Trans Man Walks into a Gay Bar

A Journey of Self Discovery

English language

Published Aug. 30, 2023 by Kingsley Publishers, Jessica.

ISBN:
978-1-83997-183-9
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4 stars (3 reviews)

'On the bookshelves, there was plenty of stuff on being gay, and much needed, joyous accounts of what it is to be trans, but nothing really that encapsulates what is it to be both - to exist in the hazy terrain between.'

After his relationship with his girlfriend of 5 years ended, Harry realised he was a single adult for the first time - not only that, but a single, transmasculine and newly out gay man.

Despite knowing it was the right decision, the reality of his new situation was terrifying. How could he be a gay man, when he was still learning what it was to be a man? Would the gay community embrace him or reject him? What would gay sex be like? And most importantly, would finding love again be possible?

In this raw, intimate and unflinchingly honest book, we follow Harry as he navigates the sometimes …

2 editions

Review of 'A Trans Man Walks into a Gay Bar' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This took me such a long time to read, if only from how painfully relatable so many of the author’s experiences have been to my own. I’d read one essay and then have to put it down for a handful of days. Harry does such a great job describing what it’s like to experience hyper visible invisibility.

There are so few books out there written from a gay trans man’s perspective. This is one of those precious few.

Review of 'Trans Man Walks into a Gay Bar' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Harry Nicholas’s first book, an autobiographical work, contains an impressive amount of interesting and considered thought in its 224 pages. At its core, the book is an eloquent narrative of his journey from one relationship to another, with transformative self-discovery in between.

But, of course, it is so much more than that, as any such tale always is. Not least because it is very clear that Harry has thought a great deal about his place in patriarchy — from when he was growing up in what he thought was girlhood, via how he’s been perceived through transition to now, existing and socialising in queer male spaces that are almost always cis-sexist and can often also be misogynistic, with transphobic microaggressions. His thoughts are well-framed and prompt consideration, for example:

Words and labels are incredibly important — I love being gay and trans and wearing those labels with pride — but …