Description

Book Synopsis
Explores the concept of labelling and the associated issues of categories such as butch or femme, transgender, bisexual, top or bottom, drag queen, b-girl, or drag king. This volume includes conversations with other writers, such as Deirdre English, Gayle Rubin, Jewelle Gomez, and Cherrie Moraga.

Trade Review
“Amber Hollibaugh is a brilliant activist intellectual from trailer park America.Her particular queer working-class life has taught her the skills, risks and pleasures of radically changing society-and social movements—from their despised edges. We’re lucky she hasn’t kept this dangerous knowledge a secret. For years her written and spoken words have made history. Now we have them all in a book that belongs in the toolbox of every working person. Pick it up and put it to work.”—Allan Bérubé
“At a time when the once-fire of the gay and lesbian movement is being extinguished by the seduction of middle class acceptability, Amber Hollibaugh raises her voice in an equally-seductive cry of queer resistance. My Dangerous Desires is a history book of one of our most faithful freedom fighters, told in the story of her own sexual-spiritual survival. Informed as much by the Civil Rights Movement as the Stonewall Rebellion, Amber Hollibaugh’s politic is one first forged in the bedrooms, the bar rooms and the back rooms of the working poor. A generation later, they are not forgotten; this book remains a living testimony for those unknown and untold by the gay and lesbian movement. Gracias, Amber.”—Cherrie Moraga, author of Loving in the War Years
“I welcome you to my friend’s essays, to the unique sharp-eyed glance of a woman who had to fight to be able to say, ‘I want.’ In Amber’s life, desire has been made sacred. Whether she is writing about the female body, the femme psyche, or the fearful need to admit desire itself, Amber has vindicated all our lives.”—Dorothy Allison, from the Foreword
“So for many years I led a double life: working as a Left political organizer, filmmaker, and writer during the day while supporting myself as a Vegas stripper and, as a young woman, earning a living through prostitution. As a dyke in the Left before Stonewall and a high femme lesbian during the growth of lesbian feminism, my erotic yearnings were often in direct opposition to the very political movements I was committed to creating.”—Amber Hollibaugh
“A smart and provocative collection. . . . As a primer on queer history and politics in the 20th century, My Dangerous Desires fills an important gap, giving voice to the kinds of experience traditional feminism has mostly ignored. . . . [One] can’t help admire the sheer breadth of Hollibaugh’s undertaking—it reflects a life lived in passionate struggle and commitment to liberation for all.” -- Elisabeth Flynn * Lambda Book Report *
(Starred Review) “A stunning collection of essays and interviews. . . . Hollibaugh's writing is sharp and glittering. . . . This provocative, challenging collection could become a feminist classic.” * Publishers Weekly *
“Amber Hollibaugh reinvigorates the somewhat shopworn phrase ‘the personal is political’ in this delightfully uncategorizable, genre-crossing book documenting her life as a working-class labor activist from a dusty California town. . . . Hollibaugh’s work delivers on its promise of unflinching bravery in the face of those who wish to silence us, whether for political efficacy or personal preference. Just as Emma Goldman didn’t want to be part of any revolution that wouldn’t let her dance, so too does Hollibaugh argue eloquently that ‘there is no human hope without the promise of ecstasy.’ Amen, and pass the Kool-Aid.” -- Jennifer Maher * Bitch *
“This memoir-cum-collected-works is a seductive tour through Hollibaugh’s thirty years as an activist, lover, and political theorist. It is also a biting critique of gay politics today.” -- Heather Findlay * Girlfriends *

Table of Contents
Introduction (1999)

A Queer Girl Dreaming Her Way Home (1999)

Sexuality and the State: The Defeat of the Briggs Initiative and Beyond

An Interview with Amber Hollibaugh

Socialist Review, May/June 1979

What We’re Rollin’ Around in Bed With: Sexual Silences in Feminism—a conversation toward ending them

