ACOMSDave

Community Journalist

  • Home
  • Community Journalist
  • Events
  • Media Page and Press Kit
    • Projects and Work
  • Resources & Documents
    • LGBTQ+ Support Groups and Documents
  • Archives
  • Contact

Archives for August 2021

Teardrops On My Drum by Jack Robinson – a gay book review

30/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Teardrops On My Drum by Jack Robinson‘Jack Robinson’ is a pseudonym, I assume, though given the sweep fo ‘Teardrops On My Drum’, anything is likely, parts of it are so unlikely they must be true!  It chronicles the life of a Liverpool slummie from 5 to 15, when he joins the Army.  The BA in the 20s seems to have been very gay.

On the way there is a lot of sexual h-jinks with other street-boys, with older boys on camping (old style) holidays, and with an adult policeman – ‘Jack’ being 12 at this time.  This all appears quite likely to me, as Oliver J Flanagan T.D,, Papal Knight and a number of unsavoury things has so wisely said, “We didn’t have sex until television came along”.

It’s true – people were so innocent-minded that the behaviour described here would probably have gone unnoticed, or been seen as personal eccentricities, especially in the working-class areas described, which must make the average person give up thanks for the oppression of the welfare state.

‘This book is a near masterpiece’ – read it!!!

 

 

Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Gay Men’s Press; 1st Edition (20 Mar. 1986)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 176 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0854490035
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0854490035

 

Links:

  • Amazon – Teardrops On My Drum by Jack Robinson  
  • Identity (a gay journal)

 

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: gay book review, Jack Robinson, LGBTQ+ Book Review, Linenhall Library, Liverpool, Oliver J Flanagan T.D., sgtreet-boys, Teardrops on my Drum

Identity (a gay journal) – reviewed by Graham Walker

30/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Identity

NOT THE MAGAZINE COVER FOR IDENTITY

Identity is a new Gay Journal published by the National Gay Switchboard in Dublin.  At the time of writing Gay Star No. 10) three issues had appeared, the latter two of which are discussed here.

Let it be said straight away that ‘Identity’ is very welcome.  It is modeled though not too obviously on journals such as Body Politic and Christopher Street in that it seeks to combine substantial literary content (short stories, poems, reviews of books and films) with political polemics and special items of news and current day affairs.

A good balance has been struck and the serious is necessarily tempered by the humourous.  The writing is in general of a high standard, and it is never less than interesting.  ‘Identity’ wisely eschews long, rambling, and invariably tedious ‘consciousness-raising’ in favour of shorter, more trenchant pieces, which in most cases make a strong impact.  The diversity of the journal is its greatest strength.

Several items deserve mention – T C Breen’s admirably researched articles on the Dublin Scandals of 1884 (no. 21), and the ‘Strange Case3 of Bishop Atherton’ (No. 3), lend an instructive historical dimension to the paper; David Norris’s article on the Christian Churches (No. 2), is lucidly erudite if a little blib; Damian Stewart’s ‘Last Dance’ (No. 3), an engaging story which captures the ‘treadmill’ nature of the gay scene and the desperate anxieties of its patrons; and David O’Connor’s ‘Crumbs’, while frequently losing its way in the author’s frenetic attempts to intellectualize his characters, still manages to be a refreshingly unconventional piece of writing.

It is still possible to quibble.  While some pieces in ‘Identity’, most notably those of Father Joe O’Leary and Conor Davidson, raise important controversial topics, there is nowhere to be found a serioussELF iDENTITY discussion of them.  the journal exudes a ‘Glad to be Gay’ tone which is to be applauded; equally necessary is a facility for self-criticism and a questioning approach to many aspects of current gay lifestyles.  

It is to be hoped that in future issues, ‘Identity’ will open up debate on such topics as the positive and negative aspects of gay ghettoes, and the opinions before the Gay movement in its attempt to pursue political change.

