Knitting Circle Radclyffe Hall Well of Literature

The Knitting Circle

Radclyffe Hall Well of Literature

Contents

Sub-sections:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ


General information

  • Linda Kay Silva's web site

    The web site promotes Linda Kay Silva's Out of Bounds Books e-publishing house. She writes mystery novels and historical fiction, primarily from a lesbian point of view.

    Web site:http://www.pond.net/~storm

    This entry last updated 10th. September, 2001.

  • Blithe House Quarterly

    A site for gay short fiction. BHQ features a diversity of new short stories by emerging and established gay and lesbian authors.

    Web site:http://www.blithe.com/

  • FICTIONSEARCH

    Go to a web site dedicated to links to fiction.

    Search for your favorite reading or writing sites.

  • Authors Workshop

    SAE: Kathryn Bird, c/o/ Gemma, BM Box 5700, London, WC1N 3XX.

  • Gay London Writers

    A group of gay male writers who have regular meetings/workshops in London.

    Web site:http://members.tripod.co.uk/gaylondonwriters

  • Queer Words, the lesbian and gay quarterly paperback web site:http://www.aber.ac.uk/~zyw/index.htm

  • Bi Booklist, of books by Bi writers or about Bisexuality web site:http://www.biresource.org/bookstore/

  • GRAND PRIZE FOR QUEEREST WORDSinThe Pink Paper, 2nd. August, 1996, issue 441, page 2. "e;Waterstone's, the national bookstore chain, have teamed up with the Welsh writers' centre Ty Newwydd, to launch the second annual Queer Words gay writing competition. A prize of 1,000 is offered to the best work of fiction by lesbian or gay piece of writing submitted in the next six months."e;

  • The strange case of the missing gay detectives, by Roger Dobson, inThe Independent, 3rd. August, 1998, page 7. "e;Lesbian detectives like Carole Ashton, Kate Delafield, and Emma Victor are muscling in on crime fiction and have never been more popular. But while business is booming for them, gay men, it seems, are non-starters in the world of the whodunnit. Conjecture about the relationship between Holmes and Watson apart, gay gumshoes are about as rare as non-smokers in Chandler'sThe Big Sleep. Professor Stephen Knight, who has been researching the curious case of the missing gay detective, says their absence is, well, a mystery. 'There is a near absence of crime fiction written from a male homosexual viewpoint,' says Professor Knight, of the University of Wales, Cardiff, who talks about about the issue in a paper he is presenting at an international conference on crime fiction in Germany this week. 'There have been contenders, like Dave Brandtsteter, a California private eye who is firmly but discreetly homosexual, and Dan Kavanagh's unobtrusively homosexual London detective, Duffy, but they have not had the success of the lesbian sub genre'."e;

    "e;Inspector Carole Ashton, described as being 'more glamorous than Sydney Harbour itself' has intense relationships with female suspects. Private eye Emma Victor, who figures in novels with titles that includeShe Came too Late, andShe Came in a Flash, also has fun."e;

    DETECTIVES WITH LIPSTICK ON THEIR COLLARS

    • Creator:Mary Wings.Character:Emma Victor.
    • Creator:Val McDermid.Character:Lindsay Gordon.
    • Creator:Katherine V Forrest.Character:Kate Delafield.
    • Creator:Clair McNab.Character:Carol Ashton.

    Detectives come out, a letter fromGregory WoodsinThe Independent: The Thursday Review, 6th. August, 1998, page 2. "e;Stephen Knight is wrong to state ('The strange case of the missing gay detectives', 3 August) that there is a 'near absence' of gay crime fiction. The heterosexual novelist Jonathan Kellerman's cop, Milo, one of the most famous characters in contemporary crime fiction, is gay. Many gay male novelists, too, have been producing queered versions of this popular genre. Indeed, St Martin's Press publishes a whole series of 'Stonewall Inn Mysteries' with gay detectives. Professor Knight should begin by reading the novels of Michael Nava."e;

  • Violet Quill. A writers' group formed by Christopher Cox, Robert Ferro, Michael Grumley, Andrew Holleran, Felice Picano,Edmund White, and George Whitmore. The first meeting of the group took place in New York in March, 1980, and over the following year they met seven more times in Manhattan apartments.


  • Stephen Adams, (1980), "e;The Homosexual as Hero in contemporary fiction"e;, Vision Press Limited, 208 pages, ISBN 0 85478 204 4 (hardback).

    Discusses the attitudes taken by writers in their presentation of gay characters. The writers discussed at length areGore Vidal,James Baldwin,Truman Capote, Carson McCullers, James Purdy,John Rechy, William S. Burroughs,E. M. Forster,J R Ackerley,Christopher Isherwood, Angus Wilson, Iris Murdoch, and Jean Genet.

  • David Bergman, (editor), (1994), "e;The Violet Quill Reader: The Emergence of Gay Writing After Stonewall"e;.

  • Brian Bouldrey, (editor), (1996), "e;Best American Gay Fiction 1996"e;, Little Brown and Company, 318 pages, ISBN 0-316-10317-9 (paperback).

    Extracts of writing byEdmund White, Jim Provenzano, R. S. Jones, Jason K. Friedman, Scott Heim, Dick Scanlan, Robert Glück, Ernesto Mestre, Jim Grimsley, Adam Klein, Matthew Stadler, Christopher Bram, Bernard Cooper, Joe Westmoreland, Michael Lowenthal, J L Schneider, Stephen Beachy, Aldo Alvarez, Rick Barrett, Kevin Killian, and Michael Cunningham.

  • Brian Bouldrey, (editor), (1997), "e;Best American Gay Fiction 2"e;, Little Brown and Company, 276 pages, ISBN 0-316-10298-9 (hardback)/0-316-10299-7 (paperback).

    Extracts of writing by Andrew Holleran, Tom House, David Wojnarowicz, R. Zamora Linmark, Kevin Killian, Kolin J. M. Ohi, Karl Woelz, D. Travers Scott, William Sterling Walker, Russell Leong, Scott Thomas, John R. Keene, David Ebershoff, Michael Nava, Paul Lisicky, Ishmael Houston-Jones, Donald Windham, Gary Fisher, Stephen Beachy, Dale Peck, and Mitchell Cullin.

  • Brian Bouldrey, (editor), (1998), "e;Best American Gay Fiction 3"e;, Little Brown and Company, 276 pages, ISBN 0-316-10236-9 (paperback).

    Extracts of writing by J. Eigo, Tom House, Robert Glück, Keith Banner, Matt Bernstein Sycamore, Alfred Corn, Dennis Cooper, Eric Gabriel Lehman, Jameson Currier, Peter Weltner, Thomas Glave, Andrew Sean Greer, William Haywood Henderson, Scott Heim, Justin Chin, and Allan Gurganus.

