cradling an equally perfumed poodle
festooned with pink ribbons. Written in clear, concise, and lively
prose, Hidden offers a substantive and extensive look at men who
lived their lives in conflict with their sexuality.
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