relentlessly exposes the complexities of each development as a homosexual tries to effect a correspondence between his intellect and his emotions. Each stage is portrayed realistically and with all the power it actually
contains.
If you can read French and are able to obtain a copy of this book, you will experience a catharsis which becomes more real each time it is recalled.
T.L.W.
THE KEVAL and other gay adventures, by Harry Otis, ONE, Inc., Los Angeles, $1.95.
This handsomely produced volume of gay adventures opens like a wide panorama. From the Golden Horn to Hongkong, from Cairo to Bali, from Bangkok to South America-varied as the scenery of this book is so are the moods of the stories and sketches between its covers. To the music of the Keval, an ancient shepherd's flute, unfolds the tender and moving love story of two Turkish youngsters. Greta and Earl, sister and brother, go cruising in Cairo, and it's Earl for once who gets the better part of the deal. The madness of the carnival in Rio makes an excellent background to another story. And as the the backgrounds of the stories change so do the moods. There is tenderness in "Home to Kashmir"; subtle irony in "Druga's Solution"; and yearning-eternally the same everywhere on the face of the earth-
VESTAL FIRE
by Compton Mackenzie (author of "Thin Ice"). Delightfully witty and literate novel of a modern Hadrian and Antinous. $2.95, plus 20 cents postage
VILLAGE BOOKS
116 Christopher St., N. Y. 14 Send for latest Catalog, #21, at no charge.
in that brief Japanese sketch "Another New Year." Not satisfied with all this the author takes a deep plunge into the past and recreates in "Noon in Persia" a vivid espisode from the life of Alexander the Great. The famous Sultan Babur emerges equally vividly from the pages of "Like Father, like Son."
What makes all this such enjoyable reading is the simple fact that the book shows straightforwardly that love between men can be found in every corner of this world of ours. It has existed in the far-away days when Alexander The Great went to India, and it exists to this very day. Varied as any manifestation of love this book tells the reader how natural a thing love between men has been and always will be.
The English Editor The Circle, Zurich
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