A random collection of over 1910 books and audiobooks authored by or about my transgender, intersex sisters, and gender-nonconforming persons all over the world. I read some of them, and I was inspired by some of them. I met some of the authors and heroines, some of them are my best friends, and I had the pleasure and honor of interviewing some of them. If you know of any transgender biography that I have not covered yet, please let me know.

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Home » , , , » Christine Jorgensen - A Personal Autobiography

Christine Jorgensen - A Personal Autobiography

The book was published in 1067, and it had many re-editions, including the one in 2000 with the introduction by Susan Stryker.

It covers the story of Christine Jorgensen (1926-1989), an American singer, actress, celebrity, and the most iconic figure of the transgender movement in the USA, if not in the whole world, famous for being the first world-famous person to have surgery sexual reassignment conducted in Denmark in the 1950s, inducted into Chicago's Legacy Walk celebrating LGBT history in 2012, honored in San Francisco's Rainbow Walk in 2014, and included in the National LGBTQ Wall of Honor at Stonewall National Monument in New York City in 2019.

When a slender young woman stepped off a plane from Denmark to be greeted by howling reporters and an outraged American public, nobody expected that it would be one of the biggest moments in the history of transgender women.

The woman, Christine Jorgensen, had been born a male and after living as a shy, effeminate young man for twenty-four years, had been surgically transformed into a woman. For Christine, the transformation signalled the end of a tortured search for sexual identity. For the press and public, however, "George-Christine" became America's No. 1 topic of conversation.


Her private life was not successful. She wanted to marry John Traub, a statistician but the engagement was broken. In 1959, she announced her engagement to Howard J. Knox, who worked as an office worker in Massapequa, New York, where her father had built a house for her after her reassignment surgery, but the couple was denied a marriage license because Jorgensen's birth certificate still listed her as a man. She died in San Clemente, California, on May 3, 1989.


Available via openlibrary.org

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