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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Book by book, Lillian Faderman continues to surpass herself., July 10, 1999
I don't ordinarily write reviews; rather, I read them. But I must take issue---and I very much disagree---with the two-star review (above) given Faderman's newest book `To Believe In Women'. Faderman's work, from the classic `Surpassing the Love of Men', through `Scotch Verdict', `Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers' (and the great, sprawling anthology `CHLOE plus OLIVIA' which she edited and for which she wrote the prologue to each section), stands far away and above the work of almost any other scholar of lesbian history; indeed, the great bulk of work by contemporary scholars in the field of lesbian history has not only been based upon, but legitimized by her efforts. She was *the* pioneer, and continues to be the foremost lesbian historian of our time. And while Faderman is a scholar of tremendous erudition, as a writer she manages to walk a line between the academic and the accessible with all the wit, grace, and agility of a cat. In `To Believe In Women', she is, as ever, at her best.Taking on the task of interweaving the political, social, and educational impacts of American lesbians of past generations on American culture is no easy job; in `To Believe In Women', Faderman handles that job with style and finesse. She explores not only these womens' accomplishments, but their failures and setbacks, as well. She examines not only successful lesbian relationships, but those that fail or compromise (a form of failure in itself) because of social fear, financial insecurity, or simply a change of heart. But what is perhaps one of the most pleasing points of this book is that Faderman allows these long-gone (and sometimes heterosexually- married) women to speak for themselves and their lesbianism in private letters and personal diaries; papers in which, even when the writer was (occasionally) attempting to be `discreet', the lesbian subtext is far from sotto voce. Faderman makes her case for these women's lesbianism amply clear to anyone with the simple ability to *think* as they read. In short, `To Believe In Women', is yet one more excellent addition to lesbian history; a book to be savored, enjoyed, and remembered. "I shall go to Chicago and visit my new lover---dear Mrs. (Emily) Gross---en route to Kansas.So with new hope and new life..." --Susan B. Anthony* *as cited in `To Believe In Women', page 1
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