"Kids on the Street offers a valuable account of young people, sexuality, marginalization, and mutual support in San Francisco. . . . Readers may wish to dive straight into the detail: they will find a set of moving stories and thoughtful authorial interventions. This powerful book will repay its readers' persistence."--Chris Brickell "Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth" (10/1/2024 12:00:00 AM)
"Kids on the Street is an admirable, thoroughly researched, and carefully documented history of the once vibrant queer culture of the Tenderloin and Polk Street. Featuring scores of interviews with one-time Polk Street denizens, it is also a lament for the displacement of the multiracial, multigender culture of San Francisco's first post-Stonewall queer district. Drawing attention to that once-thriving, often overlooked culture, the book is a valuable contribution to queer history."--Hank Trout "Gay and Lesbian Review" (9/1/2023 12:00:00 AM)
"Kids on the Street showcases how performance and movement itself, religious practices and a culture of mutual aid helped people overcome a variety of social traumas...This is an exceptionally well-researched book that uplifts marginalized voices and perspectives with profound implications which transcend disciplinary boundaries. [It] is essential reading for historians of twentieth-century California, youth, urban development, and queer history at the very least."--Jack Hodgson "European Journal of American Culture" (1/10/2024 12:00:00 AM)
"Filled with fresh insights and original archival and ethnographic research, Kids on the Street is an outstanding book, which deserves a wide readership among urban historians, religious studies scholars, historians of childhood, performance studies scholars, and cultural historians of gender nonconformity, race, and sexuality."--Alex Melody Burnett "The Metropole" (5/7/2024 12:00:00 AM)
"Plaster intricately entwines the historical and the ethnographic by drawing on major works in queer studies, performance studies, and affect theory, as well as by organizing two brilliantly conceived and beautifully narrated public humanities projects."--William Stell "American Religion" (5/13/2024 12:00:00 AM)