Amber Hollibaugh and Cherrie Moraga Heresies Magazine, 1979/1980
Desire for the Future: Radical Hope in Passion and Danger
from Pleasure and Danger, edited by Carole Vance (Routledge Press, 1993)


The Right to Rebel
Gay Left Journal #9 (1979)


Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism
With Deirdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and Gayle Rubin
Socialist Review, 1978
Opposite Sex: Lesbians and Gay Men Talk About Each Others’ Sexuality
An Interview with Amber Hollibaugh, Jewelle Gomez, and Gayle Rubin
(Sara Miles and Eric Rofes, ed., 1998)


Femme Fables Columns
New York Native, 1983/1984

The Gap She Fostered

A Barren Expanse of Loneliness

Intimate Signs of War
Sympathy of the Blood
The Village Voice, June 1984
Strategies for Freedom
The Nation, May 1993


Sex Work Notes: Some Tensions of a Former Whore and a Practicing Feminist (1999)

Lesbianism is not a Condom
LAP Notes, 1992
Transmission, Transmission, Where’s the Transmission?
Sojourner Newspaper, June 1994
Lesbian Denial and Lesbian Leadership in the AIDS Epidemic: Bravery and Fear in the Construction of a Lesbian Geography of Risk
from Feminist Empowerment in the Age of AIDS, Nancy Stoller and Beth Schneider, editors (Temple University Press, 1996)


Sexuality, Labor, and the New Trade Unionism: A Conversation with Amber Hollibaugh and Nikhil Pal Singh
Out at Work (1999
A Grande Dame: The Femme Interview
An Interview with Amber Hollibaugh
Fem(me) Anthology (1999)


My Dangerous Desires: Falling in Love with Stone Butches, Passing Women, and Girls (Who are Guys) Who Catch My Eye (1999)

My Dangerous Desires

    Product form

    £21.84

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £22.99 – you save £1.15 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 13 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Amber L. Hollibaugh

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of My Dangerous Desires by Amber L. Hollibaugh

      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 10/11/2000
      ISBN13: 9780822326199, 978-0822326199
      ISBN10: 0822326191

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Explores the concept of labelling and the associated issues of categories such as butch or femme, transgender, bisexual, top or bottom, drag queen, b-girl, or drag king. This volume includes conversations with other writers, such as Deirdre English, Gayle Rubin, Jewelle Gomez, and Cherrie Moraga.

