Vintage Pulp and Original Gay Erotica
Brown-Bucker
Manhard
MH-430
Jeff Kincaid
$1.95
Foreword
In the recently published massive study, Sexuality and Homosexuality—A New View, Arno Karlen states:
“Society’s problem, then, is not the menace of homosexuality, but the possibility that doubly and triply pushing the deviant robs society of some of its valuable members and taints the quality of life with gratuitous cruelty. Therefore I believe that we should totally revise our sex-control laws. As long as violence and the seduction of very young children are not involved, sex can be left to the control of informal sanctions. Perhaps, also, if we stop seeing the sexual deviant as such a threat, we can afford to see him as a unique human being, in many cases little different from others except in his sexual preference.”
Little different. This is precisely the point Jeff Kincaid is making in Brown bucker. The homosexual is not someone who is sick, not someone who is to be pitied. He is a human being, a unique human being, and he differs very little from “straight” human beings. The homosexual’s loves and hates, his fears and his desires, the way he lives and breathes and dies, they differ not at all from the heterosexual. Why should the fact that he prefers to sleep with another man make him a deviate to be pitied, and in some cases hated?
Why is he a threat?
Dr. Karlen’s study has been recognized by leading psychologists and psychiatrists as being one of the few books written by a doctor which actually is accurate in its facts and sensible in its summation.
He sees the harm done to the homosexual since the beginning of time, and yet too, the harm the homosexual has done to society. He is never afraid to bring out the bad things about homosexuality, to point out the faults and the problems.
But he is never without an open mind, and he is able to see, as so many are not, that the homosexual is first a person. Yes, there are bad homosexuals, and, on the other hand, there are good heterosexuals. We cannot condemn them all because of a few.
Jeff Kincaid writes of the same people, homosexuals, only his approach is fictional, but in his fiction he draws real-life portraits and perhaps his book should serve as a counterpart to Dr. Karlen’s study, for it shows in human terms the characters Dr. Karlen studies. Mr. Kincaid believes also that there are bad homosexuals, and he writes of them. But he doesn’t condemn homosexuality because of the actions of one or a few homosexuals. His writing is literate and psychologically sound, and always realistic. Thus there are sexual scenes which some readers may shy away from. We warn you of these now, before you turn another page. As Dr. Karlen is not afraid to dissect the roots of homosexuality in the thoughts and motivations of his patients, Mr. Kincaid is not afraid to clearly write of the sex that takes place between two men—the reason, the simple reason, that labels them homosexuals.
Society’s problem is not the menace of homosexuality. Dr. Karlen states it just that way. Jeff Kincaid states it in another way, equally, we feel, as effective.
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