This is a very interesting collection of older gay science fiction and fantasy short stories from the 1970s. Overall, fascinating as a cultural relic, though some of the stories were good and others were pretty bad - and by "bad" I mean they struck me as being blatantly homophobic, and I was left scratching my head as to why Jeffrey Elliot included them in his collection. I can only think that it was because at the time this was compiled, there just wasn't that much gay sci-fi out there, but really, a few of these stories were completely wrong for the collection.
Vamp by Mike Conner is an interesting look at a future world. Society is divided rigidly into classes, and the upper class have some pretty disgusting past times - like exploding animals. The main character, Dieter, is an artist who gets a job working for a company that actually spies on the lower classes to get inspiration for their pieces. But Dieter is not content to exploit his subjects, instead he wants his peers to feel pathos towards them. Especially when he falls in love with his assigned subject, Coe.
When It Changed by Joanna Russ takes a popular theme of pulpy, B movie science fiction plots - a world of women, where all the men have died out, and then a small team of "heroic" men find them - and spins it on its head, showing us the anger and fear of a woman who has been living happily in this world with her wife and family, and has no desire for the return of men.
The Night Wind by Edgar Pangborn is an old favourite of mine, that I read years ago in Terry Carr's science fiction anthology, Universe 5. Set in a post-apocalyptic medieval-type world, homosexuality is viewed as a mutation and sin. The narrator is a fifteen year old boy named Benvenuto, who was caught making out with another boy in a cornfield, and forced to run away. He comes across the cottage of a woman, whom he was told is a witch, but is really a sweet person.
The Woman Who Loved the Moon by Elizabeth A. Lynn is a sword & sorcery story set in a fantasy world with a hint of feudal Japan. The county of Issho is home to the Talvela family, and their three beautiful warrior-women daughters: Alin, Tei and Kai. The bards sing of them being more beautiful then the moon, and this angers the moon-goddess, who takes the form of a beautiful woman warrior named Sedi.
Going Down by Barry N. Malzberg is one of the worst stories in the collection. There is an Institute that allows a subject to experience all the sort of sexual practices he can not in real life through some sort of illusion or hypnotism. Malzberg equates homosexuality with pedophilia, incest, bestiality, rape, and murder.
Black Rose and White Rose by Rachel Pollack is an adult fairy tale. Rose White is a beautiful girl who's parents are sure she will get a rich husband and turn furious when she refuses her suitors, sending her to work as a scullery maid for a cruel merchant. When a traveling carnival comes to the village, the magician unveils a dancer named Black Rose and the two girls fall in love.
Flowering Narcissus by Thomas N. Scortia is a sort of funny sci-fi story. It really isn't gay though. A biker named Honcho agrees to an experiment where he'll sleep for a week - but when he wakes up a century has past and the human race has been wiped out by plague, leaving only sexless androids, who cloned Honcho and brought him back. They also created a woman out of Honcho's DNA for him to mate with - so, sort of weird, but not really gay.
Nuclear Fission by Paul Novitski presents an alternate future with airships, polygamous marriages and open relationships. I'm not really sure why this one made it into the collection, either, since most of the emphasis was on the main character's little boy and how hard it was for him having a mother who went away to travel, work, and love women. So, whatever.
Passengers by Robert Silverberg is, again, NOT gay. Passengers has a very interesting premise - that invisible alien entities have settled on Earth and periodically take over human beings, forcing them to do whatever they want. After a few days they vanish, and the humans resume their normal lives with little to no memory of what happened when they were "ridden" by the aliens. The protagonist is straight and spends the entire story pining for a pretty girl he was with the last time they were both "ridden" by the aliens. However, at the end of the story he is possessed by an alien that makes him gay. Which just equates queerness with horrible alien mind rape, or something. From the protagonists inner monologues throughout the story you know he's going to "wake up" from the experience absolutely repulsed and horrified.
The Prodigal Daughter by Jessica Amanda Salmonson is a good sword & sorcery story about a lesbian warrior woman, Unise, who returns as a knight to her home, Castle Green, and her father, the feared and respected Lord Arlburrow. At first Arlburrow is strictly disproving of his daughter's life, but this changes to great love and respect by the end of the tale.
Broken Tool by Theodore L. Thomas is so short it's difficult to actually get a handle on it. Basically there are two older scientists who are discussing if one student, now a young man, whom they have trained for years, is suitable to go into space. One of the old scientists is in love (secret and one-sided) with the (straight) youth.
How We Saved the Human Race by David Gerrold is a strangely told story, related in things like fake transcripts, psychological reports and newspaper clippings, about a gay scientist who creates a virus that sterilizes people. I wasn't clear if he did this with an intention to solving the problem of world overpopulation, or if he just did it to get back at the straight people who harassed him his whole life. Anyways the effect is that it ends up actually saving the human race, but the scientist himself is brutally killed by an angry mob and becomes a posthumous hero, while at the same time starting a virulent worldwide anti-gay backlash.
So . . . you can see what a mixed bag this collection is, and I wouldn't recommend it to modern readers as fun reading material. It's interesting to view it as a piece of queer media from a different time, though.