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Archives for October 2025

The Catch Trap by Marion Zimmer Bradley – Review

30/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

The Catch TrapA forgotten period masterpiece – Marion Zimmer Bradley’s The Catch Trap, published in 1979, represents a significant departure from the author’s more celebrated work in fantasy and science fiction. Set within the American circus world of the 1930s through 1950s, this novel centres on the professional and romantic partnership between two trapeze artists, exploring both the technical mastery of their craft and the emotional complexity of a relationship constrained by the rigid morality of mid-century America.

The narrative follows Tommy Zane, son of a lion tamer, whose natural gift for flying leads him to become the protégé and catcher to Mario Santelli, an established star of the trapeze. As their aerial act achieves renown, the pair must navigate not only the physical dangers of attempting the triple somersault – that most treacherous of circus feats – but also the tensions within their circus family and, more significantly, the necessity of concealing the true nature of their bond from a society unprepared to acknowledge it.

Bradley’s considerable achievement here lies in her meticulous attention to the technicalities of trapeze work. The descriptions of aerial acts are breathtakingly detailed, drawing readers into the physicality, precision, and danger inherent in the art. The reader gains an authentic sense of the rigorous training, the split-second timing, the absolute trust required between flyer and catcher. This is no romanticised or superficial treatment of circus life; rather, Bradley presents it as demanding physical labour, a discipline as exacting as any art form. The circus itself becomes more than mere backdrop – it functions as a fully realised world with its own hierarchies, traditions, and codes of behaviour. Indeed, the high-flying artistry of the trapeze serves as a metaphor for the characters’ yearning for freedom and transcendence over societal limitations.

What distinguishes The Catch Trap from much gay fiction of its era is Bradley’s refusal to sensationalise or apologise for the relationship at its centre. Tommy’s journey from naïve teenager to confident artist and self-aware individual forms the emotional core of the novel, with Mario serving as both mentor and eventual lover – a deeply charismatic figure whose experiences and convictions guide Tommy through his personal and professional growth. Their love is presented neither as tragedy nor as manifesto, but simply as the central emotional reality around which all else turns. The constraints they face are real – the period setting ensures that discretion is not merely advisable but essential – yet Bradley affords her characters both dignity and complexity. They are not reduced to their sexuality; they are artists, sons, colleagues, individuals shaped by circumstance yet possessing agency within those limitations.

Bradley’s portrayal operates as incisive social commentary, critiquing the rigid structures of heteronormativity and the oppressive expectations imposed on those who deviate from convention. The circus, traditionally a space of marginality and otherness, becomes a microcosm where characters grapple with questions of identity, belonging, and resistance to conventional morality. The generational tensions within the Santelli family add further depth, as Mario struggles to honour his family’s circus traditions while forging his own path – a conflict between preserving heritage and pursuing individual desires that underscores the weight of legacy as both pride and burden.

The novel’s treatment of relationships, whether romantic, familial, or professional, is layered and nuanced. Bradley’s prose possesses a lyrical quality and emotional resonance that renders the camaraderie and rivalries among circus performers with authenticity, creating a palpable sense of community and shared struggle. The parallels between the trust required in a trapeze act – where one’s life depends absolutely upon one’s partner – and the vulnerability inherent in any loving relationship are never belaboured but remain powerfully implicit throughout.

Yet the novel is not without its problematic aspects. The depiction of Mario and Tommy’s relationship, particularly given their significant age difference and the inherent power imbalance between mentor and protégé, raises uncomfortable questions about agency and ethical boundaries. While the narrative frames their bond as consensual and deeply loving, contemporary readers may find themselves troubled by dynamics that the text itself presents uncritically. Bradley challenges readers to grapple with complex moral and emotional terrain, though whether she fully confronts these complications or merely reproduces them remains open to debate.

The novel shares, too, certain weaknesses common to its genre and period. At times the prose tends toward melodrama, and some secondary characters remain rather thinly drawn, serving more as obstacles or facilitators to the central relationship than as fully developed persons in their own right. The historical setting, while providing necessary context for the couple’s secrecy, occasionally feels more imposed than organic, as though Bradley were more comfortable with the circus milieu than with the broader social landscape of post-war America.

Yet these are considerations rather than fatal flaws in a work that succeeds admirably in its primary aims. Bradley has written a novel that illuminates both a specialised professional world and a particular emotional experience with equal authenticity. The Catch Trap is a story of resilience and courage, celebrating the triumphs of the human spirit even in the face of societal condemnation and personal sacrifice. It invites readers into a world of dazzling artistry and intense emotional stakes, where characters navigate the precarious balance between their public and private selves.

The Catch Trap serves as an important reminder that Bradley’s talents extended well beyond the fantasy fiction for which she is primarily remembered. This is not a ‘gay novel’ inThe Catch Trap any limiting sense, but rather a novel about human beings whose capacity for love, ambition, fear, and courage transcends any single aspect of their identity. The fact that it depicts a same-sex relationship with such matter-of-fact seriousness – neither apologising for it nor making it the sole focus – represented a significant achievement for 1979, even as certain aspects of that depiction now invite more critical scrutiny.

