After a short introduction on the history of the Gay Liberation Front in Britain, this book is a collection of articles from the GLF magazine, Come Together (a triple entendre of political union, sex act, and John Lennon song). There was only ever 16 copies of this magazine published, from 1970-73, with the majority being produced in London (with issue 16 made by the Manchester branch and issue 14 by the Birmingham branch, as the group tried to decentralise to spread costs and represent more members near the end of the groups lifespan). A mixed selection of articles are represented, with an effort to select representative or interesting debates rather than provide an equal sampling from each issue.
As with all the other reading I have done about liberation groups in the 60s/70s/80s, it is hard not to notice just how little has changed, even when a lot has changed. That is to say, these articles were written at a time when being gay could see you get fined, fired, imprisoned, or incarcerated in a mental health asylum (administered to by nurses often too terrified to show compassion lest they be branded as homosexuals too and lose their livelihoods). Despite this, the issues that so many of the articles grapple with are still intimately familiar to most modern queers: is worth coming out? How and who to? Which streets can be safely walked down with your partner? Like now, debates raged about tensions between the butch (who might replicate harmful elements of heterosexual masculinity), the femmes (who might replicate harmful stereotypes about what gays should look and act like), the "screaming queens" (who might harm the "respectability" that middle-class gays tried to use to curry favour with homophobes), and the lesbians (often sidelined and condescended to by gays uncritical of the misogyny they grew up with). Discussions with prudish gays worried about outlandish pride events compromising their status are identical to ones I've heard and participated in before. The homophobia and misogyny that certain gays carry is still visible in plenty online today, and indeed the nature of social media emboldens such flippant bigotry. The arguments for straight-gays (hiding your sexuality from most) is still nearly convincing - "we have been willing to sacrifice at least a part of our personal fulfillment and stability to the community in order to recieve such economic and social perks as it may offer so long as we exist behind the mask" - in a way that causes me to use cop outs like "partner" to avoid honesty with strangers, colleagues, and students.
Most of the contributors of Come Together emphasis how vital coming out is, and are more militant than the cautious straight-gay I quoted above, and certainly it IS easier and safer to come out now with more doing so at ever earlier ages, but the societal and economic conditions behind the bigotry and immiseration of queers are still in place (indeed, the last few years have seen them intensifying and bringing the same weapons to bear on trans people as they used for decades on the degenerate homos). In this way, and many others, I think a contribution to issue 7 was prophetic in its declaration that "if Gay Lib only makes gay 'Respectable' then we have just created another product, expanded the market, suggested another false choice, another chain. We do not want to substitute the fetish of homosexuality for the fetish of heterosexuality". And to the extent that capitalism has embraced homosexuality - a narrow and restrictive extent that seeks to label and categorise in order to foster reliable markets and malleable consumers - this marks a deterioration in the hopes and prospects of true gay liberation. Despite the onslaught of homophobia, violence, and online abuse that gay people face while lawmakers belittle, defund, and impoverish them, queers are still told that there is nothing left to fight for; a false sense of security has stymied any political motivation for better while obscuring the very appendages of capitalism that prevent any progress.
So yeah, the articles are often interesting, fun, and reveal the diversity of thought and perspectives at a turning point in gay history. I've given four instead of five as I think it could have been better put together and edited to provide a history and commentary on the group, but certainly it is still a useful resource.