Alice in Genderland: A Crossdresser Comes of Age
By Richard J. Novic, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
In 1863, San Francisco passed a law that criminalized a person’s appearing in public in “a dress not belonging to his or her sex.” Over forty US cities passed similar laws during this time. This book examines their effects.
In this collaborative memoir, a parent and transgender son recount wrestling with their differences as Donald Collins undertook his transition. Despite my best efforts to be sympathetic to the mother’s complaints, I failed.
This book, originally published in 1918, convinced me that the category of transgender had to be created to save a large group of people – us – from being victimized by a hateful and uncaring world
Crossing Over: Liberating the Transgendered Christian
The title refers to the hope filled story of the Israelites escaping oppression and the Pharaoh’s army by “crossing over” the parted waters of the Red Sea. That it has a second more literal meaning for trans people makes this an apt title for a small book that delivers a message of hope for conflicted transgendered Christians.
Crossdressing with Dignity: The Case for Transcending Gender Lines
By Peggy J. Rudd, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Dancing the Dialectic: True Tales of a Transgender Trailblazer
The subtitle to this book does not lie. Rupert Raj was the trailblazer for trans activism in Canada.
Before the film, there was the book. In its portrayal of the complexity of human nature, The Danish Girl demonstrates that well executed fiction with a trans story can be relevant to all readers.
Torrey Peters’ novel Detransition, Baby is nothing if not a deep dive into what it means to be trans. An accomplished work of fiction.
An easy reading guide to gender written mostly for “people who just haven’t had to think about how gender rigidly structures our lives, spaces and interactions.”
Gender Bending Detective Fiction.
A survey of detective fiction from the late 1940s to the present reflects the journey trans people have gone through in real life. Transphobic is too mild a word to describe what we’ve often experienced.
(The) Gendered Self: Further Commentary on the Transsexual Phenomenon
By Anne M. Vitale, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Genderqueer: Voices from Beyond the Sexual Binary
Edited by Joan Nestle, Clare Howell, and Riki Wilchins. The collection of essays in this book speak for the liberation of all of us, and not just the “genderqueers” that society at any one time finds acceptable.
How Sex Changed: A History of Transsexuality in the United States
By Joanne Meyerowitz. This book brings together all the plots, subplots, themes, and characters that shaped the current position on sex changing. You may know some of this history already, but there is much here that is fresh and Meyerowitz does an excellent job of putting it all in context.
I’m a little late to the party in reviewing John Irving’s book, first published in 2012. Having just finished reading it, however, I felt compelled to write a few words. It’s simply too good a novel to be quiet about.
Underlying all the essays and poems in this book is a trans woman aware of her own growth and deliberating upon the communities which nurtured her, but which she is reluctantly discovering may now be limiting her.
The book begins with a sentence that explains the title: “I’m afraid of men because it was men who taught me fear.” The introductory chapter that follows then demonstrates how this “fear governs many of the choices I make, from the beginning of my day to the end.”
I’m Supposed to Relate to This?
A Trans Woman on Issues of Identification with Trans Moving Images, by Valérie Robin Clayman; illustrations by Kat Verhoeven.
Invisible Lives: The Erasure of Transsexual and Transgendered People
In this scholarly study, Viviane Namaste argues that transgendered people are not so much produced by medicine or psychiatry as they are erased, or made invisible, in a variety of institutional and cultural settings.
If Dickens wrote of Great Expectations (however ironically), Casey Plett’s novel about a trans woman finding her way in the early months of winter in Winnipeg is one of low expectations. And yet…
Amanda Jette Knox’s book Love Lives Here suggests that in an age when hate seems to dominate the news and social media, people are thirsting for stories in which love triumphs.
Male Bodies, Women’s Souls: Personal Narratives of Thailand’s Transgendered Youth
The narratives in this book belie Western assumptions that Thai society is relatively accepting of transgendered people.
Mamaskatch: A Cree Coming of Age
Mamaskatch is a reminder of a time not so long ago when racism, colonialism, homophobia and transphobia had direct and devastating effects on individuals. I hope we’ve become better since then.
Mansplainers and other men to avoid
In this hilarious little book, Nicole Tersigni takes on the mansplainers, sexperts and patronizers by inserting her own captions into classic works of art. As the book blurb says, “less qualified men will dish out mediocrity as if it’s pure genius”.
Miss Vera’s Finishing School for Boys Who Want to be Girls
By Veronica Vera, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
By Just Evelyn (Evelyn D. Lindenmuth), reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
My Husband Betty: Love, Sex, and Life with a Crossdresser
By Helen Boyd, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
My Husband Wears My Clothes: Crossdressing from the Perspective of a Wife
By Peggy J. Rudd, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Organizing for Transgender Rights
This book is a political science and sociological analysis of transgender rights groups in the United States. The author studies the formation, proliferation and in some cases demise of these groups through interviews with their founders.