For readers interested in LGBTQ historical fiction, or indeed for anyone drawn to stories of obsessive dedication to craft and the complications of partnerships both professional and personal, The Catch Trap deserves attention. It is a novel written with confidence and care, illuminating corners of human experience that remain as relevant today as they were in the circus rings of mid-century America. Bradley’s ability to craft a narrative that is both deeply personal and broadly reflective of larger societal issues ensures that the novel resonates long after its final page.

Title: The Catch Trap
Author: Marion Zimmer Bradley
Original Publication: 1979
Current Publisher: Open Road Media

 

#TheCatchTrap #MarionZimmerBradley #BookReview #LGBTQFiction #QueerLiterature #HistoricalFiction #GayFiction #CircusNovel #LGBTQBooks #QueerBooks #BookBlog #LiteraryFiction #1930s #GayRomance #QueerHistory #LGBTQReads #ClassicFiction #BookRecommendations

 

Links:

  • Wikipedia: The Catch Trap
  • Amazon UK: The Catch Trap
  • Eustace Chisholm and the Works and A Domestic Animal – two book reviews

Filed Under: Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: 1930s America, acrobat fiction, American circus, book blog, book review, circus life, circus novel, gay historical fiction, gay modern classics, gay romance, LGBTQ fiction, LGBTQ historical fiction, literary fiction, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Marion Zimmer Bradley novels, mid-century gay fiction, queer historical romance, queer literature, The Catch Trap, trapeze artists

ECHR Debate: Political Theatre or Genuine Crisis?

29/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

ECHR Debate

The Observer’s deep dive into the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR Debate ) debate exposes something uncomfortable: much of what we’ve been told about human rights law blocking deportations is complete nonsense. Remember the Albanian criminal supposedly kept in Britain because his son didn’t like foreign chicken nuggets? Never happened. The Iranian who couldn’t be deported so he could cut his son’s hair? Fabricated. These myths have poisoned the political debate, yet politicians from Kemi Badenoch to Nigel Farage continue weaponising them.

The Positives:

The article’s fact-checking is thorough and necessary. Oxford University’s Bonavero Institute data reveals that only 0.73% of foreign national offenders successfully appeal deportation on human rights grounds. The Strasbourg court has ruled against the UK just three times in 45 years on immigration cases. These statistics demolish the narrative that the ECHR is some insurmountable barrier to border control.

The piece also provides valuable historical context—reminding us that British lawyers drafted the ECHR after World War II, and it’s helped secure justice for Hillsborough families and protected vulnerable people during the pandemic. The practical complications of withdrawal are clearly laid out: the Good Friday Agreement embeds the ECHR, and leaving it would reduce European cooperation on asylum seekers.

The Negatives:

What’s deeply concerning is the cynicism on display. Politicians across the spectrum are treating human rights as a “useful political scapegoat” (as Liberty’s Akiko Hart notes), offering “disingenuous solutions” they know won’t work. Reform UK’s promise of a “department of believers” staffed by anti-ECHR civil servants sounds dystopian. Even Labour MPs in red wall seats are signalling hostility to human rights to appear tough on immigration.

The article perhaps doesn’t emphasise enough how dangerous this erosion of principle is. As former Lord Chancellor Charlie Falconer warns, abandoning rights for immigrants sets a precedent:

“there is essentially no limitation on what the government may do in other areas where there is political pressure.”

For Keir Starmer—who once called the ECHR his “lodestar”—this represents a pivotal test. Will he defend fundamental rights against populist pressure, or will he join the race to the bottom? The answer matters far beyond immigration policy. When politicians compete to see who can abandon human rights fastest, we all lose.

We All Lose

 

#ECHR #HumanRights #UKPolitics #Immigration #FactCheck #BorderControl #AsylumSeekers #PoliticalDebate #LegalAnalysis #MythBusting #Brexit #ReformUK #Labour #Conservatives #UKImmigration #HumanRightsAct #GoodFridayAgreement #Deportation #PoliticalAccountability #UKNews

 

Links:

  • The Observer – Misinformation and myth: the UK’s phoney war over human rights
  • Human Rights – The Legal Act in the UK

Filed Under: Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: asylum seekers, border control, Brexit, deportation laws, ECHR, European Convention on Human Rights, Good Friday Agreement, Human Rights Act, human rights debate, immigration myths, Keir Starmer, Kemi Badenoch, legal analysis, political scapegoating, Reform UK, UK immigration

Attack on Libraries Should Terrify Us All

27/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Attack On LibrariesAttack on Libraries – When I think about libraries, I think about freedom. Not the abstract, flag-waving kind—but the real, tangible freedom to walk into a room and discover ideas that might change your life. The freedom to read without someone looking over your shoulder, deciding what you’re allowed to know.

That freedom is under attack in America right now. And what’s happening there should be a wake-up call for the rest of us.

Book Banning Has Gone From Rare to Epidemic

Here’s a stat that should stop you in your tracks: between 2001 and 2020, an average of 273 book titles were challenged in US libraries each year. In 2023 alone? Over 9,000 titles were targeted. That’s not a trend—it’s an avalanche.