  • Joseph Bristow, (1996), "e;Effeminate England: Homoerotic Writing after 1885"e;, Open University Press, ISBN 0 335 09666 2, 208 pages.

    Reviewed by Richard Canning, (1996), inWith a flourish of the pen, in The Times Higher Educational Supplement, 16th. February, page 24. "e;. . . aiming to 'analyse some of the main patterns in homoerotic writing produced after 1885', specifically those which exemplify Joseph Bristow's thesis that 'effeminacy became the main stigma attached to male homosexuality in the eyes of English society'."e;

  • Paul Burston andColin Richardson, (editors), (1996), "e;A Queer Romance: Lesbians, Gay Men and Popular Culture"e;, Rouledge, ISBN 0 415 09617 0. 258 pages.

    Reviewed byJoseph Bristow, (1996), in "e;Gay rebels and queerer norms"e;, inThe Times Higher Educational Supplement, 16th. February, page 25. "e;As Paul Burston and Colin Richardson remark in their introduction toA Queer Romance, 'part of the project of queer is to attack . . . the very 'naturalness' of gender and, by extension, the fictions supporting compulsory heterosexuality'."e;

  • Peter Burton, (1991), "e;Talking to . . . "e;, Third House, 168 pages, ISBN 1 870188 17 9 (paperback).

    Peter Burton in conversion withNeil Bartlett, Steven Corbin,Quentin Crisp,Patrick Gale, Damon Galgut, Stephen Gray, Joseph Hansen,Patricia Highsmith,Allan Hollinghurst, Timothy Ireland,Christopher Isherwood, Francis King, Larry Kramer, Hanif Kureishi, Gavin Lambert, John Lehmann, Brian Masters, Robin Maugham, David Rees, Peter Robins, Martin Sherman, Colin Spencer,Edmund White, Michael Wilcox,Kenneth Williams.

  • Peter Burton, (editor), (1997), "e;The Mammoth Book of Gay Short Stories"e;, Robinson, 486 pages, ISBN 1-85487-518-3 (paperback).

    Short stories byJames Robert Baker, Peter Baker, Diesel Balaam,Neil Bartlett, Sebastian Beaumont, David Patrick Beavers, Peter Burton, Matthew Butler, Toni Davidson, Paul de Havilland, Gary Dunne, Richard K. Edwards, David Evans, James Friel,Patrick Gale, Damon Galgut, Stephen Gray, Rufus Gunn, Joseph Hansen, John Haylock, Tim Herbert, Andrew Holleran,Witi Ihimaera, Francis King, Michael Leech, Robert Leek, Simon Lovat, Joseph Mills, John Mitzel, John Patrick,Robert Patrick, Tony Peake, Felice Picano, Neil Powell, Simon Raven, Philip Ridley, Peter Robins, Jerry Rosco, Lawrence Schimel,Aiden Shaw, Colin Spencer, John Stapleton, Mansel Stimpson, Peter Wells, Graeme Woolaston, Ian Young, and John-Paul Zaccarini.

  • Kate Chedgzoyet al, (editors), (1998), "e;Voicing Women: Gender and sexuality in early modern writing"e;, Edinburgh University Press, 200 pages, ISBN 1 85331 184 7.

  • Corey K. CreekmurandAlexander Doty, (editors), (1995), "e;Out in Culture: Gay, Lesbian, and Queer Essays on Popular Culture"e;, Duke University Press, 568 pages, ISBN 0 8223 1532 7 (hardcover)/Continuum Publishing Group, 544 pages, ISBN 030433488X (paperback).

    • Synopsis:"e;This accessible volume charts some of the ways in which we have understood and negotiated the pleasures and affirmations, as well as the disappointments of mass culture."e;

    • Gay rebels and queerer normsbyJoseph Bristow, inThe Times Higher Educational Supplement, 16th. February, 1996, page 25. "e;. . . largely focused on film and its pleasurable potentialities. Bringing together some of the best-known essays that have shaped lesbian, gay, not to say queer theory in the past 15 years . . ."e;.

  • Camilla Decarnin,Eric Garber, andLyn Paleo, (editors), (1986), "e;Worlds Apart: an anthology of lesbian and gay science fiction and fantasy"e;, Alyson Publications, Inc., 288 pages, ISBN 0-932870-87-2 (paperback).

    Short stories by Edgar Pangborn, James Tiptree, Jr.,Marion Zimmer Bradley, Walt Liebscher, John Varley, Joanna Russ, Elizabeth A. Lynn, Nicholas Fisk, Jewelle Gomez, Rand B. Lee, and Samuel R. Delany.

  • Jonathan Dollimore, (2001), "e;Sex, Literature and Censorship"e;, Polity Press, 206 pages.

    Scholars - but not always gentle menby Jonathan Bate inThe Independent: The Weekend Review, 11th. August, 2001, page 10. "e;In the best section, Dollimore shows that the liberal defenders of art against state censorship have relied on a more subtle censorship of their own. Thus the defence witnesses in theLady Chatterleytrial glossed over the really subversive thing about the book, namely Lawrence's celebration of anal sex."e;

    "e;Dollimore speaks an important truth when he suggests that some of the most compelling literature, past and present, hinges on the tension between, if not the incompatibility of, 'the ethical conscience and the creative imagination'. But having hit upon this truth, he seems unsure what to do with it."e;

  • Emma Donoghue, (editor), (1999), "e;The Mammoth Book of Lesbian Short Stories"e;, London: Robinson Publishing, 495 pages, ISBN 1-84119-049-7 (paperback).

    Short stories by Jane Harris, Anna Livia, Shay Youngblood, Marion Douglas, Susan Hampton, Ali Smith, Jane DeLynn, Dale Gunthorp, Marnie Woodrow, Mary Dorcey, ,Michelene Wandor, Dorothy Allison, Annamarie Jagose, Shani Mootoo, Jane Rule, Jenifer Levin, Madelyn Arnold, Elise D'Haene, Elizabeth A. Lynn,Emma Donoghue, Sara Maitland, Ingrid Macdonald, Sigrid Nielson, Patricia Duncker, Rebecca Brown, Aileen La Tourette, Anne Cameron, Christine Crow, and Tanith Lee.

  • Robert Drake, (1999), "e;The Gay Canon"e;, 476 pages.

  • Lillian Faderman, (editor), (1994), "e;Chloe Plus Olivia: An Anthology of Lesbian Literature from the Seventeenth Century to the Present"e;, 812 pages.

  • Brian Finnegan, (editor), (1994), "e;Quare Fellas: new Irish gay writing"e;, Dublin: Basement Press, 144 pages, ISBN 1-855941-007 (paperback).

