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Neil Miller

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Born January 1, 1945 (81 years old)
Kingston, United States
7 books
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12 readers

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Books

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Sex-Crime Panic

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6

Following the brutal murders of two children in Sioux City, Iowa, in 1954, police, in an attempt to quell public hysteria, arrested 20 men whom the authorities never claimed had anything to do with the crimes. Labeled as sexual psychopaths under an Iowa law that lumped homosexuals together with child molesters and murderers, the men were sentenced to a mental institution until cured. Their shocking story is brought to light for the first time by award-winning journalist Neil Miller, author of Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present. Shedding a harsh light on 1950s attitudes toward homosexuality, Miller's carefully researched account shows how the paranoia of the McCarthy era destroyed the lives of gay men in the American heartland. Interviews with the formerly incarcerated men, law enforcement officials, lawyers, mental hospital staff, and relatives of the murder victims provides a vivid and disturbing glimpse of a town that betrayed its own sons and a mental institution where patients provided cheap labor and shock treatment was the therapy of choice. A gripping story of murder and antigay hysteria, Sex-Crime Panic presents a dark chapter in the history of postwar America.

Out of the past

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Clint Adams never saw this coming. A young girl breaks the news to him that her mother was killed— and he's her father. And the suspected murderer is about to learn that no one messes with the Gunsmith—or his offspring.

Out in the World

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This volume contains a series of letters written by the American writer Jane Bowles, between 1935 and 1970, addressed mainly to her husband Paul Bowles and her friend Libby Holman.

In Search of Gay America

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Explores the diversity of gay and lesbian life in America in the late 1980s. Shows lesbians and gay men building communities and families, coming to terms with their religious beliefs, reconciling with their roots, and for the minorities interviewed, coping with racism as well as homophobia.