We’re not talking about obscure edge cases. Books by Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison, and Judy Blume are being pulled from shelves. A graphic novel about the Holocaust was banned in Tennessee. Even a children’s book about seahorses faced removal because—wait for it—it showed them mating.

The targets are predictable: anything involving LGBTQ+ themes (39% of challenged titles in 2024), books about race and racial justice, and materials related to sex education. But the scale is what’s new. This is no longer scattered local outrage. It’s organised, well-funded, and strategic.

It’s Not Grassroots—It’s Astroturfed

Groups like Moms for Liberty—which sounds wholesome enough—are actually connected to extremist organisations like the Proud Boys and QAnon conspiracy theorists. They’ve systematically taken over local library boards, using social media to manufacture outrage and fund candidates who’ll do their bidding.

One of the Proud Boys’ leaders literally called Moms for Liberty “the Gestapo with vaginas.” When fascists are giving you compliments, you might want to reconsider your strategy.

Librarians are facing death threats for doing their jobs. Amanda Jones, a Louisiana school librarian, spoke out against book banning at a board meeting. She was immediately accused of grooming children and received such terrifying threats that she now sleeps with a shotgun under her bed. Think about that—a school librarian needs weapons to feel safe because she defends books.

Trump’s Making It Official Policy

Things escalated dramatically when Trump returned to office. In February 2025, Dr. Colleen Shogan—the head of the US National Archives—was fired without explanation. In May, Dr Carla Hayden, the brilliant librarian of Congress, got an email: “Your position is terminated effective immediately.”

Her replacement? Todd Blanche—Trump’s lawyer from the Stormy Daniels case. That’s right: America replaced one of the world’s most accomplished librarians with a defence attorney. The symbolism couldn’t be clearer.

Meanwhile, government datasets are being scrubbed from websites. Environmental data, public health information, disease control statistics—all disappearing down the memory hole. Volunteer librarians are racing to save what they can, but established institutions need to step up and host this rescued data before it’s lost forever.

Why “Just Books” Matters More Than You Think

There’s a quote from philosopher Jacques Derrida that sums this up: “There is no political power without power over the archive.” Whoever controls what gets remembered—what gets preserved, what’s accessible—controls the narrative. They control history itself.

When a Florida judge ruled that public libraries are “government speech” and citizens have no First Amendment right to access books there, it wasn’t just about books anymore. It was about whether we’re allowed to think independently of what the government wants us to think.

It’s Already Crossing the Atlantic

Don’t think this is just an American problem. In Ireland, groups modelled directly on Moms for Liberty are targeting libraries with the same playbook. In the UK, 82% of librarians reported increased pressure to remove books in 2023, especially LGBTQ+ titles.

This August, a mob firebombed Spellow library in Liverpool because it served immigrant communities. A Reform UK councillor in Kent boasted about ordering the removal of “trans-ideological material” from children’s sections—material that didn’t even exist.

The tactics are spreading, and underfunded UK libraries are vulnerable.

What We Need to Do

Libraries have been the “pristine brand” of civic institutions for generations—universally trusted, politically neutral spaces. That brand is being deliberately tarnished, and we can’t let it happen.

We need to fund libraries properly, support librarians who face harassment, and push back loudly when books are targeted. We need to remember that free people read freely—and that freedom isn’t free if someone else decides what you’re allowed to know.

As Helen Keller wrote in 1933, when the Nazis were burning books: “You may burn my books and the books of the best minds in Europe, but the ideas those books contain have passed through millions of channels and will go on.”

Ideas are resilient. But they need defenders. Libraries aren’t just buildings with books—they’re the hidden infrastructure of democracy itself.

 

Links:

  • Gay Rights: From Revolution to Reflection
  • The Observer – ‘There is no political power without power over the archive’ -Richard Ovenden
  • The Linen Hall Library

#FreedomToRead
#StopBookBans
#DefendLibraries
#NoToCensorship
#ReadingIsResistance

Filed Under: Campaigns, Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: archive preservation, banned books, book banning, book challenges, censorship, cultural censorship, democracy, Donald Trump, First Amendment, free speech, Freedom of Information, government censorship, information access, information control, Intellectual freedom, LGBTQ+ rights, librarian attacks, libraries, library censorship, literary freedom, Moms for Liberty, public libraries, reading rights, school libraries, Trump administration

Un Invincible Été

26/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Un Invincible Été: A Tender Coming-of-Age Story

Un invincible étéA Brief but Powerful Exploration of Teenage Desire and Self-Discovery

Arnaud Dufeys’ short film Un Invincible Été captures a pivotal moment in adolescence with remarkable sensitivity and restraint. In just a brief runtime, the film manages to convey the complexity of teenage sexuality, vulnerability, and the sometimes uncomfortable gap between expectation and reality.

The premise is deceptively simple: 16-year-old Clément (Vadiel Gonzalez Lardued), bored and restless during a hot summer evening by the pool, decides tonight’s the night he’ll lose his virginity. Armed with Grindr and a lie about his age, he arranges to meet 24-year-old Naël. What follows is a delicate portrait of anticipation, nervous energy, and ultimately, a different kind of awakening than Clément expected.