Out of the Ordinary: Essays on Growing Up with Gay, Lesbian, and Transgender Parents
Edited by Noelle Howey and Ellen Samuels. Only five of the 21 essays in this collection of essays are about having a trans parent, yet this book is still a worthwhile addition for trans parents trying to reach their children.
Revealing Selves: Transgender Portraits from Argentina & Out: LGBTQ Poland
Two books that explore the experiences of trans people in Argentina and Poland.
(The) Riddle of Gender: Science, Activism, and Transgender Rights
By Deborah Rudacille, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Rupert Raj: Dancing the Dialectic
The subtitle to this book does not lie. Rupert Raj was the trailblazer for trans activism in Canada.
She’s Not the Man I Married: My Life With A Transgender Husband
By Helen Boyd, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
She’s Not There: A Life in Two Genders
By Jennifer Finney Boylan, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Desmond Cole’s dismantling of police tactics against Black people in Canada, with an excellent chapter on the disruption of Toronto’s Pride Parade in 2016 by Black Lives Matter -Toronto. We’re all in this together.
While Soar, Adam, Soar is very much about the short, inspiring life of Adam Prashaw – indeed, he contributes to much of it through his Facebook postings reprinted periodically within the text – it’s also about his dad and co-author, Rick Prashaw. I don’t think Rick intended it that way, but I also don’t think the book suffers for it.
Stuck in the Middle with You: A Memoir of Parenting in Three Genders
By Jennifer Finney Boylan, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Third Sex, Third Gender: Beyond Sexual Dimorphism in Culture and History
Edited by Gilbert Herdt. Once you’ve dismissed the notion that there is one simple, fixed definition of man and woman, which this book does very thoroughly, you become aware of the astonishing ways in which gender diversity has been expressed, tolerated, and institutionalized in various cultures.
A worthwhile and readable memoir. Lorimer Shenher served with the Vancouver Police Department and was the first detective assigned to the notorious case of missing Vancouver women.
An entertaining and inspirational collection of letters written by successful transwomen sharing what they have learned on their journey to womanhood. It is by turns honest, heartfelt, funny and furious. “A love letter to our community.”
An anthology that brings together activists and allies to examine the various strategies and forms of resistance needed to transform oppression into opportunity for change.
Trans America: a counter-history
Can we even think of trans before trans? What is the prehistory of transsexuality and transgender? These are some of the questions this history aims to address.
C. N. Lester’s critique of the way trans people have been, and continue to be, portrayed in the media and popular culture has a mild undercurrent of anger which I found invigorating. Anger has a way of focusing one on the need for action, and as Lester clearly demonstrates the battle is far from over.
Trans Medicine: the Emergence and Practice of Treating Gender
This history of trans medicine makes clear the problem from its inception has been that many medical providers don’t really know what they’re doing.
I learned a lot from this special issue of Transgender Studies Quarterly on trans pornography, but could never quite convince myself – as several of the contributors have – that performing it was “empowering”.
There are some worthwhile arguments in Juno Roche’s book Trans Power, but she’s so enamoured of her own personal epiphany that she mistakenly assumes it is the way forward for all trans folks. It is not.
By Pat Conover, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Transgressive: A Trans Woman on Gender, Feminism, and Politics
An interesting collection of essays by an academically trained philosopher trans woman that explores various facets of the trans experience.
Transmen and FTMs: Identities, Bodies, Genders, and Sexualities
A book that effectively captures the breadth of the FTM experience, but ultimately a worthwhile addition to any trans book collection.
A biography of the remarkable Sandra Pankhurst, a woman who brings order and care to the living and the dead. Before she was a trauma cleaner, she was many things: abused child, husband and father, drag queen, sex affirmation patient, sex worker, businesswoman, and trophy wife. An affirmation that we are all in this together.
Travesti: sex, gender and culture among Brazilian transgendered prostitutes
It’s a strange and interesting world. That was the recurring thought going through my head as I made my way through this sometimes astonishing book.
Understanding Cross-Dressing: A Discussion from Many Points of View
By Virginia Prince, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
The Uninvited Dilemma: A Question of Gender
By Kim Elizabeth Stuart, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Unzipping Gender: Sex, Cross-dressing and Culture
By Charlotte Suthrell, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.
Vested Interests: Cross-dressing & Cultural Anxiety
By Marjorie Garber, reviewed by Samantha P. Samantha passed away in 2019. This review was originally published on her web site.