Transgender Books
You can find these books at any library or bookstore.
These books were reviewed by Jamie.
Rating scale:
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=fair |
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= good |
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= very good |
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=excellent |
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= fantastic! |
Trans-Sister Radio |
Unbending Gender |
Transgender Warriors |
An Unconventional Family |
The Woman I Was Born Not To Be |
The Lazy Crossdresser |
Crossdressing With Dignity |
My Husband Wears My Clothes |
Crossdressers and Those Who Share Their Lives |
Fantastic Women |
The Man in the Red Velvet Dress |
Surpassing the Love of Men |
Sex and Gender in Historical Perspective |
Crossing, A Memoir |
Gender Shock |
Vested Interests |
Transformations |
The Gendered Society |
GENDERqUEER |
Miss Vera’s Finishing School for Boys Who Want to Be Girls |
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The Woman I Was Born Not To Be Alecia Brevard This is an excellent autobiography of a M 2 F transsexual's journey from an Appalachian sissy-boy who, "should have been a girl" to a mature, introspective woman in her early 60's. She grew up never pleasing her father but with early support from her sister and eventual aceptance from her mother. Her experiences include: four failed marriages, self castration, TS surgery, a Marilyn Monroe clone at Finnocchio's, a 6' model with copper colored hair, waitress, stripper, several rapes, college student, drama instructor, movie and theatre actress, playwright and author. The 21 pictures in the center of the book show the progress of an attractive person evolving from a pretty boy to an exotic sex goddess to an attractive and mature human being that I'd enjoy as a neighbor. She gives the 'Ain't Necessarily So' rebuttal to Freud's comment that "anatomy is destiny." Finally, her psychological evolution and personal insights are summarized in her closing chapter. If you haven't figured it out by now, I liked this book because I could identify with the growing self awareness towards full humanity.
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Charles Anders Greenery Press 2002, ISBN 1-890159-38-7 $13.95 Books & Co. This
book is aimed at the emerging crossdresser and his initial effort to mimic women
perfectly. Here are five paragraphs
from pages iv & v of the Introduction.
“I first met a group of transsexuals when
I joined a transgender group in Jesse Helms country.
Some of them looked like Donna Summer, some of them looked like Donna
Reed. But the one thing the people in this support group had in
common was that they were trying to live as women.
They went through a lot of hardship to blend in and make their way in the
world. I knew instinctively I
wouldn't ever do what they did.
Most crossdressers I know only put on their glad rags behind closed doors
with the shades drawn. They never
let another soul see them. They may
be held back partly by shame, but probably also the fear of falling short.
I stayed resigned to dressing up very rarely and secretively for a long
time. I fantasized and read badly
written porn stories in which sadistic women turned men into, “shemale
slaves.”
I didn’t relax until I decided I didn’t
need to be a diva like the drag queens, or appear female like the transsexuals.
I’m amazed how long it took me to figure that out.
There are zillions of crossdressers out there, and they don’t have much
in common with most drag queens or transsexuals except for wearing women’s
clothes. I wouldn’t be writing
this book if I didn’t believe that for every visible drag queen and TS, there
are a hundred mostly invisible men who just like to wear pretty things.
These days, I have tons of fun dressing up.
And if you offered me the chance to do Captain Kirk’s body swap, I
probably wouldn’t take it. I
enjoy being a man in women’s clothes. Once
I mastered all the tricks of gender transformation, I realized how easy it was
to cut corners. I’ve been cutting
them ever since.
A lot of short cuts can be summed up in one
phrase: I don’t try to look like a woman.
Making people believe you were born female is the Holy Grail for many
crossdressers. But I don’t worry about creating any kind of
“illusion,” either glamorous or womanly.
I want to look good and have fun. To
have fun, I have to feel comfortable and banish worries about getting away with
deception.” There is much more material and I recommend this book.