What makes this film particularly effective is its refusal to sensationalize. Writer Nicolas Moulin crafts a narrative that understands the urgency and single-mindedness of teenage desire while also acknowledging the emotional complexity beneath it. The film’s turning point—when Clément encounters a body “completely different from Naël’s”—becomes not just about physical intimacy but about accepting reality versus fantasy, and the messy, imperfect nature of growing up.

The performances are naturalistic and unforced, particularly Gonzalez Lardued’s portrayal of Clément’s mix of bravado and uncertainty. Dufeys directs with a light touch, letting moments breathe and trusting his audience to read between the lines. The summer setting—the pool, the heat, the isolation—creates an almost dreamlike atmosphere that perfectly captures that strange liminal space of adolescence.

Un Invincible Été doesn’t provide easy answers or moralize about its subject matter. Instead, it offers an honest, empathetic glimpse into a formative moment, reminding us that coming of age is rarely about grand revelations but rather small, sometimes awkward moments of truth that shape who we become.

A thoughtful, mature short that lingers in the mind long after its brief runtime.

 

Un invincible été Un invincible été Un invincible été Un invincible été

Links:

  • IMDB – Un Invincible Ete 
  • YouTube – Un Invinvible Ete

 

#UnInvincibleÉté #GayShortFilm #LGBTQCinema #QueerCinema #FrenchFilm #ComingOfAge #ShortFilm #GayMovie #QueerFilm #IndieFilm #LGBTQShort #GayTeen #FrenchCinema #ArnaudDufeys #SummerFilm #QueerStory #GayRomance #ShortFilmReview #LGBTQ #QueerMedia

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: arnaud dufeys, coming of age, french gay film, French short film, gay coming out, gay short film, gay teen movie, grindr movie, independent cinema, lgbtq short, LGBTQ+ cinema, queer cinema, queer short film, summer romance, teen sexuality, un invincible été, vadiel gonzalez lardued

Between sickness and sin

24/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Review of ‘Between sickness and sin: models of male homosexuality in Northern Ireland c. 1960-1990’

Between sickness and sinAuthor: Charlie Lynch

Publication: Irish Historical Studies (2025)

Summary and Central Argument

Charlie Lynch’s article (Between sickness and sin: models of male homosexuality in Northern Ireland c. 1960-1990) provides an essential analysis of how male homosexuality was understood and managed in Northern Ireland between the early 1960s and the end of the 1980s. The central thesis posits that understandings of same-sex desire were primarily channelled through two powerful, negative institutional frameworks: the theological model of ‘sinfulness’ and the medical model of ‘sickness’ (or pathology).

The article charts the evolution and interaction of these two models, arguing that they formed the dominant discourse against which gay men had to navigate their lives and against which nascent reform movements had to fight.

Methodology and Evidence

A major strength of this article is its use of a rich and varied evidence base. Lynch moves beyond typical institutional histories by synthesising three key source types:

  1. Contemporary Comment and Institutional Writings: Analysis of theological texts, medical journals, and public commentary that articulated the official positions of churches and health professionals.
  2. Law Reform Documentation: Examination of how the campaign for legal reform in the 1970s forced major Protestant churches to issue formal, often complex, responses to the “problem” of homosexuality.
  3. Oral History Testimonies: Crucially, the work incorporates the lived experiences and memories of gay men from the period. This inclusion ensures the analysis is grounded in the reality of those affected by the ‘sickness’ and ‘sinfulness’ models, providing necessary nuance and depth.

Key Contributions

The article offers several valuable contributions to the historiography of sexuality:

  1. Nuance in Religious Response

Lynch successfully complicates the often-simplistic narrative of monolithic religious opposition. While the notoriety of fundamentalist campaigns (like the one led by Ian Paisley against the decriminalisation of homosexuality) is acknowledged, the article demonstrates the complexity of responses within two major Protestant denominations. It shows that institutional reactions were not uniform and that there was a tentative emergence of a challenge from radical Christian voices, which provides a more sophisticated picture of the religious landscape than typically presented.

  1. The Rise of Medical Pathology

The article highlights that, similar to trends in England, the notion of homosexuality as a pathology or sickness gained significant traction in the 1950s and 1960s. This medicalisation led to harmful conversion practices, such as aversion therapy, which were performed in an attempt to “cure” men of same-sex desire. By focusing on both the theological and medical realms, the article paints a complete picture of the institutional hostility faced by gay men.

Conclusion

Lynch’s article is a robust and important piece of scholarship. It illuminates a critical period in Northern Ireland’s social history, detailing the oppressive frameworks used to control and define male sexuality. Combining institutional records with oral history creates a nuanced narrative that is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of sexuality, civil rights, and modern Ireland.

