FICTION First Edition.
A novel depicting a gay relationship between two bikers in early ’60s London, filmed in 1964 with Rita Tushingham and Colin Campbell; an important early film for queer cinema.
Dick and Reggie are ‘leather boys’, working-class London teens with an affinity for leather jackets and motorcycles who become friends through their involvement in a gang. For Dick, the money he gets from the gang’s thefts helps to support his ailing grandmother; for Reggie, membership in the gang provides relief from an unhappy home life and a loveless marriage. When Reggie decides to leave his unfaithful wife and move in with Dick, the two soon discover their feelings for each other are much stronger than mere friendship. As they make plans for their future together, will they find the happiness they seek, or is their love doomed to end in tragedy?
The first novel to offer an authentic portrayal of love between ordinary, working-class young men, Gillian Freeman’s The Leather Boys (1961) is a groundbreaking classic of gay fiction that remains moving and compelling today. This edition includes a new introduction by Michael Arditti, who situates The Leather Boys alongside other early gay works by women writers like Mary Renault and Marguerite Yourcenar and argues that Freeman’s novel and its 1964 film adaptation played a vital part in liberalizing British attitudes towards homosexuality.
First published in 1961 by author Eliot George, a pseudonym for Gillian Freeman, all later editions use her real name.
The novel was published under the cheeky pen name Eliot George, but three years later, when Ms. Freeman wrote the screenplay for a film of the same title, she used her real name. (The opening credits said Ms. Freeman’s screenplay was based on the novel by Eliot George.)
Assessing the book and film in 2015 for The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide, Richard Canning wrote, “ ‘The Leather Boys’ was and remains groundbreaking.”
The book and, more so, the movie, he said, “made a pitch for the normality of male homosexuality, offering one of the first portrayals of it between working-class characters.”
This story of a blossoming gay romance between two working class teenage biker boys was published in 1961 – three or four years after Wolfenden had recommended decriminalisation of homosexual activities but a full six years before any legislation came into force. It’s not surprising, therefore, that the book has something of a cult status within the LGBT community and also accounts for why the publishers thought it necessary to give the author a pseudonym.
Eliot George is not a very imaginative pen name I suppose but inverting the name of a 19th century giant of novel writing who had to masquerade under a man’s name in order to be taken seriously as a writer does make a point of sorts. The name hides the identity of the novelist Gillian Freeman, who at this point had published two or three novels under her own name and went on to write a whole lot more as well as a highly regarded study of written pornography called The Undergrowth of Literature. As you might expect from an author with serious credentials, this piece of storytelling is not only designed to provide a space for the gay voice but to tell a convincing tale of working class teenage life.
Dick and Reggie are 18 year olds who lead quite different lives – Dick is devoted to his ailing grandmother who has just been widowed and Reggie has succumbed to social pressures and has married unwisely to Dot, a girl he now despises – but they come together in the coffee-shop gang led by the volatile and vicious Les. The gang indulges in petty acts of vindictive vandalism that give both Dick and Reggie a thrill but it’s also clear that their activities are escalating towards the more openly criminal.
When Reggie finally leaves Dot, he moves in with Dick at the grandmother’s house and the two find themselves sleeping in the same bed. Their latent attraction to each other is triggered and so begins a tentative but very positive physical and emotional relationship. They even start planning a life together away from their narrow neighbourhood and Dick makes plans for them to join the merchant navy. Needing money to make their plans come true and for Reggie to pay off Dot, the two decide to pull off the robbery of a small cinema without telling Les or the rest of the gang what they are up to. This is a breach of gang etiquette that they know would bring down a swift reprisal if discovered but they decide to risk it.
Their plans are exposed by Dot in an act of guilty vindictiveness and despite the fact that the robbery of the cinema has to be aborted, Les and the gang extract a tragic price for their disloyalty.
The book was filmed in 1964 and directed by Sidney Furie and it’s easy to see why it would have appealed to a film-maker. The prose is very readable, direct and unadorned and there is no attempt to complicate or justify the relationship that develops between the boys – and mercifully no attempt to write any explicit sex scenes.
The touching diffidence between the central characters, the gentleness of their relationship, stands in stark contrast to the violence of the gang. But it’s also right and good that the boys are not depicted as angels or as stereotypically ‘gay’ – in fact the homosexuality which is central to the book is almost taken for granted and the story of two teenage boys looking to escape the limited boundaries of their lives is by far the more important and dominant theme.
Jacket design by Oliver Carson.
First Edition. Scarce. Price-clipped dust jacket. Remnants of previous protective wrapper tape on prelims.
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