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Dick and Reggie are ‘leather boys’, working-class London teens with an affinity for leather jackets and motorcycles who become friends through their involvement in a gang. For Dick, the money he gets from the gang’s thefts helps to support his ailing grandmother; for Reggie, membership in the gang provides relief from an unhappy home life and a loveless marriage. When Reggie decides to leave his unfaithful wife and move in with Dick, the two soon discover their feelings for each other are much stronger than mere friendship. As they make plans for their future together, will they find the happiness they seek, or is their love doomed to end in tragedy?
The first novel to offer an authentic portrayal of love between ordinary, working-class young men, Gillian Freeman’s The Leather Boys (1961) is a groundbreaking classic of gay fiction that remains moving and compelling today. This edition includes a new introduction by Michael Arditti, who situates The Leather Boys alongside other early gay works by women writers like Mary Renault and Marguerite Yourcenar and argues that Freeman’s novel and its 1964 film adaptation played a vital part in liberalizing British attitudes towards homosexuality.
Author: Gillian Freeman
This edition published 2013 146 pages
Read and Recommended by Remi:
First published in 1961, The Leather Boys is a groundbreaking novel that explores working-class same-sex love at a time when homosexuality was still illegal in Britain. Set in post-war South London, it follows Reggie and Dick—two emotionally starved eighteen-year-olds—one trapped in a loveless marriage, the other living with his doting grandmother. Their friendship, born in the haze of coffee bars and the rebellious world of leather-clad bikers, slowly deepens into something more.
Freeman’s writing is tight and direct, it captures the thrill of motorcycles, the euphoria of new leather, and the pressure of family and societal expectations. The novel doesn’t wallow in self-pity or angst; instead, it presents Reggie and Dick’s relationship naturally, validating queer love in an era when it was rarely acknowledged, let alone celebrated. Though their story is one of love and loss, The Leather Boys remains a powerful testament to desire, defiance, and the struggle to imagine a future with no roadmap to follow.