 

#BetweenSicknessAndSin #CharlieLynch #LGBTQHistory #NorthernIreland #IrishStudies #QueerHistory #SocialHistory #OralHistory #LawReform #AcademicReview

 

Links:

  • Cambridge University Press – Between sickness and sin: models of male homosexuality in Northern Ireland c.1960-1990
  • The Carpenter Club

Filed Under: Community Journalist Tagged With: 1960s, 1990s, aversion therapy, Between sickness and sin, Charlie Lynch, Irish Historical Studies, law reform, LGBTQ+ History, male homosexuality, medicalization, Northern Ireland, oral history, Protestant churches, religion, sexuality

The Troubles Legacy: A One-Sided Search for Truth

23/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

“Here is equal participation, the truth will remain buried with those who refuse to speak.”

The Troubles Legacy – Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn wants to find the truth about The Troubles. Noble goal, but after 30 years of failure, we should ask why the current approach won’t work.

Here’s the uncomfortable reality: of 3,600 deaths during The Troubles, over 90% were caused by terrorists. Yet terrorists rarely participate in truth-seeking. They’ve melted into the shadows, and their political allies—now sitting in government—keep their secrets locked tight.

The Troubles Legacy

The system is fundamentally unbalanced. The Ministry of Defence must hand over records and produce witnesses. Sinn Féin, the IRA’s political wing, does neither. Neither do loyalist parties connected to paramilitaries. This creates a process biased against the army and RUC—the only participants actually cooperating.

Consider what happens to soldiers who do cooperate. Two soldiers were promised no retribution by the McCann family for helping find closure. They told the truth about shooting an IRA leader during an arrest. Their reward? Five years of prosecution before acquittal. Dennis Hutchings endured seven years of legal torment and died during the trial.

The message is clear: cooperate and face years of legal hell. Stay silent and walk free.

Benn’s “new” framework isn’t new—it’s the same adversarial court system that’s failed for three decades. Defence lawyers will advise clients not to engage, creating no admissible evidence. Meanwhile, security services hold files and recordings that could reveal the truth, but refuse to open them.

If we genuinely want the truth, we need equal participation. Political parties linked to paramilitaries must share what they know, or be excluded from demanding investigations. Until then, this process will continue targeting military and police who kept records and cooperated, while the real secrets remain buried with those who refuse to talk.

#TheTroubles #NorthernIreland #LegacyIssues #Veterans #BritishArmy #RUC #SinnFein #IRA #MilitaryJustice #PeaceProcess #Terrorism #VeteransRights #HilaryBenn #NILegacy #ArmedForces

Links:

  • The Legacy of the Troubles: A Joint Framework between the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government of Ireland
  • Gay history – Kate Hoey speech
  • The Critic – Hilary Benn is repeating a failed approach to The Troubles

 

 

Filed Under: Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: British Army veterans, Dennis Hutchings, Hilary Benn, IRA, Joe McCann, legacy investigations, legacy issues, military prosecution, Northern Ireland, paramilitaries, peace process, RUC, sinn fein, terrorism, The Troubles, veterans rights

Giroscope: The Punk Co-Op

19/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Giroscope: The Punk Co-OpGiroscope: The Punk Co-Op That Gamed Thatcher’s Britain (And Why We Can’t Do It Again)

Forty years ago, a group of punk-inspired activists and students in Hull decided to stop complaining and start outsmarting the system.

They pooled benefits and savings, bought a derelict terrace for £3,200, taught themselves the trades through sheer DIY grit, and created Giroscope: a worker-led co-op that bought, fixed, and let affordable homes to those who needed them most.

Playing Thatcher’s Game Better Than She Did

Instead of fighting capitalism head-on, Giroscope used Thatcher-era deregulation to its advantage. They “played the game” — borrowing big, turning empty properties into community assets while banks loosened criteria and cash flowed freely.

Their portfolio grew. Regeneration schemes followed. Eventually, they pulled off a million-pound church renovation and community hub — all while developing job-training programmes, repair shops, and support services for hundreds of locals.

Today, Giroscope’s legacy is a £10m charity, a beacon of hope in a once-forgotten part of Hull.

Could We Recreate It Today? The Brutal Truth

No. It’d be much harder. Possibly impossible.

Here’s why:

Sky-high property prices. Derelict housing for pennies doesn’t exist in most cities anymore. That £3,200 terrace would cost six figures today — if you could even find one.

Stricter regulation. Thatcher’s wild west of loose lending has been replaced by risk-averse banks and mountains of red tape. Good luck borrowing big as a scrappy collective with no credit history.

A culture of individualism. The punk rebellion and grassroots collective action that fuelled Giroscope has been replaced by closed community bonds and a society that tells you to “build your personal brand” instead of pooling resources.

Government support is patchy and short-lived. Innovative projects face legal and financial hurdles at every turn. The safety nets that once existed? Gone.

A Unique Moment in Time

Giroscope thrived because rebels could “work the system” and build change from the ground up. The conditions were perfect: cheap housing, accessible credit, looser regulation, and a generation willing to band together and get their hands dirty.

Today’s generation faces a more complex, less forgiving landscape.

But here’s the thing: the need for willpower, stubbornness, and solidarity has never been greater.

