Update June 2024: I have decided to not simply update but remove my original review and write a new one because I no longer think it is sufficient to say if this a good or bad collection of stories (it is in fact an excellent selection) but why in the second quarter of the 21st century it is not only still worth reading but is essential reading.
The late twentieth century produced some very fine anthologies of writing by current gay authors, the Men on Men series originally edited by George Stambolian being the best known, but there also anthologies which explored the theme of male homosexuality (please see my footnote *1 below) but which included work by women and men who were not gay and attempted to include a sampling of authors from throughout the 20th century and from around the globe. 'In Another Part of the Forest' by Alberto Manguel and Craig Stephenson is probably the best and most comprehensive, certainly in terms of the country of origin of the authors, anthology of short fiction on the theme of male homosexuality. I am deliberately avoiding the term 'gay' because how that term was understood in 1994 and how it is understood now. In 1994 the idea that Gay or Homosexual men were worthy of being a theme in literature, or that they had a literary history or a tradition in any of the arts was generally dismissed. It was a time when the gayness of figures such as Thomas Mann, Caravaggio, Michelangelo, Jasper Johns or Robert Rauschenberg was denied, ignored or dismissed as the theories of cranks or obsessives. Anthologies like this one provided light on a world that was still too often dismissed as pathologically abnormal or irrelevant.
This anthology includes stories about Gay men from authors from the Soviet Union (at the time of publication still in existence), China, Japan, Australia, Ireland, Canada, Argentina, France, Nicaragua, Sri Lanka, New Zealand as well as strong samplings from the USA and UK. I know many of the authors are not gay and I am sure many younger readers would not find them 'Gay' in the sense that they would understand the word. Which is why anthologies like this should be read. Gay men have a history and a past and it is not one based on sufferance. Most of these stories in this anthology have been published outside of any 'gay' publication or anthology. They stand as works of literature and they tell stories that are universal and speak to all of us - unless maybe you chose not to hear.
*1 It may be hard for younger readers to understand but for a long time there was only the terms Gay and Lesbian - in the very early days of Gay Liberation attempts had been made to use Gay as an inclusive description but it never caught on and the few attempts at presenting Gay and Lesbian writing under one cover came to naught because of accusations, often justified, of tokenism. The universal use of LGBT only came in at the very end of the 1990s is probably best defined as a 21st century term.