    • Blurb:"e;This ground-breaking collection brings together and introduces some of the freshest voices in modern Irish gay fiction. By turn witty, sexy, angry, and lyrical, these writings reflect a part of Irish society unleashed after years of oppression and discrimination. Told from a variety of perspectives, Quare Fellas is a celebration of the Irish gay identity, open at last in all its diversity."e;

    • The authors are Eamon Somers, Keith Ridgway, Michael Wynne, J. J. Plunkett, Gerry Scott, Anthony Newsome, Cherry Smyth, Jo Hughes, Anthony McGrath, and Attracta Cox.

  • Byrne R. S. Fone, (editor), (1998), "e;The Columbia Anthology of Gay Literature: Readings from Western Antiquity to the Present Day"e;, New York: Columbia University Press, 829 pages, ISBN 0-231-09670-4 (paperback).

    • Blurb:"e;The decades since Stonewall have seen a renaissance of gay literature and scholarship prompting both a search for the roots of gay literary history - a body of literature long ignored - and a reevaluation of many well-known works. Here at last is a single volume that reveals the bright thread of gay literature throughout the Western tradition."e;

    • There is no index.

    • The sources quoted are Gilgamesh, The Old Testament, Homer, Thucydides, Lucian, Plutarch, Plato, Solon, Anacreon of Teos, Theognis, Pindar, Euripedes, Theocritus, the Greek Anthology, Philostratus, Xenophon, Pseudo-Lucian, Nonnus, Catullus, Virgil, Ovid, Petronius, Martial, Juvenal, The New Testament, Philo Judaeus, Clement of Alexandria, The Theodosian Code, The Code of Justinian, Henry I, Edward I, Paulinus of Nola, Hrabanus Maurus, Walafrid Strabo, Marbod of Rennes, Baudri of Bourgueil, Hilary, Ganymede, The Story of Lancelot and Galehaut, The Story of Amis and Amile, Marsilio Ficino, Filippo Scarlatti, Angelo Poliziano, Cecco Nuccoli, Marino Ceccoli, Pacifico Massimi,Michelangelo Buonarroti, Benedetto Varchi, Torquato Tasso, Roman Pasquinades, Antonio Rocco, Henry VIII, Edmund Spenser, Michael Drayton,Christopher Marlowe, Richard Barnfield, William Shakespeare, Sir Edward Coke, George Lesly, Tobias Smollett, John Cleland, Ned Ward, Jeremy Bentham, George Gordon Byron (Lord Byron), Donatien Alphonse François Sade (Marquis de Sade), Heinrich Zschokke, Heinrich Hoessli,Karl Heinrich Ulrichs,K. M. Kertbeny, Lord Alfred Tennyson, William Johnson Cory,John Addington Symonds, Gerard Manley Hopkins,Edward Carpenter, Edward Cracroft Lefroy, Marc André Raffalovich,Lord Alfred Douglas, George Ives, Aleister Crowley, John Francis Bloxam,Havelock Ellis,Oscar Wilde,A. E. Housman,E. M. Forster,Wilfred Owen, D. H. Lawrence,J R Ackerley,Christopher Isherwood, Stephen Spender, Ralph Nicholas Chubb,W. H. Auden, Arthur Rimbaud, Paul Verlaine,Marcel Proust, André Gide, René Crevel, Jean Cocteau, Jean Genet, Elisar von Kupffer, "e;gotamo"e;, John Henry Mackay, Benedict Friedlander, Aleksandr Sergeyevich Pushkin, Nikolay Klyuev, Sergei Esenin,Mikhail Alekseevich Kuzmin, Constantine Cavafy, Sandro Penna, Luis Cernuda,Federico García Lorca, Adolfo Caminha, Porfirio Barba-Jacob, Xavier Villaurrutia, Eduardo Gudino Keifer, Julian del Casal, Emilio Ballagas, José Lezama Lima, Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson,Walt Whitman, Bayard Taylor, Charles Warren Stoddard, James Mills Pierce ("e;Professor X"e;), Xavier Mayne (Edward Prime-Stevenson), Earl Lind ("e;Ralph Werther"e;/"e;Jennie June"e;), Robert McAlmon, Bruce Nugent, Robert Scully,Charles Henri Ford, "e;Clement Andrews"e;, Sydney Wilmer, Giles de Gillies, Donald Malloch,Hart Crane, Robert Duncan,Gore Vidal, "e;Donald Webster Cory"e; (Edward Sagarin), Frank O'Hara,Allen Ginsberg, John Wieners, William Burroughs,John Rechy, John Giorno, James Purdy, Ralph Pomeroy, William Barber, Perry Brass, Harold Norse, Edward Field, Kenneth Pitchford, Joseph Cady, Joe Brainard, Adrian Brooks, Michael Rumaker, Alfred Corn, John Iozia, Andrew Holleran, Melvin Dixon, Walter Holland, Walta Borawski,Edmund White, Carl Morse, Jim Everhard,James Baldwin, Thom Gunn, Michael Lassell, Daryl Hine, Essex Hemphill, Craig Reynolds, Salih Michael Fisher, D. Rubin Green, Donald Woods, Assotto Saint.

      See other lists of entries in reference works.

  • Gabriele Griffin, (editor), (2000), "e;Romancing the Margins?: Lesbian Writing in the 1990s"e;, Harrington Park Press, Inc., 187 pages, ISBN 1560231289 (paperback).

  • Gabriele Griffin, (2002), "e;Who's Who in Lesbian and Gay Writing"e;, Routledge, 226 pages, ISBN 0-415-15984-9 (hardback).

    • Blurb:"e;Who's Who in Lesbian and Gay Writingis a lively and accessible biographical guide to lesbian and gay literary culture, fromSapphoto modern pulp fiction. It features authors of works with lesbian or gay content as well as known lesbian and gay writers. This volume opens the boundaries of the field to include writers of popular cultural fiction who are placed alongside the canon of poets, dramatists and novelists to acknowledge the importance of pop culture to gay and lesbian communities. This book includes fascinating entries on authors fromW.H. Audento Alice Walker,James BaldwintoVirginia Woolf, as well as those such as Judith Butler who have theorised lesbian and gay culture and writing, or have contributed to the uncovering and charting of this vibrant literary history. Fully cross-referenced, and with suggestions for further reading, this book offers an invaluable guide to a rich and varied literary culture and is indispensable for anyone with an interest in lesbian and gay writing."e;

