Coming soon
TRIANGLES AND SWASTIKAS
The true story of homosexual persecution in Nazi Germany, taken directly from history texts, unfiltered by modern day rumor and lies.
WALT WHITMAN
America's most famous gay poet, and the subsequent trial of Oscar Wilde years after Whitman's death that reveal the untold story about his secret life and the "love that dare not speak its name".
THE INVENTION OF HOMOSEXUALITY
The true story of how the term "homosexuality" came into being, and how before the 1800s, homosexuality had no name or common description. Learn about how Victorian culture rarely made a distinction between friendship and sexual relations, and how famous people such as Abraham Lincoln found themselves in situations that today would seem to be of a homosexual nature.
LEANARDO DA VINCI AND WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE - TWO OF THE GREATEST MEN THAT EVER LIVED
Learn about the secret lives of two men who are praised as being among the most extraordinary men in human history, who shaped the culture and lives of billions of people, and who also knew a "love that has not a name".
THE SACRED BERDACHE
Learn about the Native American homosexuals who were revered by their fellow tribesmen as being holy men. Also learn about the Polynesian cultures and the Sambians, cultures that believe the only way an adolescent boy can progress into adulthood is through the ingestion of adult male semen.
WOMEN IN LOVE
Learn about Eleanor Roosevelt and her relationship with a lesbian news reporter. Also learn about Sappho, the poet, and the decadent lesbian culture that swept over Paris in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
THE GREAT WAR
Homosexuality in the trenches during World War I. While sexual activity was rare amongst soldiers during war, there were often passionate and deeply romantic friendships that arose between men in combat during the worst war the world had ever seen in its history. The war itself was seen as a purging agent to get rid of homosexuals. Also includes a bio of the Lawrence of Arabia, a homosexual whose masochistic desires lay beneath a warrior-like exterior that sent him home in fame.
GERMANY'S GOLDEN AGE
Germany was a homosexual paradise between the two world wars. Berlin, the capital city, was well known as the gayest place on earth at the time. The famous Moltke trial was Germany's version of Britain's Oscar Wilde trial, and led to the dark days of homosexual oppression in Nazi Germany during World War II.
FOUR BOHEMIAS
Profiles of gay neighborhoods in major cities around the world, including New York's Harlem and Greenwich Village, San Diego's Hillcrest, San Francisco's Castro, Paris' Left Bank, Miami's South Beach, and Los Angeles' West Hollywood. Traces the history of the neighborhoods and how they became gay meccas.
BLOOMSBURY
An elite group of liberals called Bloomsbury began affecting British culture before and after World War I, and brought about sweeping changes that made a grand impact on society.
THE WELL OF LONELINESS
A bio of the novelist Radclyffe Hall, and other famous novels, including Edmund White's A Boy's Own Story and E. M. Forster's Maurice.
HOMOSEXUALITY IN RUSSIA
How homosexuality slowed began to gain acceptance in the slow and gradual liberalization trend that began in Europe and began to flow into Russia. Also, the mysterious deaths of Tchaikovsky and Gogol, the world famous composer and author, respectively, which may have been a murder attempt by the Russian Orthodox Church to purge the nation of homosexuality. Also profiles the persecution of homosexuals in Russia's gulags during the Communist years.