When Brooklyn Was Queer

When Brooklyn Was Queer

by Hugh Ryan

Narrated by Hugh Ryan

Unabridged — 11 hours, 30 minutes

When Brooklyn Was Queer

When Brooklyn Was Queer

by Hugh Ryan

Narrated by Hugh Ryan

Unabridged — 11 hours, 30 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

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Overview

The groundbreaking, never-before-told story of Brooklyn's vibrant and forgotten queer history, from the mid-1850s up to the present day

When Brooklyn Was Queer is a groundbreaking exploration of the LGBT history of Brooklyn, from the early days of Walt Whitman in the 1850s up through the women who worked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard during World War II, and beyond. No other book, movie, or exhibition has ever told this sweeping story. Not only has Brooklyn always lived in the shadow of queer Manhattan neighborhoods like Greenwich Village and Harlem, but there has also been a systematic erasure of its queer history-a great forgetting.

Ryan is here to unearth that history for the first time, and show how the formation of Brooklyn is inextricably linked to the stories of the incredible people who created the Brooklyn we know today. Folks like Ella Wesner and Florence Hines, the most famous drag kings of the late-1800s; E. Trondle, a transgender man whose arrest in Brooklyn captured headlines for weeks in 1913; Hamilton Easter Field, whose art commune in Brooklyn Heights nurtured Hart Crane and John Dos Passos; Mabel Hampton, a black lesbian who worked as a dancer at Coney Island in the 1920s; Gustave Beekman, the Brooklyn brothel owner at the center of a WWII gay Nazi spy scandal; and Josiah Marvel, a curator at the Brooklyn Museum who helped create a first-of-its-kind treatment program for gay men arrested for public sex in the 1950s. Through their stories, When Brooklyn Was Queer brings Brooklyn's queer past to life.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

[A] boisterous, motley new history...an entertaining and insightful chronicle, building on earlier histories by George Chauncey, Sherill Tippins and Charles Kaiser, among others, and enhanced by original research in newspaper archives, unpublished letters and collections of ephemera.” —The New York Times Book Review

"A chronicle for the ages.” —Harper’s Bazaar

“A funny, tender and disturbing history of LGBTQ life.” —The Guardian

“A hungry archivist, Hugh Ryan unearths vivid material to populate this story [of queer Brooklyn]….The archival discoveries that Ryan has made evoke a world of affection and pleasure.” —The New Republic

An exquisite, strange, and beautiful book.” —Out.com

“A dynamic combination of meticulous research and impassioned prose.... A romantic, exquisite history of gay culture." —Kirkus Reviews, starred

"This evocative and nostalgic love song to the borough and its flamboyant past offers a valuable broadening of historical perspective.” —Publishers Weekly

When Brooklyn Was Queer achieves everything one could want in a history.... Thorough research, engaging storytelling, fascinating stories and a history of obscurity make this investigation of queer Brooklyn a compelling, essential read.” —Shelf Awareness

Fascinating.... A number of celebrated creative types figure prominently.... Greater attention is given, however, to those who, once influential, have now been forgotten. Bringing them alive again is one of the valuable services Ryan’s fine work contributes to queer history.” —Book Riot