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Crossdressing With Dignity (The Case for Transcending Gender Lines) Peggy J. Rudd Ed.D
(Read Below)
My Husband Wears My Clothes (Crossdressing From the Perspective of a Wife) Peggy J. Rudd Ed.D
(Read Below)
Crossdressers and Those Who Share Their Lives Peggy J. Rudd Ed.D
These three books are popular classics in the crossdressing community and vary in age from 5 to 10 years. They are from a woman married to a psychologist in 1980 who revealed his crossdressing to her after the wedding. Although initially a shock, she made a decision to work on the positives and is now a leader in the Texas gender community. She and her husband Mel/Melanie now regularly sponsor annual “Dignity Cruises” for crossdressers and host an annual “SPICE” conference aimed at wives dealing with crossdressing. The Biblebelt writing style makes me suspect ghostwriting, but even so all three books have a lot of good thoughts that I can agree strongly with. It may be that the “Biblebelt” writing tone is only a reflection of the close association between crossdressing and spirituality. One thought is that crossdressers are “gender gifted.” (I always wanted to tell my mother that the early treatment as a girl had been helpful in my later relationships with co-workers.) What I draw from her example is that her high level of education was probably an indicator of potential acceptance. The more education the wife has the higher the probability that (m2f) crossdressing can be successfully integrated into a marriage. |
Annie Woodhouse I first read this book several years ago and later re-read it extensively because it dealt with a feminist psychologist in Britain trying to find whether M2F crossdressers and transsexuals had anything to offer the feminist movement. I was very disappointed that she found no positive connections and was also shocked when she reported a case of a crossdresser beating his wife, something I thought never occurred. It is part of my mythology that transgendered males and the Women’s Movement are complementary within a common gender revolution. The failure of her research to support this idea is (I believe) due to the psychological immaturity of the men she interviewed. She, like many other gender researchers, failed to differentiate between subjects in their initial erotic phase and those in their later spiritual phases. She overlooked her primary helper whose I,Thou boundary was outside himself and focused on helping others. I have a paper on this topic which I call, “Stages of Transgender Development.” |
Transgender Warriors (Making History from Joan of Arc to RuPaul) Leslie Fineberg This
Beacon Press book contains a series of stories about gender-crossers and
political revolts such as The Stonewall Riots.
It was an interesting book from a historical perspective and I recommend
reading it.
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Sandra Lipsitz Bem Sandra Bem is a Cornell University Professor famous for devising the Bem
sex-role inventory test to measure gender role orientation.
This book describes how her two children (boy first and a girl second)
turned out after her best efforts at gender-neutral rearing.
The children have left home and she is separated from her husband, but
still on friendly terms. I didn’t
get any clear message from this book as to the difference it made to the
children except for her son who occasionally wears a skirt. |
Joan Williams
It is from the perspective of a female attorney and is concerned with the economic, social and racial inequities based on sex. The authors remedy is to use the law to fix social problems and divorce problems in particular |
Chris Bohjalian It
is set in a small northeastern town and |
Sex and Gender in Historical Perspective Edited by Edward Muir & Guido Ruggerio (rating 0). This
book was given to me by my oldest son because he knows of my interest in gender
issues. While I appreciated his
thoughtfulness, It seems terribly dull and what little I did read referred to
Medieval Italy and lacks modern relevance. |
Lillian Faderman
I found this book about 6 years ago in
Seneca Falls New York at the Women’s History Museum after touring Elizabeth
Cady Stanton’s home. I read it
entirely, but don’t recall much except for it’s primary theme of love
between women. There was a
description of “Boston Marriages” between prominent women, which had the
effect of marriage. There also was
an extensive section detailing how love between women was very common before the
rise of the mental-health industry’s’ pejorative labeling in the late 19th
century. Apparently no one worried
about it previously as women couldn’t get each other pregnant and men
generally didn’t see it as a threat. |
The Man in the Red Velvet Dress J. J. Allen This book is from a long time married crossdresser with many interesting observations. It is well written by an experienced author, but his conclusions are probably still evolving. He makes the important point that most (M2F) crossdressers wonder all their lives about why they crossdress. He has some very good pictures of crossdressers from about 20 years ago including Virginia Prince who started organizing crossdressers worldwide under her FPE (Foundation for full Personality Expression). He also has a picture of what is clearly a fetishist in the early stages of psychological development. He also talked about the “Black Lace Prison” of addictive crossdressing and same sex activity. He also fails to recognize the effects of psychological development on crossdressers. |
Miss Vera’s Finishing School for Boys Who Want to Be Girls Veronica Vera I found this paperback about 2 years ago in a Barnes & Noble bookstore. It is a witty explanation of how an adventurer in the porn industry became the headmistress of a school for men wanting to explore their feminine side. The author is a first rate writer with a tendency toward the frequent use of double entendre. The book isn’t in front of me now, but I still recall her comment about “wearing the pants in her life by helping men wear skirts in theirs.” One favorite student, a former nuclear engineer studying to be a veterinarian, appears in many of the photos and is joined near the end of the book by a very attractive & supportive lady friend. This was a fun book to read that I also found fairly accurate in describing the needs of men imitating women. |
Michael S. Kimmel This is a textbook from a male author working in academia and unsatisfied by the current “gender” literature. It wasn’t a particularly riveting book for me but did seem to have a broad grasp of the problem. Sometimes I think we who deal with the “gender problem” are like the blind Indian wise men describing the elephant in that we lack a common perspective. Most of what I see at Books & Co is either by feminists wanting affirmation and economic equality or males who are in the early part (i. e. erotic phase) of their journey through gender. Apparently this author is neither. He mentioned that most crime is gender based; I don’t know where he got that. |
Transformations (Crossdressers and Those Who Love Them) Mariette Pathy Allen
I have had this book since about ’91.
It is a book of pictures and text by a photographer who met her first
crossdressers at a New Orleans Mardi Gras.
