This is a fascinating history of how post-war Britain transformed from a country hostile towards ‘queer’ lives to the LGBQTI+ universe of today. Illustrator and cartoonist Kate Charlesworth lovingly crafted book is terrific. An envisioning – from her own life and experience of our shared history, all well researched and meticulously detailed. Her reimagining of her own school days in a northern comprehensive ‘Compy’ is laugh out loud funny and shows not only a merciless eye for satire but the warm comfort of adoring this familiar girl’s comic formula.
It’s saturated with her warmly working class lesbian view point of LGBTQ history from the end of the second world war to the present day and is stuffed full of curious facts, sumptuous memorabilia and some eye opening connections and queer influencers which were new to me. There’s a lush camp overtone to this book which I adored but Charlesworth also takes on the wretched struggles of the last 60 years, showing the real pain and suffering caused by the late Thatcher years equality battels. Her fury and anger behind the clause 28 battles are given a raw honesty and the awful impact of AIDS churning around her life.
Kate has been contributing to UK’s graphic novel and cartooning scene for a long time and there’s some wonderful cross pollination going on here. Go buy it now and read it through all of LGBTQ history month. The perfect accompaniment.
Out now, for more info or to buy this tremendously fun book see the publishers website here: