LGBTQ+ LITERATURE

Reading Gay Secondhand Books — Unique Legacies for New Generations

Who, I wonder, read this gay novel before me? What did they go through in their own lives? What did this book mean to them?

John Peyton Cooke
Prism & Pen
Published in
11 min readMay 28, 2024

--

Image shows two books. Left, ‘The Family of Max Desir’ by Robert Ferro — cover art featuring black-and-white photographs of family memories at the top, and a gay coupple arm-in-arm on a beach at the bottom. Right, ‘The Blue Star’ by Robert Ferro, featuring an illustration of a large ship on the ocean, as seen from a stone archway.
First editions of ‘The Family of Max Desir’ (1983) and ‘The Blue Star’ (1985) by Robert Ferro, Dutton. (Photo copyright © 2024 by John Peyton Cooke)

Cruising for Books

I collect gay fiction, but I don’t consider myself a serious collector. I collect new books but also used or secondhand books. I don’t need them to be first editions. It doesn’t have to have a dust jacket. It doesn’t even need to be in good shape, as long as I can still read it.

A surprising amount of gay fiction remains out of print. Those that have come back into print are usually available only as trade paperbacks or e-books. I prefer hardcovers if I can get them.

So I go out cruising for books. Old hardcovers are my type.

In New York City, I haunt The Strand. In Los Angeles, it’s The Last Bookstore. You can find me at a Goodwill, or, when I’m in London, an Oxfam charity shop. Then there are local library sales.

Online purchases from AbeBooks are fine, but buying online takes the thrill out of discovery. In a bookstore, you can stumble across things.

--

--

John Peyton Cooke
Prism & Pen

Author of several novels and short stories, most with gay protagonists. TORSOS was a Lambda Literary Award finalist (Best Gay Men’s Mystery).