    • The entries areJ R Ackerley, Valentine Ackland, Mercedes de Acosta, Harold Acton, Al Berto, Edward Albee, Ann Aldrich, Sarah Aldridge, Sibilla Aleramo, Arnold Aletrino, Paula Gunn Allen, Dorothy E. Allison, Lisa Alther, Margaret Anderson, Gloria Anzaldúa,Reinaldo Arenas, June Arnold, Jean-Paul Aron,Pat Arrowsmith, John Ashbery,W.H. Auden, François Augiéras,James Baldwin, Honoré de Balzac, Ann Bannon, Pat Barker,Djuna Barnes, Natalie Clifford Barney, Richard Barnfield, Judith Barrington, James Miranda Barry, Roland Barthes,Neil Bartlett, Katherine Lee Bates, Charles Baudelaire, Sylvia Beach, Simone de Beauvoir, Robin Becker, William Beckford, Ruth Benedict, E. F. Benson,Paul Berry, Mireille Best, Elizabeth Bishop, Marie-Claire Blais,Dirk Bogarde, Kate Bornstein, Jean-Louis Bory, Elizabeth Bowen,William Edgar Bowers,Jane Auer Bowles,Paul Bowles, Malcolm Boyd, Karin Boye,Marion Zimmer Bradley, Christopher Bram, Beth Brant, Gert Brantenberg, Bertolt Brecht, Vera Brittain, Brigid Brophy, Nicole Brossard, Olga Broumas, Rita Mae Brown, Dorothy Bryant, Bryher (Winifred Ellerman), Elly Bulkin, Barbara Burford, John Horne Burns, William S. Burroughs, Aldo Busi, Judith Butler, Lady Eleanor Butler, Samuel Butler, Lord George Gordon Byron,Claude Cahun, Pat Califia, Kate Calloway,Truman Capote,Edward Carpenter, Victor Catala, Willa Cather, C. P. Cavafy, Jane Chambers, Charlotte Charke,Bruce Chatwin, John Cheever, Ismat Chughtai, Jan Clausen, Michelle Cliff, Bente Clod, Jean Cocteau,Colette, Cyril Collard, Ivy Compton-Burnett, Eliza Cook, Marie Corelli, Tee A. Corinne,Noël Coward,Hart Crane,Quentin Crisp,Rupert Croft-Cooke, Christine M. Crow, Countee Cullen, Michael Cunningham, Mary Daly, Clemence Dane, Herbert Daniel,Sarah Daniels, Elisabeth Dauthendey, Michael Davidson, Jill Davis, Jacob Israël de Haan, Elsie de Wolfe, Samuel R. Delany, Lucie Delarue-Mardrus, Jane DeLynn, Emily Dickinson, Denis Diderot, Melvin Dixon, John Donne,Emma Donoghue, Mary Dorcey, Mark Doty,Alfred Lord Bruce Douglas,Norman Douglas, Claire Dowie, Sarah Dreher, Angela de Maurier, Daphne du Maurier,Carol Ann Duffy,Maureen Duffy, Stella Duffy, Adelaïde Dufrénoy, Robert Duncan, Patricia Duncker, Lawrence Durrell, Andrea Dworkin, Elana Dykewomon, T. S. Eliot, Sumner Locke Elliott, Edith Ellis,Havelock Ellis, Bernardine Evaristo, Lillian Faderman,Tash Fairbanks,U. A. Fanthorpe, David B. Feinberg, Leslie Feinberg, Dominique Fernandez, Robert Ferro, Hubert Fichte, Edward Field, Michael Field (Katherine Bradley and Edith Cooper), Harvey Fierstein,Timothy Findley,Ronald Firbank, A. T. Fitzroy (Rose Laure Allantini),Janet Flanner, Katherine V. Forrest, Jeannette H. Foster, Michel Foucault, Diana Frederics, Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman, Alice French,Stephen Fry, Marilyn Frye, Mary Eliza Fullerton,Patrick Gale, Ellen Galford, Erszébet Galgóczi, Marjorie Garber, Théophile Gautier, Sally Miller Gearhart, Pam Gems, Jean Genet, Stefan George, Mehemmed Ghazali, André Gide, Elsa Gidlow, Charlotte Perkins Gilman,Allen Ginsberg, Zinaida Nikolaevna Gíppius, Nikolai Vasilevich Gogol, Jewelle Gomez,Juan Goytisolo Gay, Judy Grahn, John Henry Gray, Thomas Gray, Angelina Weld Grimké Doris Grumbach, Thom Gunn, Gypsy Rose Lee, H. D. (Hilda Doolittle), Marilyn Hacker,Radclyffe Hall,Richard Hall, Sandi Hall, Caroline Halliday, Christopher Hampton, Lorraine Hansberry, Gillian Hanscombe, Joseph Hansen, Bertha Harris, Jane Heap, Lillian Hellman, Josephine Herbst,Patricia Highsmith, Daryl Hine,Magnus Hirschfeld, Guy Hocquenghem, Andrew Holleran,Alan Hollinghurst,A. E. Housman, Richard Howard,Langston Hughes, Joris-Karl Huysmans, William Inge, Luce Irigaray,Christopher Isherwood, Naomi Jacob, Hans Henny Jahnn, Alice James,Henry James,Derek Jarman, Alfred Jarry, Sarah Orne Jewett, June Jordan, Helvi Juvonen, Karin Kallmaker,Jackie Kay, Frans Kellendonk, Maurice Kenny,Jack Kerouac, Heinrich von Kleist, Irena Klepfisz,Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing, Larry Kramer, Tony Kushner,Mikhail Alekseyevich Kuzmin, the Ladies of Llangollen, Nella Larsen,Bryony Lavery, D. H. Lawrence, Ursula K. Le Guin,Edward Lear, Anne Leaton, David Leavitt, Violette Leduc, Vernon Lee, Rosamond Lehmann, Matthew G. Lewis, José Lezama Lima, Anne Lister, Anna Livia,Federico García Lorca, Audre Lorde, Pierre Louÿs, Amy Lowell, Lee Lynch, Robert McAlmon, Blanche McCrary Boyd, Carson McCullers, Val McDermid, Christian McEwen, Colin MacInnes, Claude McKay, John Henry Mackay, Compton MacKenzie, Mary MacLane, Claire McNab, Candia McWilliam, Eveline Mahyère, Erika Mann, Klaus Mann,Thomas Mann, Ethel Mannin, Olivia Manning, Rosemary Manning, Jaime Manrique, Katherine Mansfield, Caeia March, Jovette Marchessault,Christopher Marlowe, Adam Mars-Jones, Paula Martinac,Valerie Mason-John, F. O. Matthiessen, Robin Maugham,W. Somerset Maugham, Armistead Maupin, Margaret Mead,Herman Melville, James Merrill, Charlotte Mew, Edna St Vincent Millay, Isabel Miller, Kate Millett, Yukio Mishima, Lilian Mohin, Paul Monette, Adrienne Monnier, Honor Moore, Cherríe Moraga, Claire Morgan, Mari Mori, Karl Philipp Moritz, Iris Murdoch, Suniti Namjoshi,Joan Nestle, Lesléa Newman,John Beverley Nichols, Anaïs Nin, Frank O'Hara,Joe Orton,Wilfred Owen, Sofia Iakovlevna Parnók, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Gail Pass,Walter Pater,Robert Patrick, Julia Penelope, Sandro Penna, Cristina Peri Rossi,Fernando Pessoa, Katherine Philips, Felice Picano, Marge Piercy, Alejandra Pizarnik, Sarah Ponsonby, Maria Louise Pool, Minnie Bruce Pratt, Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson,Marcel Proust,Manuel Puig, James Purdy, Marie Madelaine von Puttkamer, Rachilde (Marguerite Aymery), Marc-André Raffalovich,Nina Rapi,Sir Terence Mervyn Rattigan,John Rechy, Forrest Reid, Christa Reinig, Mirkka Elina Rekola, Mary Renault, Gerard Reve, Adrienne Rich, Henry Handel Richardson, Arthur Rimbaud, Richard Rive, Christine Rochefort, John Wilmot (Earl of Rochester), Ruth Margarete Roellig, Rosamaria Roffiel, Frederick William Rolfe, Eleanor Roosevelt, Ned Rorem, Sinclair Ross, Christina Rossetti, Muriel Rukeyser, Jane Rule, Joanna Russ, Umberto Saba,Vita Sackville-West, Donatien Alphonse François Sade (Marquis de Sade), Ihara Saikaku, Pirkko Helena Saisio,Saki (Hector Hugh Munro), Luis Rafael Sánchez, Cora Sandel,Sappho, Severo Sarduy, Frank Sargeson, May Sarton,Siegfried Sassoon, Olive Schreiner, Sarah Schulman, Annemarie Schwarzenbach, Sarah Scott, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Anna Seward, William Shakespeare, Tat'iana L'vovna Shchépkina-Kupérnik, Randy Shilts, Ann Allen Shockley, Edith Sitwell, Osbert Sitwell,Dame Ethel Mary Smyth, Solita Solano,Somerville and Ross, Susan Sontag, Sir Stephen Spender, Jack Spicer,Split Britches, Verana Stefan,Gertrude Stein, Charles Warren Stoddard,Lytton Strachey, Dorothy Strachey Bussy, August Strindberg, Howard Overing Sturgis, May Swenson, Algernon Charles Swinburne,John Addington Symonds, Mutsuo Takahashi, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Henry David Thoreau,Alice B. Toklas, Pier Vittorio Tondelli, Sylvia Townsend Warner, Violet Trefusis, Michel Tremblay, Lady Una Troubridge, Marina Ivanovna Tsvetáeva,Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, Carl Van Vechten, Paul Verlaine, Théophile de Viau,Gore Vidal, Virgil, Renée Vivien, Bruno Vogel, Alice Walker, Patricia Nell Warren, Evelyn Waugh, Anna Elisabet Weirauch,Denton Welch, Antonia White,Edmund White, Patrick White,Walt Whitman, Anna Wickham,Oscar Wilde, Gale Wilhelm,Tennessee Williams, Barbara Wilson, Elizabeth Wilson, Lanford Wilson, Sir Angus Wilson,Johann Joachim Winckelmann, Christa Winsloe,Jeanette Winterson, Monique Wittig, Charlotte Wolff,Gregory Woods,Virginia Woolf, Wu Tsao, Marguerite Yourcenar, Vilhelmine Zahle, Luis Zapata, Eve Zaremba.

