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Joan Denson was the American Dream except
for one little problem: she was a lesbian.
This is a memoir of the girl-next-door
who faces her homosexuality and finds
herself unwelcome in her surroundings.
A
child during WWII, the author came of
age reading The Diary of Anne Frank. The
memories of oppression and suffering of
the innocent so captured her imagination
that she struck up a friendship with Anne
Franks father and visited Annes
annex, where she found in her desire for
Anne a hidden piece of herself.
By
early adulthood Denson absorbed the culture
of the fifties, an era famous for its
"loud events and quiet discontents."
With a husband and children, she coveted
suburban bliss as much as the next girl.
But something was amiss. That something
came in the form of a lesbian experience
that led her to realize what had been
missing all along.
A
precursor to the "lipstick lesbian"
the author, now a prominent Beverly Hills
psychotherapist, recounts the struggles,
joys, and humor of growing up homosexual
in an era of repression. Her memoir provides
a first-person account of the evolution
of sexual mores over the last thirty years.
Price:
$14.95
Pages: 240
Format: Trade Paper
Trim Size: 6 x 9
ISBN: 1-56980-212-2
Pub Month: October
Rights: World
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