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8 Reviews
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The unexamined life is not worth living - Socrates,
By A Customer
This review is from: About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights (Hardcover)
As a gay physician kicked out of the Navy under Clinton's
Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy, I have a unique
understanding of this book. Much the same way
I told my friends that the movie "The Hunt for Red
October" did an excellent job of portraying the
submarine USS Dallas, on the subject of gays in
the military I can tell you this book has substance.
No, my experience was different, but similar
enough still that Mr. Kennedy's relating parts
of this book made old wounds hurt, and other parts
reminded me of the progress we have made. Unlike
the majority of readers who probably only understand this issue
from the military or the civilian sides, I can truly
tell you that Mr. Kennedy has somehow poured his soul
into ink and paper, and you and I are the privileged
ones.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Whew!,
By A Customer
This review is from: About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights (Hardcover)
This book was difficult to read at times=boring. The subject matter did not flow. Much of the text was repetitive, rambling, with a lot of irrelevant material. The author is an attorney who served in the US Army as a prosecutor in the JAG office, finding himself in the uncomfortable position of being a gay man prosecuting other gays. An awareness of this as well as the title of the book would lead the reader to assume that one would gain some increased insight into the tactics of the military in this area. Not so. Very little space is devoted to this experience.Most of the book is about Kennedy's difficulty in accepting his homosexuality, his closet and his family.
Just not the book I expected to read.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent,
By A Customer
This review is from: About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights (Hardcover)
A READER DECEMBER 1, 1998 I have just finished reading James F Kennedy's book "About Face." It's about a young Army officer coming to terms with his gayness. I am the mother of six adult children, three of whom are Gay/Lesbian. Though my children have been out for several years, this book brought to me a new awareness as to what it really feels like to be gay. Mr. Kennedy is very honest about his feelings and emotions. In my humble opinion, this book is a must read for both parents and gay children.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The unexamined life is not worth living - Socrates,
By A Customer
This review is from: About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights (Hardcover)
On the subject of gays in the military, this book has amazing substance. The primary concern is not with understanding the Judge Advocate General Corps, but understanding one officer's struggle within it, and within himself. Mr. Kennedy, like many before him, searches his past for answers and doesn't really find out why he is made the way he is, then diligently searches for a present and a future, where he can love himself unconditionally, and those he chooses. Unlike the majority of readers who may have previously understood this issue only from the civilian side, those thousands of gay and lesbian service members caught in the middle of the fray, who have been discharged solely on the basis of their sexual orientation, can attest that Mr. Kennedy has somehow poured his soul into ink and paper
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A heartwrenching personal story of coming out,
By A Customer
This review is from: About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights (Hardcover)
This personal story of serving in the military as a closeted homosexual, coming to terms and finally fighting for homosexual rights, is a wonderful companion book to Randy Shultz' book Conduct Unbecoming. I am so glad that Sean decided to tell his story so those of us who never served in the military and are not gay could gain a greater understanding. Only through understanding can changes in military policy occur
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent story!,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights (Hardcover)
Not having been in the military, I was glad to have this insider's view of the gay scene in the military. I thought it remarkable how at ease Mr. Kennedy was with his straignt buddies in many parties and other free time activities that his straignt friends enjoyed, and how effective he was at covering his gay tendencies. I was also impressed with how effectively he could diffuse cases against gays. He is a remarkable man.
5.0 out of 5 stars
good,
By A Customer
This review is from: About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights (Hardcover)
this is a very good coming out stor
5.0 out of 5 stars
Book full of hidden rage, terrible pain underlies every word,
By A Customer
This review is from: About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights (Hardcover)
This is a harrowing account of the life of a gay man dedicated to his career in the Army. He is forced to witness and be a part of a judicial system that persecutes gay and lesbian soldiers many times for just how they are born...he is part of JAG...how does he come to terms with this challenging life to which his career choices have lead him? Read the book to find out, but beware, you will be horrified to realise that the book has been written as "nicely" as possible so as not to put off those who might be offended at a man expressing pain. Why ? Because society says same gender love is forbidden, a sign that the power of the bigot reaches into even our perception of our right to express ourselves in book format. Sensitive book, not for those who read with their "eye of discernment" closed...they will just find it boring..
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About Face: A Gay Officer's Account of How He Stopped Prosecuting Gays in the Army and Started Fighting for Their Rights by James E. Kennedy (Hardcover - May 1995)
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