      See other lists of entries in reference works.

  • George E. HaggertyandBonnie Zimmerman, (1995), "e;Professions of Desire: Lesbian and Gay Studies in Literature"e;, Modern Language Association of America, 250 pages, ISBN 0873525639.

  • P-P Hartnett, (editor), (2000), "e;The Gay Times Book of Short Stories: New Century, New Writing"e;, Gay Times Books, 305 pages, ISBN 1-902852-19-2 (paperback).

    Short stories byMichael Arditti, Nicholas Blincoe, Chaz Brenchley, Toni Davidson, Jon Evans, Chris Ferguson, Christopher Fowler, Mike Giddens, Amardeep Gill, John R. Gordon, John Gosden, P-P Hartnett, Michael Hootman, Joe Lavelle, Shaun Levin, Stephen Lucas,Paul Magrs, Peter McGraith, Paul McVeigh, Craig Metphert, John Myatt, Mike Parker, Antonio Pasolini, Tony Peake, Andrew Pearman, Peter Slater, Rupert Smith, Nick Stellmacher, Stewart Who?, Michael Wynne, Christopher Whyte.

  • P-P Hartnett, (editor), (2001), "e;The Gay Times Book of Short Stories: The Next Wave"e;, Gay Times Books, 323 pages, ISBN 1-90285238-9 (paperback).

    • Short stories by Anthony Baulch, Gordon Beeferman, Dominic Berry, John Joseph Bibby, Michael Boynton, David Brewin, Nathan Buck, Miles Donohoe, Dean M. Drinkel, Mat Dunne, Alex Fínean-Liáng, Geezer, Lewis Gill, David Gue, Robin Ibbeson, Morgan Melhuish, Keith Munro, Arden Pryor, Nishan Ramaindran, Robbie Romano, Adam Rowland, Stuart Sandford, Tony J. Shaw, Kai Morgan Venice, Zio J. Walsh, Justin Ward, David Watkins, and Alistair Whyte.

    • See theGay Timeswriters, 2001.

  • Elaine Hobby, co-edited with Chris White, (1991), "e;What Lesbians Do in Books"e;, The Women's Press, 240 pages, ISBN 070434288X (paperback).

  • Sonya L. Jones, (editor), (1998), "e;Gay & Lesbian Literature Since World War II"e;, Haworth Press, 250 pages, ISBN: 1560231025 (paperback).

