Star-bellied snoots the form of school district prom polici, ary excln and the gay marriage bate
Contents:
- THE GAY HISTORY OF AMERI’S CLASSIC CHILDREN’S BOOKS
- READG THE GRCH AS GAY TO PISS OFF DR. SSS
- THE GAYBC'S ARE IN, DR. SSS IS OUT
THE GAY HISTORY OF AMERI’S CLASSIC CHILDREN’S BOOKS
It seems like an odd qutn but I am genuely cur. I gus the qutn me to me after watchg “Road Hoe” the 1989 Patrick Swayze stker of a movie which Sue immediately clared mt obvly be a cult film for gay men. It do have about as strong a gay subtext as any film this si… * was dr suess gay *
” It’s about a t who liv wh two gay men; you n tell by the book, then jt published, was evintly meant to help normalize already borgly normal fai like ours by g the tradnal substutn of animals for people orr to illtrate how much fun havg gay dads n be.
READG THE GRCH AS GAY TO PISS OFF DR. SSS
If you thk I’m about to your childhood by readg the Grch as gay character, you’d be even more disappoted to disver the tth about Dr. Sss. Did you know that The Cat the Hat was… * was dr suess gay *
) And if you stopped to thk about , “Lucy” seemed to argue that the gay dads, however full of fun, were aquate: When the pa chips were down, they need rcug, too.
THE GAYBC'S ARE IN, DR. SSS IS OUT
Among gay-themed children’s stori, they preferred “Frog and Toad. ” No, I know: “Frog and Toad” — a seri of four picture books by Arnold Lobel, origally published between 1970 and 1979 — is not gay-themed. But ’s not not gay-themed eher.
They get to scrap separately but get out of them together, which is not a bad fn of left: Jam Marshall, “Gee and Martha, ” urty of Houghton Miffl Harurt; Arnold Lobel, “Frog and Toad are Friends” © 1970 Arnold Lobel, ed by permissn of HarperColls Publishers; Jam Marshall, “Miss Nelson is Missg!, ” urty of Houghton Miffl HarurtOur boys loved the stori, as did we — but not bee Lobel was gay.
They ntued to make books together for years: a Frog and Toad tale if ever there was, Lobel’s gayns, when I learned of much later, seemed like somethg I should have known all along; lurked everywhere his words and pictur.