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::The danger and allure of prostitution for boys.<br>(Book Review, [[Alexander's Choice (book)|Edmund Marlowe]], August 26, 2016 )<!-- Added 8-26-16 --> | ::The danger and allure of prostitution for boys.<br>(Book Review, [[Alexander's Choice (book)|Edmund Marlowe]], August 26, 2016 )<!-- Added 8-26-16 --> | ||
Revision as of 18:00, 26 August 2016
Books and reviews
- The danger and allure of prostitution for boys.
(Book Review, Edmund Marlowe, August 26, 2016 )
- The danger and allure of prostitution for boys.
- Review of Enchanted Boy
(Book Review, Edmund Marlowe, August 6, 2016 )
- This story of a boy's life in Liverpool aged five to fifteen in the years 1948 to 1958 is told with profound humanity.
- Two gay trilogies worth a read
(Book review, Bernie Najarian, March 27, 2016)
- Many same-sex-attracted MAPs these days profess to feel completely separate from the gay community (sorry, LGBT-ETC-but-no-P community), but in reality, writings that are potentially relevant to us get published fairly often by members of that community. The opposite may happen, too – useful stuff published within our community may be out there for those LGBTs who are brave enough to take advantage.
- Review of Oscar Browning: A Biography by Ian Anstruther
(Book Review, Edmund Marlowe, February 1, 2016)
- Oscar Browning (1837-1923), Eton schoolmaster and Cambridge don, widely known as O.B., was an unusually colourful character even by the high standards of eccentricity often found in these ancient institutions.
- Review of The Judgment of Caesar by S. Saylor
(Book Review, Edmund Marlowe, January 28, 2016)
- A non-BL novel by a popular historical novelist with an interesting and positive portrayal of a pederastic affair.
- Review of Lunch with Elizabeth David
(Book Review, Edmund Marlowe on December 22, 2015)
- This is a review of Lunch with Elizabeth David by Roger Williams (1999), of possible interest to some here as a novel mostly about the boyloving writer Norman Douglas.
- Restored and retold by Andrew Calimach
- The chart that follows presents a global view of the surviving Greek myths centered on paederastic desire. They are grouped by categories named “scenarios,” of which four principal types are identified, “Hybristic erastes;” “Enkratic erastes and collaborative eromenos;” “Imprudent erastes and eromenos;” and “Hybristic eromenos.” Each scenario type is labeled according to the dominant dynamic of the stories in the group.