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The Tomcat Chronicles: Erotic Adventures of a Gay Liberation Pioneer (Haworth Series in Glbt Community and Youth Studies)

The Tomcat Chronicles: Erotic Adventures of a Gay Liberation Pioneer (Haworth Series in Glbt Community and Youth Studies)

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $13.57
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Truth is hotter than fiction.
Review: Nichols's erotic memoir is his personal, sexual history of the years between 1961 and 1964, when gay life in America was alleged to have been one big closet. In fact, young, good-looking men like Nichols had the time of their lives, if they were discreet. AIDS was unheard of; and it was easier to seduce good-looking "straight" men in that simpler time. From 42nd Street in New York to 21st Street in Miami Beach, Nichols covered the waterfront.

As erotica, "The Tomcat Chronicles" is as stimulating and more literary than most of today's sex fiction. It is also required reading for all who are interested in gay American history and in the life of one of the gay community's most important activists and authors.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great adventure in learning about life.
Review: This is really not so much an "erotic adventures" book as it is a charming story about the romantic adventures of an idealistic young activist exploring gay life in America in the 1960s.

Indeed, after finishing the first chapter in which Nichols describes his first erotic encounter with a new friend he's met on a Florida beach, I jokingly told friends this book looked like it would simply be pure "erotic homosexual propoganda". I'd never read such romantic hyperbolic descriptions of homosexual sex. Indeed, I suspected I had missed out on something all these years. I was almost jealous. If I had been heterosexual, I'd probably felt I'd really missed life's greatest experience: "homosexual sex"!

However, beginning with the second chapter, everything became "real" as Nichols commences a long quest trying to find his lost love.

In the process, he discovers that some people you encounter in life are not what they pretend to be. He hitches rides all over the country, finds hustling is one reliable means of survival, befriends his missing love's lesbian sister to bolster his position in a future reunion and explores gay and straight culture in small towns and large cities. Being tall, masculine and handsome made everything easier and more interesting.

Nichols has a great ability to make those strange characters he encounters come vividly to life. If you took the best of John Rechy and Jack Keroac and blended them together, you'd end up with a book like this.

The title seems to promise either masturbatory material or a dated 1960s sex memoir. This book is much more. It is a timeless story about life and romance, an exploration of the interaction between sex and love.


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