Amazon.com Review
Journalists Chris Bull and John Gallagher argue in their new book,
Perfect Enemies, that the national social politics of the 1990s are being increasingly defined by the conflict between the conservative religious right and the gay rights movement. This challenging thesis examines in meticulous detail the legal battles the Christian Coalition has waged against gay rights laws across the country. The authors' analysis of the gays-in-the-military fight is on target as they dissect the mistakes made by both gay leadership and the Federal government. Endlessly provocative and highly charged, Bull and Gallagher convincingly hammer home their point that the fight about gay rights effects everyone, not just the gay community.
--This text refers to an alternate
Hardcover
edition.
From Publishers Weekly
The religious right and the gay movement, this book contends, have a lot in common. Both are outsiders, considered fringe groups by the general population, and each brought the other to national attention in the political arena in the 1990s. Jerry Falwell is quoted as saying, "If homosexuals didn't exist, we'd have to invent them." Attacks on gays more than anything else, gay journalists Bull and Gallagher contend, have catapulted the religious right to the prominence it has enjoyed for much of this decade. A well-researched case for this is meticulously presented, but in arguing it, Bull and Gallagher have managed to write merely another gay attack on Christian conservatism?a commonplace centrist condemnation of evangelism. The book does succeed, however, in giving a well-documented and contextualized account of the skirmishes between the religious right and gay rights, and for this alone, it is valuable. But in being aimed primarily at the gay market, this fails to be the breakthrough book it could have been.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an alternate
Hardcover
edition.