Giroscope proved that when people refuse to accept the world as it is, they can carve out something better — even if the odds are stacked against them. That spirit doesn’t belong to one era. It belongs to anyone brave enough to claim it.

So maybe we can’t replicate Giroscope. But we can learn from it. And we can find our own way to fight back.

Links:

    • Power to Change: Giroscope Case Study
    • Social and Sustainable: Giroscope Portfolio
    • The Developer: 40 Years of Turning Empty Properties into Affordable Homes
    • Stonewall Housing to investigate how the older LGBT community live

 

#Giroscope #HousingCrisis #PunkActivism #CoOperatives #AffordableHousing #CommunityAction #ACOMSDave

Filed Under: Community Journalist Tagged With: ## Meta Tags (Comma Delimited): Giroscope, 1980s Britain, affordable housing, alternative living, community action, community housing, cooperatives, derelict properties, DIY culture, grassroots movement, housing co-operative, housing collective, housing crisis, Hull regeneration, punk activism, punk rebellion, social housing, Thatcher era, urban regeneration, worker co-op

HeartDrop — When Love Presses ‘Accept’

17/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Heartsrop“Will love survive the silence — or will fear keep pressing decline?”

In a world where honesty often feels like a luxury, HeartDrop emerges as a quiet yet defiant whisper of truth.

This poignant and bold short film follows Dylan and Max, a young queer couple in a small town, as they navigate the complexities of identity, secrecy, and love. One person embraces their true self with courage, while the other conceals it beneath the mask of social expectations.

Between them lies a fragile thread: a hidden phone feature — their silent, secret way to express the love that words can’t.

As HeartDrop unfolds, we are asked a simple but piercing question:
Can love survive when it’s forced to hide?

The Story Behind the Screen

At its core, HeartDrop is not merely a story of young love — it’s about truth, fear, and the courage to be seen.  The film captures that delicate moment between expression and repression, between what the world expects and what the heart needs.

Created by a team of emerging queer filmmakers, it feels deeply personal — intimate yet universal. Every pause, every gesture, every vibration of a phone carries emotional weight. It’s cinema that lingers quietly long after the final frame.


🌟 Cast

  • Daniel YaqoHeartdrop

  • Will Trineer

  • Idaya Bello

  • Haig Jamkodjian

  • Tyler Holmes

  • Jacob Versace


🎥 Crew

Producers: Daniel Yaqo, Matt Latreille
Writers: Daniel Yaqo, Matt Latreille
Director: Daniel Yaqo
Director of Photography: Eliana D’Assisi
Editors: Jasmine McLaughlin, Matt Latreille
Sound Design / Mixing: Daniel Zea

1st AD: Alyssa Rose Hunt
1st AC: Lily Chiasson
2nd ACs: Alyssa Rose Hunt, Alexandra Morrison
Drone Operator: Matt Latreille
Location Sound: Kyla Marie Supat, Sophia Lam
Gaffers: Lily Chiasson, Joseph Liu
Wardrobe: Adrian Ally (Martianally)
Key Hair & Makeup: Wade Dane
Production Assistant: Karen Pascal

Extras: Wade Dane, Alyssa Rose Hunt, Holly Loggie

🙏 Special Thanks

  • UNTITLEDToronto by Flaunt Boutique Hair Salon — for providing the café location

  • The Ally Family — for providing the bedroom sets


🌈 Connect & Follow

📸 HeartDrop Short Film – Instagram
🎬 Daniel Yaqo – Instagram


💭 Final Thoughts

HeartdropHeartDrop is more than a short film — it’s an emotional exploration of what happens when love exists in the shadows.
For many queer people, it feels like a mirror: the first text that wasn’t sent, the kiss that didn’t happen, the truth that waited too long to be spoken.

Its power lies in its quietness — a tenderness that refuses to hide.
HeartDrop doesn’t shout its message; it whispers — and in that whisper, we hear something profoundly true.

 

#HeartDrop #QueerFilm #LGBTQCinema #ShortFilm #IndieFilm #LoveIsLove #QueerStories #DanielYaqo #FilmReview #ACOMSDave

Links:

  • YouTube – Heardrop
  • IMDB – Heartdrop
  • Thirteen or So Minutes: A Quiet Revolution in the Span of a Coffee Break

 

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: Daniel Yaqo, film review, HeartDrop, identity and love, independent film, LGBTQ love story, LGBTQ+ film, queer cinema, queer storytelling, short film

The Boys in the Boat

17/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

The Boys in the BoatA Triumph Worth Rowing For: The Boys in the Boat

There’s something quietly stirring about The Boys in the Boat — both Daniel James Brown’s book and George Clooney’s film adaptation. I went in expecting a solid sports drama and came away deeply moved, even if a few moments felt, well, a touch too polished by Hollywood’s hand.

Set against the bleak backdrop of the Great Depression, the story follows nine working-class young men from the University of Washington who dared to dream beyond their circumstances. Sons of loggers, shipbuilders, and farmers, they rowed their way from obscurity to the 1936 Berlin Olympics — and into history — by defeating not only the privileged Ivy League elites but also Hitler’s hand-picked German crew.

