logo
The Light of Day by Christopher Stephens and Louise Radnofsky audiobook review – a pioneer of gay liberation

The Light of Day by Christopher Stephens and Louise Radnofsky audiobook review – a pioneer of gay liberation

The Guardian5 days ago
When Christopher Stephens was a student at Oxford in the early 2000s, a friend asked him a favour: would he visit a man at his home in east Oxford each week and read to him? That man was Roger Butler, who was blind, in his 60s and initially wary of having a stranger come to his house. Before their first meeting, Butler asked their mutual friend whether Stephens was 'one of us', by which he meant gay.
The pair soon established a bond, as Stephens read books by Alan Hollinghurst and Edmund White to Butler over a bottle of red wine. Sometimes Butler would ask him to read excerpts from his own autobiographical essays which told of his life growing up gay in postwar Britain. In 1960, Butler had joined forces with two colleagues from the Homosexual Law Reform Society and written a letter to national newspaper editors outing themselves. Beginning the letter with 'Sir, we are homosexuals', all were risking their freedom at a time when sex between men was illegal.
The Light of Day tells the parallel stories of Stephens's burgeoning friendship with Butler in his twilight years, and the latter's life as a pioneer of gay liberation. While Stephens reads the chapters detailing his visits to Butler's home, Griff Mellhuish narrates the sections about Butler's early life. The audio version also features delightfully crackly home recordings made by Butler in which he discusses his parents and catches up on his correspondence. In a moving final clip, he notes that he doesn't regret the blindness that struck in his 30s since it led to 'the most miraculous thing', which was moving to Oxford and meeting Stephens.
Available via Headline, 9hr 43min
The Undisputed King of SelstonDanny Scott, John Murray, 9hr 10minA poignant and funny memoir of life in a coal-mining town in the 1970s. Read by the author.
Sign up to Inside Saturday
The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend.
after newsletter promotion
The Violet HourJames Cahill, Sceptre, 12hr 46minAndrew Wincott narrates this gripping thriller about duplicity and power struggles in the art world.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins... and says Dad's Army's Private Godfrey could have done better than these recruits
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins... and says Dad's Army's Private Godfrey could have done better than these recruits

Daily Mail​

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins... and says Dad's Army's Private Godfrey could have done better than these recruits

Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins - Channel 4 Rating: At ease, you men... dancer Louie Spence has declared that, in the event of World War III breaking out, he's ready to serve. 'I might just jump at it,' he bragged, on Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins. 'I think I'd be in the Home Guard. We'd have a gay Dad's Army, darling. Honestly, they wouldn't want to mess with the gays.' Shortly after that, he botched a hostage rescue exercise by hurling a grenade into a building where two civilians were waiting to be saved. Private Godfrey could have done a better job. The show launched on Sunday night — small wonder that by yesterday's second episode, Louie had already bailed out and gone home. His big idea might not save the country from invasion, but surely the BBC would love an LGBT remake of its most successful comedy. Call it Fab Army. Previous series of Celebrity SAS have been camp enough to merit their own float at a Pride festival. The ex-special forces veterans in charge of each batch of hapless volunteers couldn't help standing in a row with their thumbs tucked into their belts, like a Village People tribute act. Former U.S. Marine Rudy Reyes was caught on camera, stripped to the waist and admiring his muscles in the mirror. I worried that the next ordeal the celebs faced would be a choreographed Full Monty striptease, to a soundtrack of You Can Keep Your Hat On. This time, the NCOs are less flamboyant but also less aggressive. They snarl, swear and belittle contestants for every mistake, but so far we've seen no 'beastings' — the punishing bouts of intensive exercise that end only when recruits pass out from exhaustion. And these days, the mock interrogations are more like therapy sessions. They still begin with victims propelled into half-lit cells with bags over their heads, but the questions are sympathetic, even kindly. 'Don't be so nervous,' chief instructor Mark 'Billy' Billingham told Michaella McCollum, one of the 'Peru Two' jailed in South America for drug smuggling. They coaxed the story from her, beginning with teenage drug abuse in Northern Ireland, then working as a courier for an organised crime gang in Spain, followed by arrest at the airport in Lima. 'So yeah, I ended up spending three years in prison,' she said. Billy asked the questions expected of all good psychotherapists: 'How did that feel? Do you wanna talk about it?' Back in the dorm, she was beaming: 'I feel a bit better after that chat with them, really positive.' The physical challenges involve lots of running up mountains with rucksacks, as ever, but I can't help feeling that a lot of the tears and terror are manufactured for the cameras. One test saw the celebs hanging from a zipwire over an abyss. If that same set-up were an attraction at a theme park, people would queue for hours to have a go.