She mentions that she earlier had attended a girl’s school where she
was once accused of not knowing the difference between boys and girls.
She also had studied Margaret Mead’s reports of life in other societies
and their freedom to arrange the relationships between the sexes in many
different ways. I spoke to Mariette
at the ’99 BeAll convention in Cleveland where she told me she had held a
birthday party for Margaret Mead on her 75th birthday.
She said they lived in the same building. Any way this well-written book is a beautiful photo-essay of
crossdressers and the people they are in relationships with.
As a long time member of this community I recognized many of the faces in
the pictures. Apparently she is
making a career of attending TV/TS conventions as she is listed as a presenter
in most of the gender convention literature I see. |
Vested Interests (Crossdressing & Cultural Anxiety) Marjorie Garber This author claims there can be no culture without crossdressing. She is Professor of English and Department Chair at Harvard (?). Although I’m unsure she would agree with me I think she is saying that the bi-polar gender model needs the crossdressing input to gain self-perspective. Much of her arguments were over my head because they involved models from Shakespearean era literature unfamiliar to me. However her claim that culture needs crossdressing seems valid. The pictorials show a picture of a crossdressed Ken (from the Ken & Barbie dolls) which was apparently shipped from Mattel’s factory without inspection (it’s now a valuable collectors item). A full reading of this book takes some time and a little work with the dictionary. |
Gender Shock (Exploding the Myths of Male & Female) Phyllis Burke
This is a first-rate book on gender issues in society.
The author and her partner have a male child and there was concern that
the child might suffer from the lack of a male role model. An elderly Unitarian widow who said essentially that the
“Iron John” myths from Robert Bly are so much bullshit deflates this
“problem” early in the book. The
middle of the book recounts several gruesome stories of children abandoned to
psychiatric institutes for gender re-education by parents apparently too
embarrassed to deal with gender variance. In
the last part she has a chapter on gender independence and it’s advantages for
society. This is the best
thought-out book on gender I have seen! |
Deirdre (formerly Donald) N McCloskey
I found this book in Denver at the Tattered Cover Bookstore.
The Author is Professor of Economics at Iowa State University who
converted from male to female between the ages of 52 and 55.
Although she keeps the respect of colleagues who knew her before and
after, she loses her family. Her sister, a Harvard psychiatrist, repeatedly tries to have
her committed to a mental institution. I
think her story is fairly typical for a well-connected M2F and makes interesting
reading, but there are no surprises except for the marginally satisfactory
surgical work. Along with the
gender crossing she changes from an atheist to a spiritual Christian.
She ends the book with a list of 50 common misunderstandings.
The first 10 are: Gender
crossing has to do with homosexuality. It
is always apparent at an early age. Psychiatrists
know about it. Psychiatrists
or psychologists can cure it. Punishments
and expulsions can cure it. Gays
wish to be women. Gender
crossers are effeminate as boys and men. They
are small and feminine looking. You
can tell. They
are lower class, never professors or business people or concert pianists. And so on for 40 more.
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edited by, Joan Nestle, Clare Howell, and Riki Wilchins; Alyson Books 2002, ISBN 1-55583-730-1, $16.95 from Books & Co. The
rating of 5 isn’t for easy reading but for its application to the wider
society This book is a
collection of essays from the gender community with perhaps more f2m than m2f
and many intersex people. Some are
easy reads and some aren’t. The
common theme is the suffering imposed on otherwise harmless individuals for
gender ambiguity; for not being ’fully’ male or female.
The female linebacker, the male debutante, the gay and the indeterminate
intersexual are all at risk. It’s
about the freedom of appearance in a “free” society.
Susan Wright, in her essay, “Be A Man” says, “I started
crossdressing to learn more about men, but ended up learning more about myself.
I didn’t realize I’d discover how much of my personality and ways of
interacting have been patterned by outside forces.
Does the clay need to know how it has been molded?
Maybe not, but I think we can all benefit from looking at life from
outside the gender traps we have grown up in.
I certainly did.” A particularly
powerful essay is the “Gender Rights are Human Rights”, by Riki Wilchins, at
the end of the book, speaking to representatives of the Gill Foundation
recounting the presentation to Patrica Ireland and the NOW National Board for
transgender inclusion. Paragraph 6
p 290 begins, “So I looked around the room at all these powerful, very
serious, and intimidating women, and said, “Many of you are no doubt wondering
why a man with a vagina is standing here lecturing you on where feminism should
go.” I look down a Patricia here
and notice she is now searching vigorously in her wrist for a good vein to open.
“But consider for a moment that men with vaginas are what gender looks
like when it’s deregulated, and so my presence here today is a sign of your
success and not your failure.” Riki also commented that, In the final analysis, the moral center of a movement is not defined by how well or how long we fight for our own rights. Important as that is, it’s also enlightened self-interest: We all want our own rights. The moral center of a movement is defined by how well and how long we fight for those who are not us, for those more easily left behind.
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