 

Links:

  • National Gay Federation – Identity
  • Key dates for lesbian, gay, bi, and trans equality
  • The Boys on the Rock by John Fox

 

The National Gay Federation is now known as National LGBT Federation (NXF)  – Identity

Identity

 

 

 

 

 

Review of ‘Identity’ first published in Gay Star No 10 (held int he Linenhall Library Archives)

Filed Under: Community Journalist, Education and Development, History Tagged With: dublin, gay magazine review, Identity, Linenhall Library, National Gay Federation

Arrangement (2019) – a gay short move review

26/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Arrangement (2019)Arrangement 92019) starts off with a character in the shadows texting – with a musical song sung by Garth Ross (My Time Is Your Time) playing in the background indistinctly.  The first verse of the song sets up the story in a number of ways:

 

… Finally
We’ve got some time
Time to do the things
We like to do
Now that you’re mine again
And you feel my touch
I know exactly what to do with you… 

 

The main characters in Arrangement (2019) are Rex, Jessie, and Graham.  Rex regularly has come to pick up his friend Jessie, and whilst waiting is texting Graham [the overnight security guard] across the parking area whilst he waits for Jessie.  When Jessie arrives he says he needs to go to the bathroom’ thus really asking Jessie to wait a few minutes.  So rex disappears into the bathroom, meets up with Graham, where they do the business standing up, and then Rex goes to kiss Graham, which Graham rejects out of hand.  

This leads to an unexpected conversation from Graham on how he feels, and as this conversation develops they both sit down with their backs to the wall.

Grahm is like a lost soul, his marriage is betwixt and between, it is in the doldrums, and the relationship he seems to have with Rex is one of physical relief; or is it.  the film ends with Rex leaving, Graham thanking Rex, and we are left wondering what will happen next time?  Will there be a next time?

 

Arrangement (2019) Arrangement (2019)

Information on Arrangement (2019)

Length:  6minutes

Director:   Chadlee Skrikker
Writer:   Chadlee Skrikker
Stars:   Matthew Barrett (Graham),  Laurent de Froberville (Jessie),  Hagar Joubert (Rex

 

Links:

  • YouTube – My Time Is Your Time
  • YouTube – Arrangement (2019)
  • IMDB – Arrangement (2019)
  • Chicken (2001)

Filed Under: Movie Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: arrangement, Chadlee Strikker, gay short movie review, Hagar Joubert, Laurent de Froberville, LGBTQ+ short movie review, Matthew Barrett

The Boys on the Rock by John Fox – a gay book review by DTerry McFarlane

22/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

The Boys on the Rock by John FoxThough our copy of the Boys on the Rock by John Fox is a proof copy,  I could find very little that was in need of correction; except for the basis of the story.

The story is one of these: Boy has girlfriend, but fantasies about his best mate in his mind – finally he meets his first gay and gives his girlfriend up, with little compassion on his side – then he goes to college where he falls in love with this ‘ good looker’ who turns out to be gay and they become lovers.  However, his lover is fickle and goes his own way, leaving Billy to look after his crippled friend!

As you will see, the story is not very original and shows it!  Many books come to mind which cover the same themes in a vastly superior way – indeed even some of the pulp magazines carry stories that have considerably more literary merit.

In conclusion, therefore, if you enjoy reading a rehash of other people’s work, and the rehash is not put together work, then I recommend ‘the Boys on the Rock by John Fox’ – otherwise pick up your local newspaper. 

 

 

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ SMP Paperback; New edition (15 Jan. 1994)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 156 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0312104332
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0312104337

Links:

  • Amazon – The Boys ON The Rock (1984)
  • Amazon – the Boys On The Rock P (1994)
  • Firestorm by Gerald Wening

Originally published in Gay Star Issue No 16 – currently held in Linenhall Library

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Reviews

Firestorm by Gerald Wening – a gay book review by DTerry McFarlane

22/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Firestorm by Gerald WeningFirestorm by Gerald Wening is a book that follows a standard format, including that of the homophobic minister, and “we can save you” doctor.  As I don’t wish to destroy your reading enjoyment, let me say that the book provides a quick, ‘light’, read (all 170 pages in total).

The cover of the book is quite attractive, and the print quality is good.

Wening,  has produced a “normal” fictional gay book – but how I do wish authors would attempt to write about characters with depth and feeling, and not just superficial characteristics!

