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Leather AD: M
Larry Townsend
New York: Badboy, 1996. -
Boy
James Hanley
London: Boriswood, 1931.First trade edition of Hanley’s second novel, a very grim tale of the brief life of a thirteen year old stowaway from Liverpool. YOUNG 1694. This copy with the signature of Gary Simes and a newspaper clipping of a photographic portrait of Hanley to the front endpaper.
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Sushi Central
Alasdair Duncan
Brisbane: University of Queensland Press, 2003. -
Coming Up Roses
Michael Carson
London: Black Swan, 1991. -
2nd Time Around
James Earl Hardy
Los Angeles: Alyson, 1996.First printing of the second book in the B-Boy Blues series.
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The Ninth Satire: Poetry, Fiction & Biography
Stephen J. Williams
Melbourne: Pariah Press, 1993.Cover illustration by Charles Blackman.
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How Long Has This Been Going On?
Ethan Mordden
London: Quartet Books, 1996. -
Works and other Smoky George Stories
Perry Brass
New York: Belhue Press, 1992. -
A Controlled Explosion
Dave Royle
London: Trouser Press, 1993. -
Fine Lines: A Short Novel, With Selected Short Stories
Gerard Curry
Austin: Banned Books, 1989. -
The Second Window
Robin Maugham
New York: McGraw-Hill, 1968.YOUNG 2575*.
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The Wrong People
Robin Maugham
New York: McGraw-Hill, 1971.US Edition of YOUNG 2580*.
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Paris Nights: Sydney, Oxford St, Mid 80’s Sex, Drugs & Clubbing
D. M. Crawford
Sydney: D M Crawford, 2020.A semi-biographical story of sex, drugs, and clubbing in Sydney, Oxford Street, mid-80’s. “Mark was a closeted suburban boy from Wollongong, hiding his sexuality within his surroundings. The enticing allure of Oxford Street nightlife beckoned and in particular a legendary nightclub called Patchs. A semi-biographical account of a young man’s journey and self-discovery which leads to a chance encounter as he hooks up with an older guy called Matt Paris, who’s been around the traps and harboured a secret past. They form a complicated friendship and bond as they embark on a shared weekend life together. Both men were from vastly different backgrounds, experiencing the highs and lows of gay life on Oxford Street in the mid to late ’80s of sex, drugs and clubbing. Oxford Street was called Sydney’s ‘Gay Golden Mile’. A beehive of social activities gathered on this strip that glittered with life and a party atmosphere catering for everyone’s tastes and fantasies. The DJ’s in these establishments were the Gods of the dance floor, playing an accompanying soundtrack to your life. This was Mark’s story and experience!” (publisher’s blurb)
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The Connecticut Countess: Chronicles of Davey Bryant
David Watmough
Trumansburg: The Crossing Press, 1984. -
The Male Homosexual In Literature: A Bibliography
Ian Young
Los Angeles and Toronto: ReQueered Tales, 2020.This edition is identical to the second edition published by Scarecrow Press in 1982. It has been reset but the core content has not changed.
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The Male Homosexual In Literature: A Bibliography (Supplement)
Ian Young
Los Angeles and Toronto: ReQueered Tales, 2020.Includes titles overlooked in the Second Edition, plus works written before the 1981 cut-off date but published later, including works published for the first time in book form. It also includes four appendixes: a checklist, a guide to pen-names, and personal essays.
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The Day Eazy-E Died
James Earl Hardy
Los Angeles: Alyson, 2001.The fourth book in the B-Boy Blues series.
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Human Warmth & Other Stories
Daniel Curzon
San Francisco: Grey Fox Press, 1981.YOUNG 884*.
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Airport Encounter
James Badger
: Privately Printed, 2012.Erotic coming of age fiction with some homosexual themes set in Brisbane, Armidale, and Toulouse. Limited private printing of 100 copies. “Nigel Wellesley is an Australian choirboy and this book follows him and his talented group of friends from their first sexual experiences into being teenagers. The action switches between Brisbane, Armidale and Toulouse as Nigel has to cope with his girlfriend Jane Barton being in a different city, and then in a different country, but he has plenty of sex-play with his fellow boys while they are separated. Music naturally plays a major part in the story. Mark Ambon is a talented composer and his very shy girlfriend Rose Trescowick is a poet, while Andy Riemer (son of a jazz musician) juggles being a child prodigy pianist with surfing. All of these have major parts in the plot, as do a dirt-poor Moroccan immigrant family in Armidale who Nigel and Jane befriend. A heart-warming, and quite sexually explicit, story.” (publisher’s blurb)
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Eight Days A Week
Larry Duplechan
Boston: Alyson, 1985.Interracial gay novel by an African-American author.