The female-impersonators /
Transcriber’s Note:
The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
The Author—a Modern Living Replica of the Ancient Greek Statue, “Hermaphroditos” (Photo by Dr. A. W. Herzog)
RALPH WERTHER—JENNIE JUNE
(“EARL LIND”)
Author also of
The Riddle of the Underworld
EDITED, WITH INTRODUCTION
ALFRED W. HERZOG, Ph.B., A.M., M.D.
Member of the New York and the New Jersey Bar
Editor of the Medico-Legal Journal
NEW YORK
Ralph Werther
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CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
Introduction
I. How This Book Came to Be Written.
II. The Place of the Androgyne in the Male Sex Scale.
III. Androgynes of Mythology and History.
IV. Man Is a Passional, Rather Than a Rational, Being.
I. Reveries Suggested by My Infancy.
II. School Days.
III. An Androgyne’s Youth.
IV. I Grow into The Fairie Boy.
V. The Boy Who Never Grew to Be a Man.
I. Female-Impersonation.
II. A Typical Female-Impersonation Spree.
III. The Gambler.
IV. A Stuyvesant Square Pick-up.
V. Evenings at Paresis Hall.
VI. Thoughts Suggested by the “Hermaphroditoi” in General.
I. Debut as Adult Female-Impersonator.
II. The Pug Heaven.
III. A University Friendship.
IV. The Masked Ball.
V. Frank—Eunice’s Indiscretion.
I. Angelo Angevine’s Debut as Public Female-Impersonator.
II. Jailed for Wearing Petticoats.
I. Two Murder Mysteries Which, Strangely Alike in Many Ways, Baffled All Efforts to Solve.
II. Z Mystery Baffles Inquiry at Every Angle.
III. College Student’s Death is Unexplained.
I. What a New York Official Physician Has to Say about Fairies.
II. What One of America’s Foremost Medical Writers Has to Say about Fairies.
INDEX