    • Blurb:"e;This book chronicles the multifaceted explosion of gay and lesbian writing that has taken place in the second half of this century. Encompassing a wide range of subject matter, it includes work by established scholars as well as young theoreticians and activists who have initiated new areas of investigation. The contributor's examination of this rich literary period makes it easy to view the half-century from 1948 to 1998 as the Queer Renaissance."e;

    • Review:by Michael Bronski on Amazon.co.uk. "e;Since the end of World War II, lesbian and gay writing has flourished in the United States and engendered a finely tuned, perceptive critical response. Much of the critical writing, however, has focused on a presumed 'canon' of gay writing, overlooking lesser-known works and themes. Sonya L. Jones has gathered together 11 essays that fill in some of the gaps. Amanda C. Gable'sBertha Harris's Lover: Lesbian and Postmoderninvestigates the novels of Bertha Harris, a late-1960s writer whose work took three decades to come into its own with readers and critics. Gary Richard'sWriting the Fairy Huckleberry Finnlooks at the fictions of William Goyen andTruman Capote, tracing a homoerotic literary tradition from Mark Twain to the present. Other works discussed in the essays includeJames Baldwin's Another Country, Jane Rule's Inland Passage, Dale Peck's Martin and John, and June Arnold's Sister Gin. Gay and Lesbian Literature Since World War II is an important collection for anyone interested in the state of gay and lesbian letters and criticism today."e;

  • Seymour Kleinberg, (editor), (1977), "e;The Other Persuasion: The Homosexual Theme in the fiction of . . . "e;, Picador, ISBN 0 330 25557 6.

  • William J. Mann, (editor), (1997), "e;Grave Passions: Tales of the Gay Supernatural"e;, New York: Masquerade Books, 328 pages, ISBN 1-56333-405-4 (paperback).

    A collection of short stories by Simon Sheppard, Poppy Z. Brite, Perry Brass, Felice Picano, Thomas S Roche, M. Christian, Gary Bowen, Noel Ambery II, Geoff Huntington, William J. Mann, Jim Merrett, Scott O'Hara, Lawrence Schimel, Bryce J Tache, Kenneth Harrison, and Jon-Carl Lewis.

  • David Marcus, (editor), (1994), "e;Alternative Loves: Irish Gay and Lesbian Stories"e;, Dublin: Martello Books, 232 pages, ISBN 1-86023-001-6 (paperback).

    The authors are Patrick Boyle, Ita Daly,Emma Donoghue, Mary Dorcey, Desmond Hogan, John Jordan, Rita Kelly, Ray Lynott, Colum McCann, Val Mulkerns, Edna O'Brien, Julia O'Faolain, Sean O'Faolain, Terry Prone, Frank Ronan, Padraig Rooney, and William Trevor, with a forward by Ailbhe Smyth.

  • Adam Mars-Jones, (editor), (1983), "e;Mae West is Dead: Recent Lesbian and Gay Fiction"e;, London and Boston: Faber and Faber, 312 pages, ISBN 0-571-13022-4 (hardback)/0-571-13188-3 (paperback).

    • Blurb:"e;Mae West is Deadrepresents the best of contemporary lesbian and gay fiction both in Britain and the United States. The twenty-one stories range in setting from Notting Hill to Izmir and include such characters as Annie Oakley and Superman."e;

    • Short stories by Sandy Boucher, John Bowen, Rebecca Brown, Simon Burt, Jan Clausen, David Cook, Daniel Curzon,Richard Hall, Peter Hazeldine, Aileen La Tourette, Anne Leaton, Sara Maitland, Merril Mushroom, James Purdy, Jane Rule, Joseph Torchia, and Barbara Ellen Wilson

  • Catherine E. McKinley and L. Joyce Delaney, (editors), (1995), "e;Afrekete: An Anthology of Black Lesbian Writing"e;, Anchor Books, 317 pages, ISBN 0385473559 (paperback).

  • Michael J. Meyer, (editor), (2000), "e;Literature and Homosexuality"e;, Amsterdam: Rodopi, ISBN 90 420 0519 X (paperback).

  • Joseph Mills, (editor), (2001), "e;Borderline: the mainstream book of Scottish gay writing"e;, Edinburgh and London: Mainstream Publishing, 272 pages, ISBN 1 84018 507 4 (paperback).

    • Blurb:"e;This original and unique anthology contains previously unpublished work, including material from Scotland's more established authors. The older writers featured here are equally determined topresent a different view of Scottish life, in all its diversity: Edwin Morgan writes of a searing, brief encounter on a bus; Toni Davidson describes a similar event on a train; Alasdair Gray's lesbian S&M fantasySomething Leatheris a wonderfully celebratory piece of writing. As this collection shows, through a range of voices and experiences, there is no definitive outlook for any author, gender, sexuality or race these days - just one massive melting-pot called Scotland."e;

    • The authors are Toni Davidson, Edwin Morgan, Janice Galloway, Thomas Healy, Jack Dickson, Ali Smith, Irvine Welsh, Sue Green, Graeme Woolaston, Joseph Mills, Jimmy McGovern, Alasdair Gray, Manda Scott,Jackie Kay, James Kelman, Dylis Rose, Bill Douglas, Gordon Legge, Ellen Galford, Alexander Trocchi, Martin Foreman, Christopher Whyte, Keith Adamson, Sebastian Beaumont, A. L. Kennedy, andCarol Ann Duffy.

  • Mark Mitchell, (editor), (1995), "e;The Penguin Book of International Gay Writing"e;, Penguin Books, 588 pages, ISBN 0-14-023376-8 (paperback).

    Includes an introduction by David Leavitt and writing by Plato, Petronius, Giovanni Boccaccio, Benvenuto Cellini, Ameng of Wu, Ihara Saikaku, Marquis de Sade, Honoré de Balzac, Gustave Flaubert, Fyodor Sologub, Robert Musil, Sigmund Freud, André Gide, andThomas Mann, Jean Cocteau, Marguerite Yourcenar, Sandro Penna, Albert Camus, Klaus Mann, Umberto Saba, Elsa Morante, Costas Taksis, Yukio Mishima, José Lezama Lima, Gerard Reve, Yves Navarre, Agustin Gömez-Arcos, Evgeny Kharitonov, andManuel Puig, Roland Barthes, Renaud Camus, Tony Duvert, Edward Limonov, Evgeny Popov, Michel Tournier, Giuseppe Patroni Griffi, Roberto Calasso, Caio Fernando Abreu, Patrick Drevet,Reinaldo Arenas, and Edwin Oostmeijer.

  • Mark Mitchell and David Leavitt, (editors), (1998), "e;Pages Passed from Hand to Hand: The hidden tradition of homosexual literature in English from 1748 to 1914"e;, Chatto & Windus.

    • Reproduces extracts of writing by Tobias Smollett, John Cleland, Charlotte Cibber Charke,Herman Melville, Bayard Taylor, Charles Warren Stoddard,Walter Pater, Alan Dale (Alfred J. Cohen), Howard Overing Sturgis, Ambrose Bierce,Henry James, Edwin Emanuel Bradford, John Francis Bloxam, Count Stenbock, Kenneth Grahame, Frederick Rolfe (Baron Corvo), Owen Wister, E. F. Benson, John Gambril Nicholson, Willa Cather, Horace Annesley Vachell, Charles Kenneth Scott-Moncrief, Saki (Hector Hugh Munro), Louis Umfreville Wilkinson, Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson, D. H. Lawrence, Patrick Weston (Gerald Bernard Francis Hamilton), andE. M. Forster.