 

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Alyson Publications Inc; First Edition, First Printing (1 Jan. 1985)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 177 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 093287052X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0932870520

Links:

  • Fellow Travellers by T C Worsley
  • Amazon – Firestorm by Gerald Wening

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: gay book review, Gerald Wening, lgbtq+ gay book review

Fellow Travellers by T C Worsley – a gay book review by Vincent Geoehegan

13/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Fellow Travellers by T C Worsley

 

Fellow Travellers by T C Worsley explores the impact of the political upheavals of the 1930s on five characters:  Harry, a working-class ex-guardsman; Gavin, a feckless undergraduate; Pugh, a young and exuberant ex-public schoolboy; Martin, a priggish poet; and Lady Nellie, a somewhat naive left-wing aristocrat.  The first three are gay; Martin, as they say, swings both ways; while Lady Nellie doesn’t.  Against the intrusive backdrop of world Stalinism and fascism, and in particular the great moral drama of the Spanish Civil War, these individuals have a complex series of sexual, emotional, and political inter-relationships.

Worsley uses a clever formal device to present his material.  An anonymous narrator, who acts as the guiding thread throughout the book, reveals documents he has accumulated for an unwritten novel.  These documents are eyewitness accounts by our five characters – accounts of their dealings with the world and with each other.  This enables Worsley to portray effectively the complicated personalities of his subjects and to show how they differ in their perceptions of the same political;  and personal events.

The price to be paid for this formal novelty is that the characters remain as fragments, disembodied subjects, and objects, never really coming alive, and consequently one feels rather uninterested in their fate.  Only at the end, in war-torn Spain does the book’s method really pay off, as the immense tragedy, impossible to capture ‘objectively’, is graphically revealed through the very different eyes of the five.

The book is a novel with gay characters, rather than a gay novel.  Gayness is neither the theme nor an agnosied issue, but provides rather the texture of the work.  It is, in this respect, a welcome addition to the literature.

 

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ London Magazine Editions; First Edition (1 Jun. 1971)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 249 pages

Links:

  • Amazon – Fellow Travellers by T C Worsley
  • Homophobia and Terrorism are not limited to Muslims.

Originally published in Gay Star No 16 held in the Linenhall Library, Belfast

 

 

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: Fellow Travellers, gay book review, LGBTQ+ Book Review, Linenhall Library, T C Worsley

Parallel Lives by Peter Burton – a gay book review

10/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Parallel Lives by Peter BurtonParallel Lives by Peter Burton, is a  memoir that falls into three unequal parts:  the first section sees PB (Peter Burton) coming to terms with his adolescent self.  this is very gracefully written as is the very end of the book describing the last few years.

The rest is a carnival of name-droppings and descriptions of unpleasant people getting unpleasingly blotto and/or pilled.

Peter Burton has no time for the ‘Gay’ movement because it is dominated by middle-class types who look down on working-class people like himself.  He also exalts the commercial scene over the efforts of the ‘politicals’, and glossy mags over the likes of … GAY STAR(?), THE PREDECESSOR OF ACOMSDave (the Blog).

This class (ill-) feeling without any impetus towards change is a very English thing – mysterious to a simple Irish queen like myself.  And the inability to spot the symbiotic relationship between the ‘scene’ and the ‘community is very London-village.

Despite these rather sharp criticisms, I look forward to a real autobiography from Peter Burton.  Towards the end of this volume, he edges towards real self-analysis.  He has a good brain, a sharp eye and commonsense, an assessment of himself and the sub-culture and also the general community could be a masterpiece.

 

Product details for Parallel Lives by Peter Burton

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Gay Men’s Press (18 April 1985)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 128 pages

 

First published in Gay Star No 16, paper copy held at The Linenhall Library, Belfast

 

Links:

  • Amazon – Parallel Lives by Peter Burton
  • The Glass Boat by Alison Ward

 

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: Alison Ward, gay book review, gay star, LGBT+ book review, LGBTQ+ Book Review, Linenhall Library, Peter Burton, The Glass Boat

Olympic Medals and Population

09/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

So the Tokyo Olympics are over and the medals are coming home, and yes there will be disappointments, but it is a big but, every one of those athletes went and represented their country to the very best of their ability.  And yes, if we just look at medals, as one newscaster did when he stated that the United Kingdom had done as well as in Rio or London (a  statement now proven to be at least half incorrect).   The United Kingdom has achieved more than London and only slightly less than Rio – an absolutely brilliant result when considering the pandemic’s impact and comparing Olympic medals against the population.

