"A thrilling work of historical recovery. The author successfully captures the life and times of a man whose story tells us so much about the forms of oppression and resistance in the half century before Stonewall and gay liberation. A vital contribution to LGBTQ history!" --John D'Emilio, author of Memories of a Gay Catholic Boyhood: Coming of Age in the Sixties
"Finally, a fascinating, carefully researched biography of the founder of the first US homosexual rights organization, Henry Gerber! Thanks, Jim Elledge, for documenting the life of this pioneering resister." --Jonathan Ned Katz, author of The Daring Life and Dangerous Times of Eve Adams
"This important biography of German-born Henry Gerber--arguably the first American gay rights activist--fills a critical lacuna in the queer historical record. It does so by documenting Gerber's early activism, influenced by the thriving queer culture of Weimar Germany, as well as the inspiration Gerber provided later to members of the American homophile movement." --Robert Beachy, author of Gay Berlin
"Jim Elledge's An Angel in Sodom is a fascinating biography of Henry Gerber, who founded America's first known LGBTQ rights group (The Society for Human Rights), in Chicago in 1924. For too long, Gerber has mostly been a footnote in our history; Elledge's careful research fills in critical gaps in his bio, and in the history of queer organizing in America as a whole." --Hugh Ryan, author of When Brooklyn Was Queer
"Elledge provides many details, and, unless some other great source of information turns up, this book is the best we have to go on. And it's a great improvement over what was available before Elledge started his research." --Third Coast Review
"Jim Elledge, a veteran chronicler of gay Chicago, makes the case that we should consider Gerber not an asterisk, but a forefather of the gay-rights movement--one who would influence later generations of activists...a rare glimpse into a 1920s and '30s queer world."--The Atlantic