“You think Brooklyn is queer now? When Brooklyn Was Queer (St. Martin's Press) by Hugh Ryan traces the borough's vibrant, forgotten queer history beginning in the mid-1850s and continuing to the present day, essentially replacing the ‘systematic erasure’ of its longtime LGBTQ community and restoring its rightful place in the saga of Brooklyn.” —The Bay Area Reporter

~~~

“A monumental achievement of queer social history, Hugh Ryan’s When Brooklyn Was Queer animates a time not so dissimilar to our own in which desire and loneliness fuel a need for intimacy and community. Ryan’s book is an important new addition to the work of pioneers such as Joan Nestle and George Chauncey, a story told in vivid prose that's filled with small moments both heartbreaking and beautiful.” —Ira Sachs, filmmaker

“A delicious, fun, and moving study, cohered and popularized from generations of queer historians and deepened with new and exciting primary research. Hugh Ryan’s love for queer Brooklyn is page-turning, intersectional and an engrossing read.” —Sarah Schulman, Stonewall Book Award-winning novelist and AIDS historian

“Meticulous research and wonderfully skillful storytelling make Hugh Ryan’s book a revelation of queer history as well as a joy to read.” —Cleve Jones, Lambda Award-winning author of When We Rise

“Hugh Ryan’s When Brooklyn Was Queer is a real eye opener. So much of our history seems to focus on the bars in the West Village and the activism that sprung forth from them 50 years ago that we have nearly forgotten there was a vast trove of rich and diverse queer stories that pre-dated the Stonewall riots happening just across the river. From the beginning radical Brooklyn was intellectual, sexy, and dangerous! Who knew?” —Mx. Justin Vivian Bond, singer-songwriter, actor, and Lambda Literary Award-winning author of Tango: My Childhood, Backwards and in High Heels

“With meticulous research and fierce compassion, Hugh Ryan brings stories and communities almost lost to history to vivid life. Ryan’s brilliant work is a thrilling portrait of the endurance, resourcefulness, and indefatigable joy queer people brought to bear upon the challenge of their own survival. This is an essential book, and I’m more grateful to it than I can say.” —Garth Greenwell, author of What Belongs to You

“Tender, compelling, fascinating—Hugh Ryan is doing essential work here, bringing us stories of the lives we almost lost to time and gentrification, stories we need urgently, of the queer life that thrived before this moment. Ryan brings us back to a time before we had even the expectation of legal acceptance, and the lives people made as they could, and his interlocutor’s eye for where to look is, as ever, brave and unstinting.” —Alexander Chee, author of the Los Angeles Times bestselling The Queen of the Night

“Ryan does an amazing job of finding fascinating and surprising stories.... This book is a remarkable investigation into 19th and 20th century history that vividly opens up an entire field of study that will only grow in importance in the decades ahead.... Exquisite....Ryan’s When Brooklyn Was Queer fills an incredible gap in our knowledge, both about the history of Brooklyn, and about the history of sexuality.” —Deborah Schwartz, President of the Brooklyn Historical Society

When Brooklyn Was Queer is a treasure for anyone who wants to look deeper, who wishes to better understand the city and its history, for anyone who walks through Brooklyn and sometimes feels the ghost of history. Spanning centuries, neighborhoods, races and classes, this is an ever fascinating story of the inventive, fascinating, striving, hustling and romantic queers who made and make Brooklyn the magical, heartbreaking place of promise.” —Kaitlyn Greenidge, author of We Love You, Charlie Freeman, a New York Times Critics’ Top 10 Books pick; New York Times contributing writer; Radcliffe Institute of Advanced Study Fellow

“Layer by layer, American queer historians have been filling in the portrait of our complex and compelling past. In this enthralling journey through the vibrant borough of Brooklyn, covering over a 100 years, Hugh Ryan combines his excellent story telling with his passionate quest to throw open the doors of Brooklyn bedrooms and government files, of Naval Yard beats and Coney Island adventures, recovering the queer lives of those Brooklynites who came before. An American story, of desire, surveillance, resistance, and creation within the shadow of that great bridge. Ryan is immensely readable.”Joan Nestle, co-founder of the Lesbian Herstory Archives

MAY 2019 - AudioFile

Ryan narrates his work of LGBTQ history as it played out in Brooklyn over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Those featured include drag kings, a brothel owner, a black lesbian dancer, a transgender man, and others. Ryan’s delivery is engaging and, at times, intimate. Exploring the rich but often unrecognized, or even erased, events of Brooklyn's past, he shows how prominent Brooklyn was in terms of queer history and how much of that dissolved, particularly after WWII. The historical events come across as clear in his prose and accessible in his conversational delivery. When he is tracing the intimate details of people's lives through diaries, letters, other writings, and even interviews, he conveys a bit more emotion and meaning, which will pull listeners in even more. L.E. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169718584
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 03/05/2019
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 1,000,095
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