Merle Miller (1919-1986) was an editor at Harper's Magazine, Time, and the Nation, and was the bestselling author of several books, including the novelA Gay and Melancholy Sound and Plain Speaking,a biography of President Harry Truman. Dan Savage is the internationally syndicated columnist of ""Savage Love"" and the author of several books. With his husband Terry Miller, he cofounded the It Gets Better project and edited theIt Gets Bettercollection. Charles Kaiser is an author, journalist, and blogger. His books include 1968 in America and The Gay Metropolis, which was a New York Times Book Review Notable Book. He lives in New York City.
Forty years after Miller s article and book his eloquent voice is still poignant, still relevant to the ongoing struggle, our struggle for dignity and equal rights. <b>Jonathan Ned Katz, Founder, Co-Director, OutHistory.org</b> Forty years later, the story Miller tells remains important and necessary to read, not only for both gay and straight readers to understand the way it used to be, but because the issues Miller raised are still being discussed and argued about. <b>Nancy Pearl</b> Merle Miller s <i>On Being Different</i> is a searing indictment of social hypocrisy, written with a quite but burning passion This book is not only a valuable historical document about the gay civil rights movement, but it is an American classic because of the beauty it achieves through its unflinchingly honest portrayal of the raw pain of rejection. <b>David Carter, author <i>Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay Revolution</i></b> Without indulging in sensationalism or special pleading but making it clear that he was writing directly from his own experience, [Miller] bridged the gap between the straights and the gays in a way that few recent writers on the subject have done. He also put himself on the line as a well-known writer, who was not afraid to publicly acknowledge his homosexuality. <b><i>Publishers Weekly</i></b> Brilliant, moving, and one is obliged to add, courageous narrative of personal homosexuality. <b>James A. Wechsler, columnist</b>