It is very easy to forget that the United Kingdom is fifth in population size in the top ten medal winners, which means that for every 1m people in the population our Olympians achieved a medal.  This is absolutely stupendous when you compare that again People’s Republic of China (1 med per 16.4m), the USA (1 medal per 2.9m) or the ROC (1 medal per 2m).

It is estimated that at least 182 ‘out athletes’ from about 30 countries attended the Tokyo Games. 

…At least 55 of those athletes, who competed in 35 different sports, won medals — five nabbed gold for Team USA women’s basketball alone. In fact, if the LGBTQ Olympians competed as their own country — affectionately labeled “Team LGBTQ” by Outsports — they would rank 11th in the total medal count (right behind France and before Canada), with 32 team and individual medals: 11 gold, 12 silver and nine bronze…NBC News

Our Olympians are marvellous. and wouldn’t it be wonderful if the media realised this for more than just the two weeks of the Olympic Games!

 

Olympic Medals and Population

 

 

  Top 10 Countires Olympic Medals 2021 with Population  
Rank Team/NOC Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank by Total Population Total  
1 United States of America 39 41 33 113 1 332.9 million  
2 People’s Republic of China 38 32 18 88 2 1444.2 million  
3 Japan 27 14 17 58 5 126 million  
4 Great Britain 22 21 22 65 4 68.2 million  
5 ROC (Russian Olympic Committee) 20 28 23 71 3 144.2 million  
6 Australia 17 7 22 46 6 25.8 million  
7 Netherlands 10 12 14 36 9 17.1 million  
8 France 10 12 11 33 10 65.4 million  
9 Germany 10 11 16 37 8 83.9 million  
10 Italy 10 10 20 40 7 60.3 million  

 

Links:

  • World Population Review
  • Olympic Medal Count
  • ‘Team LGBTQ’ earns 32 medals at Tokyo Olympics
  • TOKYO OLYMPICS: 10 INSPIRING GAY AND BI MALE ATHLETES TO LOOK OUT FOR
  • The Conversion Therapy Saga

Filed Under: Community Journalist Tagged With: Bronze, conversion therapy, Gold, LGBTQ, Olympians, Olympic Medals, olympics, population, Silver, Tokyo Olympics, world population

The Secret a gay short film review

08/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

The SecretThe Secret is a short gay film about hidden love.  Julian is in a dilemma. He loves the person, he is in a relationship with, less than his best friend.  It is a story of a journey, of coming to terms with who you love and not what society and other pressures say who you should love.  Both the main actors are very handsome, and their acting is really good considering their young age. The film is only 3.37 mins long, but it successfully gets its message across.  Do make an effort to watch it, and I would love to have your comments. 
 
 
Director: Kim Anderson
Writer: Kim Anderson
Country: Germany
Language: Germany
Duration: 4 min
Stars: 
Björn Helge Jochum – Julian
Jan-Nicklas LeRoi  –  Alexander
Thea Valder  –  Jana
Kim Anderson –   Regie
 
 
Links:
  • YouTube – The Secret
  • GTM – The Secret
  • Chicken
 

Filed Under: Movie Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: Bjorn Helge Jochum, gay movie review, Jan-Nicklas LeRoi, Kim Anderson. German, LGBTQ+ move review, LGBTQ+ short gay movie review, short gay movie review, Thea Valder

Men in Frocks by Kris Kirk and Ed Heath – a gay book review by Stella Mahon

06/08/2021 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

 

Men in FrocksThe title says it all, really,  Men in Frocks.  A frock, as any woman will tell you, is quite different from a dress.  Drags of any kind wear frocks, the women of the western world, for the most part, wear dresses if they wear dresses at all.

The authors of this book are aware of this distinction.  When talking of two male-to-female transexuals they freely admit that Roz and Tish ‘do not sit comfortably in a book with (this) title’.  But they are included in a brief chapter on TV/TS, where I read something which was the exact opposite to my own feelings. 

