Some Men in London: Queer Life, 1945-1959
Some Men in London has the democratic, unpolemical quality of a social realist novel . In its sheer range of viewpoints and incidents it shares something with the roving perspective and multitudinous voices of Henry Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor (1851). It is a testament to Peter Parker's skill as a compiler - his ear for the peculiar and the archetypal alike - that gay life in these years, far from being a niche or rarefied thing, comes to feel like its own epicentre, the beating heart of the city. At times it feels more urgent and vibrant by far than life in the present.