    • This history is bunkby Peter Burton inGay Times, May, 1998, issue 236, page 80. "e;The title is excellent. Evocative. The sub-title is portentious and inaccurate:Pages Passed from Hand to Handhas not been culled from a 'hidden tradition' (much of the material included is exceedingly well-known) and nor is much of it 'homosexual literature' (much is trite, homosexualwritingat best)."e;

      "e;Pages Passed from Hand to Hand is a shoddy peice of work and the final insult comes withEdmund White'snaive endorsement on the back cover. An appalling book . . . "e;

  • Bruce MorrowandCharles Rowell, (editors), (1996), "e;Shade: An Anthology of Fiction by Gay Men of African Descent"e;, Avon Books, 400 pages, ISBN 0380783053 (paperback).

    Review:fromPublisher's Weekly"e;Upon close inspection, the often-cited 'flowering of gay literature' has been mainly an expression of the white middle class. In the Life and Brother to Brother were antecedents of writings focusing on men of color, but Shades is the first anthology devoted to fiction by black gay men. It is difficult to single out the best of the many fine offerings. The most unique perspectives, however, come in Bil Wright's "e;Your Mother from Cleveland,"e; John Keene Jr.'s "e;My Son, My Heart, My Life"e; and A. Cinqu Hicks's "e;Spice."e; Like the best in any genre, these challenge the reader's comfort level and assumptions, not only about class, race and sexuality but also about narrative structure. Samuel Delany's introduction and his memoir "e;Citre et Trans"e; contextualize the history of writings by black gay men while serving as reminders that Delany is one of the role models who inspired a generation of writers. Hopefully, what the 23 writers represented here have to say will be heard by an audience that's wider than that identified by the subtitle."e;

  • Christopher Navratil, (editor), (1996), "e;Man of my dreams: Provocative Writing on Men Loving Men"e;, San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 175 pages, ISBN 0-8118-1396-7 (paperback).

    • Blurb:"e;Whether your strong suit is loving, l usting, loathing, or leaving, you won't be able to resist the outrageous wit and surprising insights of this irreverent anthology about gay relationships."e;

    • Includes writings, which are mostly extracts from work published elsewhere, by David Plante, Michael Cunningham, Fenton Johnson,Stephen Fry, E. Lynn Harris, Liam Brosnaban, Evelyn Waugh, Stephen McCauley,Tennessee Williams,Alan HollinghurstTerrence McNally, Robert Peters,Edmund White, David B. Feinberg, Peter Cameron, Dale Peck, Ethan Mordden, Andrew Solomon, Patrick Hoctel, Robert Rodi, Francis King, Joe Pintauro, Armistead Maupin, Stan Leventhal, Michael Grumley, David Sedaris, James Merrill, Felice Picano,Joe Orton, Andrew Holleran, Ralph Pomeroy, Daniel Curzon, Paul Rudnick, John Edward Harris,Lytton Strachey, T. R. Witomski, Peter Lefcourt, Brian Sloan, Jameson Currier, Paul Reidinger, Edward Field, Michael Chabon, David Leavitt, Christopher Coe, Frank O'Hara, and Christopher Bram.

  • Emmanuel S. Nelson, (editor), (1997), "e;Contemporary Gay American Novelists"e;, Greenwood Press, 456 pages, ISBN 0313280193 (hardcover).

    Synopsis:"e;Publication of this sourcebook on gay American fiction writers, aims to grant legitimacy and recognition to this rapidly emerging area of literary studies. Though wary of canon-formation in this ground-breaking work, Nelson has selected 57 writers whose works have received serious critical acclaim and/or have won large audiences or, in a few cases, are worthy of greater attention. Included are representative writers of detective fiction and science fiction, but not authors of erotic fiction or pulp novels. Also excluded are a few novelists whose expressed wishes for privacy were respected. Writers and their works are examined in the gay literary context, and a majority of the contributing essayists are themselves gay male scholars and writers, who bring with them a level of personal and political sensitivity that is generally lacking in non-gay assessments of this literature."e;

  • Joan Nestle, (editor), (1992), "e;The Persistent Desire : A Femme-Butch Reader"e;, Alyson Publications, 503 pages, ISBN 1555831907 (paperback).

    Synopsis:"e;Surveys a decade of the attempt to reconstruct and understand the meaning and value of butch-femme relations for the contemporary lesbian, drawing on oral history, fiction, poetry, and fantasy."e;

  • Joan NestleandNaomi Holoch, (editors), (1990), "e;Women on Women : An Anthology of American Lesbian Short Fiction"e;, Plume Books, 309 pages, ISBN 0452263883 (paperback).

    Synopsis:"e;Contains a collection of gay fiction, compiled from works in progress as well as previously unpublished fiction."e;

  • Joan NestleandNaomi Holoch, (editors), (1993), "e;Women on Women 2: an anthology of American Lesbian short fiction"e;, Plume New York, (paperback).

  • Joan NestleandNaomi Holoch, (editors), (1996), "e;Women on Women 3 : A New Anthology of American Lesbian Fiction (Anthology)"e;, Plume Books, ISBN 0452276616 (paperback).

    Synopsis:"e;A diverse collection of work, reflecting the emotional, political and literary issues of the lesbian community. From love, sex and relationships to sexual abuse and AIDS, the 28 pieces of short fiction in this book cover the cultural and social spectrum of lesbian identity."e;

  • Joan NestleandNaomi Holoch, (editors), (1999), "e;The Vintage Book of International Lesbian Fiction"e;, Vintage Books, 384 pages, ISBN 0679759522 (paperback).

  • Joan NestleandJohn Preston, (editors), (1995), "e;Sister and Brother: Lesbians and Gay Men Write About Their Lives"e;, Continuum Publishing Group, 256 pages, ISBN 0304334839 (paperback).

    Synopsis:"e;Here are heartfelt writings from some renowned names in lesbian and gay literature, as well as some debut appearances. These essays explore a kind of love uncomplicated by romance, but surprisingly sensual. As the writers pursue their relationships with the oposite sex, they ultimately lay bare the nature of friendship itself. Joan Nestle's published work includes 'Women on Women - An Anthology of American Lesbian Short Fiction'. John Preston's many books include 'My Life as a Pornographer'."e;

  • David ReesandPeter Robins, (editors), (1989), "e;The Freezer Counter: Stories by gay men"e;, Third House (Publishers), 154 pages, ISBN 1 870188 11 X (paperback).