      Trade Review
      “Amber Hollibaugh is a brilliant activist intellectual from trailer park America.Her particular queer working-class life has taught her the skills, risks and pleasures of radically changing society-and social movements—from their despised edges. We’re lucky she hasn’t kept this dangerous knowledge a secret. For years her written and spoken words have made history. Now we have them all in a book that belongs in the toolbox of every working person. Pick it up and put it to work.”—Allan Bérubé
      “At a time when the once-fire of the gay and lesbian movement is being extinguished by the seduction of middle class acceptability, Amber Hollibaugh raises her voice in an equally-seductive cry of queer resistance. My Dangerous Desires is a history book of one of our most faithful freedom fighters, told in the story of her own sexual-spiritual survival. Informed as much by the Civil Rights Movement as the Stonewall Rebellion, Amber Hollibaugh’s politic is one first forged in the bedrooms, the bar rooms and the back rooms of the working poor. A generation later, they are not forgotten; this book remains a living testimony for those unknown and untold by the gay and lesbian movement. Gracias, Amber.”—Cherrie Moraga, author of Loving in the War Years
      “I welcome you to my friend’s essays, to the unique sharp-eyed glance of a woman who had to fight to be able to say, ‘I want.’ In Amber’s life, desire has been made sacred. Whether she is writing about the female body, the femme psyche, or the fearful need to admit desire itself, Amber has vindicated all our lives.”—Dorothy Allison, from the Foreword
      “So for many years I led a double life: working as a Left political organizer, filmmaker, and writer during the day while supporting myself as a Vegas stripper and, as a young woman, earning a living through prostitution. As a dyke in the Left before Stonewall and a high femme lesbian during the growth of lesbian feminism, my erotic yearnings were often in direct opposition to the very political movements I was committed to creating.”—Amber Hollibaugh
      “A smart and provocative collection. . . . As a primer on queer history and politics in the 20th century, My Dangerous Desires fills an important gap, giving voice to the kinds of experience traditional feminism has mostly ignored. . . . [One] can’t help admire the sheer breadth of Hollibaugh’s undertaking—it reflects a life lived in passionate struggle and commitment to liberation for all.” -- Elisabeth Flynn * Lambda Book Report *
      (Starred Review) “A stunning collection of essays and interviews. . . . Hollibaugh's writing is sharp and glittering. . . . This provocative, challenging collection could become a feminist classic.” * Publishers Weekly *
      “Amber Hollibaugh reinvigorates the somewhat shopworn phrase ‘the personal is political’ in this delightfully uncategorizable, genre-crossing book documenting her life as a working-class labor activist from a dusty California town. . . . Hollibaugh’s work delivers on its promise of unflinching bravery in the face of those who wish to silence us, whether for political efficacy or personal preference. Just as Emma Goldman didn’t want to be part of any revolution that wouldn’t let her dance, so too does Hollibaugh argue eloquently that ‘there is no human hope without the promise of ecstasy.’ Amen, and pass the Kool-Aid.” -- Jennifer Maher * Bitch *
      “This memoir-cum-collected-works is a seductive tour through Hollibaugh’s thirty years as an activist, lover, and political theorist. It is also a biting critique of gay politics today.” -- Heather Findlay * Girlfriends *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction (1999)

      A Queer Girl Dreaming Her Way Home (1999)

      Sexuality and the State: The Defeat of the Briggs Initiative and Beyond

      An Interview with Amber Hollibaugh

      Socialist Review, May/June 1979

      What We’re Rollin’ Around in Bed With: Sexual Silences in Feminism—a conversation toward ending them

      Amber Hollibaugh and Cherrie Moraga Heresies Magazine, 1979/1980
      Desire for the Future: Radical Hope in Passion and Danger
      from Pleasure and Danger, edited by Carole Vance (Routledge Press, 1993)


      The Right to Rebel
      Gay Left Journal #9 (1979)


      Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism
      With Deirdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and Gayle Rubin
      Socialist Review, 1978
      Opposite Sex: Lesbians and Gay Men Talk About Each Others’ Sexuality
      An Interview with Amber Hollibaugh, Jewelle Gomez, and Gayle Rubin
      (Sara Miles and Eric Rofes, ed., 1998)


      Femme Fables Columns
      New York Native, 1983/1984

      The Gap She Fostered

      A Barren Expanse of Loneliness

      Intimate Signs of War
      Sympathy of the Blood
      The Village Voice, June 1984
      Strategies for Freedom
      The Nation, May 1993


      Sex Work Notes: Some Tensions of a Former Whore and a Practicing Feminist (1999)

      Lesbianism is not a Condom
      LAP Notes, 1992
      Transmission, Transmission, Where’s the Transmission?
      Sojourner Newspaper, June 1994
      Lesbian Denial and Lesbian Leadership in the AIDS Epidemic: Bravery and Fear in the Construction of a Lesbian Geography of Risk
      from Feminist Empowerment in the Age of AIDS, Nancy Stoller and Beth Schneider, editors (Temple University Press, 1996)


      Sexuality, Labor, and the New Trade Unionism: A Conversation with Amber Hollibaugh and Nikhil Pal Singh
      Out at Work (1999
      A Grande Dame: The Femme Interview
      An Interview with Amber Hollibaugh
      Fem(me) Anthology (1999)


      My Dangerous Desires: Falling in Love with Stone Butches, Passing Women, and Girls (Who are Guys) Who Catch My Eye (1999)

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account