Stella Rimington, Britain's first female spy chief, dies aged 90
Stella Rimington, Britain's first female spy chief, dies aged 90

Reuters

time9 hours ago

  • Reuters

Stella Rimington, Britain's first female spy chief, dies aged 90

LONDON, Aug 4 (Reuters) - Stella Rimington, the first female director general of Britain's MI5 security and counter-intelligence service who ushered in an era of greater transparency at the agency, has died aged 90. Rimington, who ran the domestic security agency between 1992 and 1996, was its first head to be publicly named and later wrote a memoir "Open Secret" about her career at the formerly secretive organisation. She went on to write a series of espionage novels and is also widely thought to have inspired actor Judy Dench's tough but playful characterisation of the fictional spymaster 'M' in several James Bond movies. "She died surrounded by her beloved family and dogs and determinedly held on to the life she loved until her last breath," a family statement quoted by local media said. Rimington was given one of the British state's highest honours when she was made a dame in 1996. She joined MI5 in 1969 and worked in roles including counter-subversion and counter-terrorism. Under her leadership MI5 took a more prominent role in Britain's fight against Irish republican militants, according to a profile on the MI5 website. "As the first avowed female head of any intelligence agency in the world, Dame Stella broke through long-standing barriers and was a visible example of the importance of diversity in leadership," current MI5 Director General Ken McCallum said in a statement. She committed the agency to a more transparent approach to its work, softening its post-Cold War image. "We are, of course, obliged to keep information secret in order to be effective, this is not to say that we should necessarily be a wholly secret organisation," she said in a publicly broadcast 1994 lecture. "Secrecy is not imposed for its own sake. It is not an end in itself." Foreshadowing her later literary career, Rimington opened that same speech with a nod to the British spy novel tradition and the fascination with the security services it had inspired among the general public. "It is exciting stuff and has led to the creation of many myths - and some lurid speculation - about our work. I must admit that it is with some hesitation that I set out tonight to shed some daylight," she said. "I have a sneaking feeling that the fiction may turn out to be more fun than the reality."

Meghan Markle's Suits BFF Abigail Spencer posts gushing tribute to the Duchess on her 44th birthday - and praises her as 'champagne in human form'
Meghan Markle's Suits BFF Abigail Spencer posts gushing tribute to the Duchess on her 44th birthday - and praises her as 'champagne in human form'

Daily Mail​

time11 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Meghan Markle's Suits BFF Abigail Spencer posts gushing tribute to the Duchess on her 44th birthday - and praises her as 'champagne in human form'

