I really wanted to like this book more. But for me it took a fascinating subject and made it boring. The book consists of a whole bunch of short chapters, each a short bio of some LBGT activist. But there is no narrative to connect them. The chapters are each written by a different person, so the book is choppy and better written in some places than others. Much of the writing is pedestrian and plodding, then this happened, then this happened, then this happened. There's only a little bit of broader context and because the individual bios are very short, there is very little depth or insight to them. Two thirds of the book is post Stonewall history, meaning in my lifetime, so not the part I most wanted to read about.
Title should be Lives of LGBT Leaders in Brief. Since it is in chronological order, the back third or so of the book is about people who are still alive. Some of these chapters were done as interview transcripts, definitely not my favorite format. Others were written by the person themselves. This tend to come out sounding like "then I started this organization and we the first to do this and that and then I started this other group and people flocked to hear me" and blah blah. Very hard not to sound bragging.
This book barely made it to three stars for me and if my rating were based only on the chapters on living people, it would have been two.