At the emotional centre is Joe Rantz, the quiet, determined soul whose life reads like something out of Dickens. Abandoned at fifteen, Joe built his life from the ground up — literally — and found belonging not in family, but in the rhythm and unity of the boat. Brown captures this beautifully, weaving Joe’s struggle for acceptance with the team’s relentless pursuit of excellence.

Then there’s George Pocock, the philosopher-craftsman whose poetic reverence for rowing gives the story its spiritual lift. For him, the perfect stroke wasn’t just athletic — it was transcendent, a “symphony of motion.”

The Boys in the Boat

Olympic champion crew team, University of Washington; this team won the gold medal at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin; Handwritten on border: 1936 – Olympic Champions.

Clooney’s direction honours that spirit, capturing the class divide of “old money versus no money at all” with warmth and sincerity. Yet at times, the film bows to convention — a few too many tidy crescendos and sentimental cues where raw restraint might have spoken louder. Still, those moments never sink in.

For anyone drawn to true tales of grit and grace — Unbroken, Chariots of Fire, or Seabiscuit come to mind — this story stands proudly alongside them. And the most touching detail? When Brown interviewed the elderly Joe Rantz, he wept only when remembering the boat — that fleeting, perfect unity that defined a lifetime.

Links:

  • The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics
  • Amazon – The Boys in the Boat
  • Amazon – DVD – The Boys In The Boat: An Epic Journey to the Heart of Hitler’s Berlin
  • Arlo and the Sea – Movie Review
  • The Boys in the Boat: The Myth of the Underdog – Part 1

 

#MovieReview #TheBoysInTheBoat #GeorgeClooney #FilmAdaptation #ACOMSDave #UnderdogStory #Olympics #TrueStory

 

Filed Under: Movie Reviews Tagged With: Daniel James Brown, Depression era, George Clooney film, Joe Rantz, Olympic history, rowing movie, The Boys in the Boat review, underdog story

30 Must-Read LGBTQ Books That Everyone Should Know

15/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

30 Must Read LGBTQ Books30 Must-Read LGBTQ Books That Everyone Should Know

The literary world has been profoundly enriched by LGBTQ voices telling stories of love, identity, struggle, and triumph. From groundbreaking classics to contemporary masterpieces, these books offer windows into diverse experiences while exploring universal themes of authenticity, belonging, and self-discovery. Here are 30 essential LGBTQ books that have shaped conversations, broken barriers, and touched countless hearts.

Classic Groundbreakers

1. Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin (1956). Baldwin’s exquisite novel explores a passionate affair between an American man and an Italian bartender in Paris. Raw and unflinching, it examines masculinity, desire, and the devastating consequences of denying one’s true self.

2. The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith (1952) Originally published under a pseudonym, this revolutionary novel offered one of the first lesbian love stories with a hopeful ending. Later adapted into the film Carol, it remains a tender portrait of forbidden love in 1950s America.

3. Orlando by Virginia Woolf (1928) This fantastical biography follows a nobleman who lives for centuries and mysteriously changes gender. Woolf’s playful, genre-bending masterpiece challenges conventional notions of gender and identity.

4. The Colour Purple by Alice Walker (1982). Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel tells the story of Celie, a Black woman in the rural South whose life is transformed through love and friendship, including a profound relationship with the singer Shug Avery.

5. Maurice by E.M. Forster (1971) Written in 1913 but published posthumously, this novel traces a young man’s journey to self-acceptance in Edwardian England. Forster’s insistence on a happy ending was radical for its time.

Memoirs and Non-Fiction

6. Fun Home by Alison Bechdel (2006). This graphic memoir interweaves Bechdel’s coming out with the revelation of her father’s hidden sexuality and eventual death. Beautifully illustrated and deeply moving, it revolutionised the graphic novel genre.

7. When We Rise by Cleve Jones (2016). Jones, a protégé of Harvey Milk, chronicles his journey from the early days of the gay liberation movement through the AIDS crisis to the fight for marriage equality. This is living history from someone who helped make it.

8. Redefining Realness by Janet Mock (2014). Mock’s groundbreaking memoir offers an intimate look at growing up trans and multiracial in America. Her writing is both personal and political, challenging readers to expand their understanding of gender and identity.

9. The Best We Could Do by Thi Bui (2017) This illustrated memoir explores identity, family, and the refugee experience through a queer Vietnamese-American lens, examining intergenerational trauma and the meaning of home.

10. In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado (2019) Machado crafts an innovative memoir about surviving domestic abuse in a same-sex relationship. Each chapter employs a different literary genre, creating a haunting exploration of love and violence.

Contemporary Fiction

11. Call Me by Your Name by André Aciman (1997) Set in 1980s Italy, this sensuous novel captures a transformative summer romance between seventeen-year-old Elio and his father’s graduate assistant, Oliver. Aciman’s prose is intoxicating and bittersweet.

12. The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller (2011). Miller reimagines Homer’s Iliad through the love story between Achilles and Patroclus. This mythological retelling won the Orange Prize and introduced a new generation to queer classical literature.

13. Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston (2019) This joyful romantic comedy imagines the First Son of the United States falling for the Prince of Wales. Smart, swoony, and politically engaged, it became a cultural phenomenon.

14. Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg (1993) Feinberg’s semi-autobiographical novel follows Jess Goldberg, a working-class butch lesbian navigating identity and survival from the 1960s through the 1990s. A cornerstone of transgender literature.

15. Boy Erased by Garrard Conley (2016) This powerful memoir recounts Conley’s experience in a conversion therapy program in the South. Unflinching yet compassionate, it examines faith, family, and the harm of trying to change someone’s sexuality.

Young Adult Literature

16. Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz (2012) This tender coming-of-age story follows two Mexican-American teenagers in 1980s El Paso as their friendship deepens into something more. Sáenz’s writing is poetic and emotionally resonant.

17. Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli (2015) A charming story about a closeted teen who falls for an anonymous classmate online. Adapted into the film Love, Simon, it brought mainstream attention to LGBTQ YA literature.

18. The Miseducation of Cameron Post by Emily M. Danforth (2012). After being caught with another girl, Cameron is sent to a conversion therapy centre. This novel beautifully captures adolescent resilience and the search for authentic community.

19. Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas (2020) This supernatural romance follows a trans boy brujo determined to prove himself to his traditional Latinx family by summoning the ghost of his murdered cousin—but he accidentally summons the wrong ghost.

20. I’ll Give You the Sun by Jandy Nelson (2014) Told from dual perspectives, this luminous novel follows artistic twins navigating first love, family secrets, and grief. One twin’s storyline centers on a gay relationship that will break and mend your heart.

Poetry and Plays

21. The Collected Poems of Audre Lorde (1997). Lorde’s poetry explores being Black, lesbian, mother, and warrior. Her work is fierce, sensual, and politically charged—essential reading for understanding intersectional feminism.

22. Angels in America by Tony Kushner (1991-1992). This Pulitzer Prize-winning two-part play is an epic exploration of the AIDS crisis in 1980s America. Blending realism with fantasy, it remains one of the greatest works of American theatre.

23. Citizen: An American Lyric by Claudia Rankine (2014) While not exclusively LGBTQ, Rankine’s groundbreaking work examines microaggressions and systemic racism in contemporary America, with intersectional insights relevant to all marginalised communities.

24. Night Sky with Exit Wounds by Ocean Vuong (2016) Vuong’s debut poetry collection explores his identity as a gay Vietnamese-American man, weaving together family history, war, and desire in stunning, heartbreaking verses.

Genre Fiction

25. The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon (2019). This epic fantasy features a slow-burn lesbian romance at its centre while delivering dragons, political intrigue, and world-ending threats. At 800+ pages, it’s a commitment—but worth every moment.

26. Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (2019). Described as “lesbian necromancers in space,” this sci-fi fantasy mash-up is wickedly funny, original, and features one of the most compelling enemies-to-lovers dynamics in recent memory.

27. The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune (2020) This cozy fantasy follows a caseworker who investigates an orphanage for magical children. Featuring a middle-aged gay romance, it’s a heartwarming story about found family and acceptance.

Essential Historical and Cultural Works

28. The Stonewall Reader edited by the New York Public Library (2019). This anthology collects firsthand accounts, speeches, and documents from the gay liberation movement. It’s essential for understanding the historical context of LGBTQ rights.

29. Gender Trouble by Judith Butler (1990.) Butler’s foundational academic text challenged conventional thinking about gender, arguing it’s performative rather than innate. Dense but revolutionary, it shaped queer theory for generations.

30. And the Band Played On by Randy Shilts (1987) Shilts’s investigative journalism chronicles the early years of the AIDS epidemic and the political failures that allowed it to spread. Devastating and necessary, it documents a crisis that decimated a generation.

Why These Books Matter

These thirty books represent just a fraction of LGBTQ literature, but they offer entry points into different genres, time periods, and perspectives. They document struggles and celebrate victories. They capture first loves and last goodbyes. They make visible what society once kept hidden.

Whether you’re looking for your own story reflected to you or seeking to understand experiences different from your own, these books offer empathy, education, and connection. They remind us that LGBTQ people have always existed, always loved, always created—and that their stories deserve to be read, celebrated, and remembered.

The best part? This is just the beginning. For every book on this list, hundreds more deserve recognition. The literary landscape continues to expand with new voices, new stories, and new ways of understanding identity and love. These 30 books are must-reads, but they’re also invitations to explore further and discover the rich, diverse world of LGBTQ literature.

 

Remember, Christmas is not far away, and there is nothing like receiving a gift that has been thought about for you – a lovely book!

Links:

  • LGBTQI+ Books
  • Gay Book Reads

#BookList

#WhatToRead

#BookBlog

#ReadingCommunity

#Bibliophile

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: bisexual fiction, book list, contemporary queer lit, diverse books, gay books, inclusive literature, lesbian books, LGBTQ authors, LGBTQ book recommendations, LGBTQ books, LGBTQ classics, must-read LGBTQ, pride reading list, queer fiction, queer literature, reading guide, representation matters, transgender memoirs

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