Abigail Spencer has described Meghan Markle as 'champagne in human form' in a gushing birthday tribute to the Duchess of Sussex. The actress, who appeared on Suits alongside Meghan, shares the same birthday with her former co-star - with both of them turning 44 today. Abigail praised Meghan as a 'creature unlike any other' who 'saved' her life in heartfelt message on social media. She shared images of the two of them together, and accompanied them with her glowing caption. It read: 'As glorious as the day I met you. Champagne in human form. A creature unlike any other. Thank you for being a sister in this life, and beyond. Words can't capture. From the rooftops. So grateful for your life. Thanks for saving mine. Love, Abs. 44/4. 8/4/81.' Meghan and Abigail first met 18 years ago at an audition but they became closer once they became co-stars on the legal drama Suits. The Duchess played Rachel Zane - a paralegal who later became an attorney - in the series and Abigail was cast as lawyer Dana Scott. In an interview with Hello! earlier this year, Abigail said the pair have a 'private a friendship'. Discussing her friend's Netflix show, With Love, Meghan, Abigail said she was happy that the mother-of-two could show off her 'natural' self doing what she loves - hosting her friends and family at her rented £5million reality TV mansion. 'Meghan is the hostess with the most. Literally for years she has been like this,' she said. 'But I really was there just to support her and surround her. This is her heart, that show is her heart, it was so natural and [I was] really just there to have fun and to delight in her and to be a safe space. 'We have a very private friendship, so choosing to let people in on part of that is… it's very private but I'm glad that we got to share a little bit of it.' Abigail has been by Meghan's side for many of her most important moments including attending her wedding to Prince Harry in 2018 and hosting a baby shower for the Duchess in New York before the birth of the couple's first child Archie. Meghan and Abigail - who received one of the Duchess' first jars of her famed jam - share the exact same birthday and refer to themselves as 'birthday soul sisters'. On Sunday, the eve of her 44th birthday, Meghan took to social media to share a teaser for her lifestyle brand As ever. The Duchess of Sussex shared a video of herself carrying a wicker basket filled with flowers and bottles of As Ever Napa Valley rosé laid in white linen. In her gushing birthday message, Abigail wished Meghan a happy birthday, and credited the Duchess with 'saving' her life While Meghan's face did not feature in the video, it showed her wearing a short white dress as she frolicked in the grass, thought to be at her Montecito estate near Santa Barbara, California. She showed off her stack of rings on her left ring finger, including her engagement ring, wedding ring and an infinity ring, estimated to be worth around £210,000. She also wore a gold Cartier Love Bracelet, which costs up to £7,050, and a gold Cartier Tank Watch that once belonged to Princess Diana, both of which she regularly wears. The clip later showed a view of Meghan's swinging feet as she sits atop a stone garden wall, clad in £720 tan-coloured Hermes Santorini sandals. The words 'Coming soon...' appeared over the video to tease the launch of her new 2024 Napa Valley Rosé. Shared on the official As Ever Instagram page last night, the caption read: 'Goodness in a glass. Right around the to August!' Meghan's latest post comes after she announced another product coming to her As Ever line - although some of her customers were baffled as to what was actually new. The Duchess launched her lifestyle brand As ever earlier this year, releasing the first products in April, which included a range of teas, a raspberry spread, and a limited-edition wildflower honey with honeycomb, amongst other things. She followed it up with an apricot spread and another honey, and in July, she expanded into the world of alcohol when she dropped her own wine - the 2023 Napa Valley Rosé. Each release has been met with fierce excitement from her fans, and every product has sold out pretty quickly. Now, the Duchess of Sussex 's brand has announced its newest product... but it might not garner the same amount of enthusiasm since it's not very different from her last item. The company revealed on Wednesday that following the buzz surrounding the 2023 Napa Valley Rosé, it will be launching another wine, with a slight tweak - calling it the 2024 Napa Valley Rosé. And it vowed that it will pretty much taste the same as As Ever's first wine. 'It marries the same harmony of notes from our first blend and creates an elegant medley of delicate yet memorable flavor,' reads a press release. 'You'll want to clink glasses with friends as the sun sets, toasting to a summer of joy. 'Barefoot or in sandals, dressed up or dressed down, this rosé may become your favorite accessory for alfresco lunches and dinners at dusk.' Meghan described her new bottles as 'goodness in a glass' In the release, As Ever listed some of the positive feedback customers had given the company over its first rosé, which included comments like, '10 out of 10,' 'perfect,' and 'elevated flavor'. 'This affirmed all of the love, time and effort our team, and our founder, poured into curating this blend to evoke the sun drenched spirit of Napa Valley, and the breathtaking tenor of the California Coast,' As Ever added. 'Thank you for filling our cup. Now it's time for us to fill your glass! We are pleased to share that our 2024 Napa Valley Rosé will be available for purchase next week.' The brand also posted to Instagram with a series of images showing the new wine resting in beach sand. It was uploaded alongside a caption that read: 'Oh, how we love seeing the world through rose colored glasses. Rosé colored glasses? Perhaps even better. 'Our new vintage of As Ever's beloved rosé is available next week. The 2023 Napa Valley Rosé is described on the bottle as a 'delicately balanced rosé with soft notes of stone fruit, gentle minerality, and a lasting finish' 'Stay tuned for more details and timing.' As Ever's first wine went on sale on July 1 and sold out within the hour. Customers were able to purchase three bottles for $90, six bottles for $159, and 12 bottles for $300. Last month, Daily Mail exclusively revealed that the alcoholic beverage is made by Fairwinds Estate, a California winery that creates bespoke wines for celebrities. The 2023 Napa Valley Rosé is described on the bottle as a 'delicately balanced rosé with soft notes of stone fruit, gentle minerality, and a lasting finish.' It has a 14.5 percent alcohol by volume for the 750ML bottle. The Daily Mail FEMAIL team tried the rosé and while the wine was smooth, we couldn't easily detect the notes of stone fruit. In fact, it tasted quite bland, and almost water-y. In addition, the rosé had some acidic notes, leaving a somewhat uncomfortable sensation at the back of our throats after swallowing. In the end, the verdict was the wine lacked flavor and tasted affordable and ordinary. It wasn't terrible - but it certainly wasn't great. We felt the rosé just didn't taste like you bought it at a fancy vineyard, where it's supposed to be made, but rather, like a wine you would be served at a work happy hour. The FEMAIL team also reviewed her initial set of products, and found that Meghan's raspberry spread was too thin, too sweet, and very runny. Her hibiscus tea was extremely bitter with heavy notes of floral, with one taste tester comparing it to 'drinking lip balm.' 'It tasted like dirty dishwater,' another FEMAIL writer shared. Some of us couldn't even bear to swallow it, as one person even spat it back into the cup. As for her honey, we didn't enjoy the 'waxy' taste of the honeycomb or the super strong wildflower aftertaste.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store