…’TSs also are often accused of perpetuating fantasy female stereotypes and some people see them as Fifth Columnists who seek to undermine the struggle of women to right the imbalance of power between sexes.’ …

I had to check it – did the authors write TSs or TVs at the beginning of that sentence?  For they were actually saying something I had always felt about transvestites (AND most drag artists).  There were the men who projecting the image of women as sexual objects, who wanted to pass for women, be whistled at.  Who negated in a way that your ordinary straightforward hetman did not, the whole challenge that women have been flinging in society’s face for years.  In a way that challenge which I offer to a society which would put me in a particular niche (comfortable for it), and which I offer with my mind and lifestyle, a transexual is offering with his or her body also.

But the debate about TV/TS forms only part of this book.  Much of it, indeed most of it, is a history of the drag scene, whether on stage or off, complete with photos of this one and that one doing his drag thing.  As such it occasionally bored me a little bit. but as it moved away from the post-war years and the big drag shows, through individuals and into more modern times my interest picked up.  The chapter on ‘The Red Drag Queen’ is a case in point.  Back in 1970, when their story began as it were, I knew nothing of any gay scene, was still married and only vaguely aware of my own sexual make-up, slightly more aware of me as a woman.  So the history of that period – albeit from a ‘drag ‘ angle – caught my attention more than any other with the notion that many men – gay men, for the most part, if not the whole part – used drag as a political statement.  With their dress, used on particular occasions, not simply as a fun activity, they were ‘showing solidarity with women by ridiculing the idea of beauty objects.  It e3xpanded to a political statement on their own behalf, within GLF in London when they as well as the women members felt intimidated by the men who did most of the talking – gay men, who, ‘although prepared to pay lip-service to anti-sexism, were as dominating and aggressive as the archetypal heterosexual men’.  They became the Radical Feminists – Rad Fems for short – of GLF, would you believe.  Some had come to realise that ‘women were right about drag.  They never put down drag per se, but they put down the men who got into low cut dresses (Frocks, surely?) false books, the fantasy Hollywood stereotype’.  But we began to realise that there were ways of using drag … it’s a way of giving up the male power role … Oh yes, Kirk and Heath are correct in assuming as they do in this chapter, that such activity would today be criticized for ridiculing women,  You want to reject male power, give up that role?  So what’s the best way of doing that?  Live it in your life?  Preach it?  Oh no, as the outward sign of self-denial, you, as a man, take on the trappings of the one group of people who are universally at the receiving end of male power.  Instead of standing up and hitting out in your own right you tacitly acknowledge, by using a female image, the position of women, using the image of the so-called ‘weaker sex’ to say ‘up yours’ to the ones who parade the power.  If that is not perpetuating the rolebase of our lives, I don’t know what is.  Still, Kirk and Heath do say that ‘the Rad Fems’, like many others from GLF have come out of the experience older and wiser.

It has begun to change, hasn’t it?  I have no doubt that drag in all its old-fashioned (in more ways than one) sense continues.  Danny La Rue is still inexplicably, popular and that mostly with women.  but, as the book points ut Boy George is doing in the eighties what David Bowie did in the seventies – clothing himself how he pleases, and that becomes his dress.  Not male, not female, ut indivual.  It is also what women have been doing for quite a time, women of feminist persuasion.  We don’t, as some of the press hacks would have it (and haven’t they had a field day with the garb of the women at Greenham) insist on ‘wearing the trousers’, for it is only to them that trousers whether of cord, denim, or worsted, are a sexual symbol of power.

The book is OK.  You’ll enjoy reading it.  but keep your political eyes open while you do so.

 

Reviewer -Stella Mahone

Original review held in Gay Start  No 16 lodged in the Linenhall Library

 

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ GMP Publishers Ltd; First Edition (31 Oct. 1984)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 160 pages

Links:

  • Amazon – Men in Frocks
  • The Glass Boat
  • Gays in the 80s – Men in Frocks
  • Yvonne Sinclair – the story of TV/TS Group – Men in Frocks

Filed Under: Book Reviews, Reviews Tagged With: Boy George, Danny La Rue, David Bowie, drag queens, Ed Heath, Feminists, gay book review, Gay LIberation Front, gay men's press, GLF, GMP, Kris Kirk, LGBTQ+ Book Review, press hacks, Rad Fems, stella mahon, TSs, TVs

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next Page »

Categories

Copyright ACOMSDave.com © 2023