    Stories by Edwin Preece,Patrick Gale, Dave Royle, John Barry, Peter Robins, Keith Adamson, Charles Lambert, Joel Lane, David Rees, Joe Mills, Peter Burton, Chris Payne, Patrick Cox, Michael Carson, Ian Hutson, David Nott,Tom Wakefield, Martin Foreman,Gregory Woods.

  • Margaret Reynolds, (editor), (1994), "e;The Penguin Book of Lesbian Short Stories"e;, London: Penguin Books, 430 pages, ISBN 0-14-016706-4 (paperback).

    Short stories by Sarah Orne Jewett, Renée Vivien, Katherine Mansfield, H.D.,Gertrude Stein,Djuna Barnes,Virginia Woolf,Radclyffe Hall,Colette, Dorothy Strachey, Isak Dinesen, Anaïs Nin, Ann Bannon, Monique Wittig, Nicole Brossard, Jayne Anne Phillips,Joan Nestle, Merril Mushroom, Rebecca Brown, Jane Rule, Anna Livia, Sara Maitland, Jewelle Gomez, Dorothy Allison, Pat Califia, Frances Gapper, Alison Bechdel, Beth Nugent, Margaret Atwood,Emma Donoghue, Kathy Acker, andJeanette Winterson.

  • Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, (editor), (1997), "e;Novel Gazing : Queer Readings in Fiction"e;, Duke University Press, ISBN 0822320282 (hardcover).

    Blurb:"e;Novel Gazing is the first collection of queer criticism on the history of the novel. The contributors navigate new territory in literary theory with essays that implicitly challenge the "e;hermeneutic of suspicion"e; widespread in current critical theory. In a stunning introductory essay, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick delineates the possibilities for a criticism that would be "e;reparative"e; rather than cynical or paranoid. The startingly imaginative essays in the volume explore new critical practices that can weave the pleasures and disorientations of reading into the fabric of queer analyses."e;

    "e;Through discussions of a diverse array of British, French, and American novels-including major canonical novels, bestsellers, children's fiction, and science fiction-these essays explore queer worlds of taste, texture, joy, and ennui, focusing on such subjects as flogging, wizardry, exorcism, dance, Zionist desire, and Internet sexuality. Interpreting the works of authors as diverse as Benjamin Constant, Toni Morrison, T. H. White, and William Gibson, along with canonical queer modernists such as James, Proust, Woolf, and Cather, contributors reveal the wealth of ways in which selves and communities succeed in extracting sustenance from the objects of a culture whose avowed desire has often been not to sustain them."e;

    "e;The dramatic reframing that these essays perform will make Novel Gazing essential for all literary critics."e;

    "e;Contributors. Stephen Barber, Renu Bora, Anne Chandler, James Creech, Jonathan Goldberg, Joseph Litvak, Michael Lucey, Jeff Nunokawa, Cindy Patton, Jacob Press, Robert F. Reid-Pharr, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Melissa Solomon, Tyler Stevens, Kathryn Bond Stockton, John Vincent, Maurice Wallace, Barry Weller."e;

  • Anthony Slide, (2003), "e;Lost Gay Novels: A Reference Guide to Fifty Works from the First Half of the Twentieth Century"e;, Harrington Park Press, 204 pages, ISBN 1-56023-413-X/1-56023-414-8 (paperback).

    • Blurb:"e;In Lost Gay Novels: A Reference Guide to Fifty Works from the First Half of the Twentieth Century, respected pop culture historian Anthony Slide resurrects fifty early twentieth-century American novels with gay themes or characters and discusses them in carefully researched, engaging prose. Each entry offers you a detailed discussion of plot and characters, a summary of contemporary critical reception, and biographical information on the often-obscure writer."e;

    • The authors discussed are James Barr, Larry Barretto, Stuart Benton, Alvah Bessie, André Birabeau, Isabel Bolton, Vance Bourjaily, Kay Boyle, Myron Brinig, Richard Brooks, John Buchan, John Horne Burns, James M. Cain, Clarkson Crane, Hubert Creekmore, George Davis, Michael de forrest, Harrison Dowd, George Eekhoud, Stuart Engstrand, John Evans, Waldo Frank, Ernest Frost, Henry Blake Fuller, Richard Hull, Charles Jackson, Nial Kent, Lew Levenson, Jean Lyttle, Harlan Cozad McIntosh, Compton Mackenzie, William Maxwell, Richard Meeker, Ernest Milton, Willard Motley, Blair Niles, Eugene O'Brien, Elliot Paul, Thomas Hal Phillips, Mary Renault, Janet Schane, Rex Stout, L. A. G. Strong, André Tellier, Ward Thomas, Loren Wahl, Sylvia Townsend Warner,Denton Welch, Calder Willingham, and J. Keith Winter.

  • Caro Soles, (editor), (1994), "e;Meltdown!: An Anthology of Erotic Science Fiction and Dark Fantasy for Gay Men"e;, Richard Kasak, 207 pages, ISBN 1-56333-203-5 (paperback).

    • Blurb:"e;Editor Caro Soles has put together one of the most explosive, mind-bending collections of gay erotic writing ever published.

      From the bleak futuristic world of 'meta-AIDS' where unprotected sex is against the law, to the old-fashioned romance of a ghost story; from a transexual zombie lover, the the alien hermaphrodite dancer with a secret taste for S/M, this collection covers a lot of territory that is not the usual domain of stories that explore gay sexuality. Here men pursue their tricks and lovers and dream partners through time, space and memory; from the Crusades into the distant future and on to other worlds ...

      A volume of extraordinary imagination,Meltdown!presents both new voices and provocative pieces by world-famous novelists Edmund White and Samuel R. Delaney."e;

    • Contains short stories by Robin Wayne Bailey, Gary Bowen, Steven A. Bonivissuto, Samuel R. Delany, Kyle Stone,Edmund White, David May, Sean Martin, David Roddis, Michael C. McPherson, Mike Dubson, Marsh Cassady, Lars Eighner, and David Laurents.

  • George Stambolian, (editor), (1986), "e;Men on Men: Best new gay fiction"e;, Plume, 376 pages, ISBN 0 452-25882-0 (paperback).

    Short stories by Richard Umans, John Fox, C. F. Borgman, Brad Gooch, Andrew Holleran, Patrick Hoctel, Sam D'Allesandro, Bruce Boone, Felice Picano,Richard Hall, Ethan Mordden, Wallace Parr, Michael Grumley, Robert Glück, Robert Ferro, Dennis Cooper, Kevin Killian, andEdmund White.

  • George Stambolian, (editor), (1988), "e;Men on Men 2: Best new gay fiction"e;, Plume, 371 pages, ISBN 0 452-26402-2 (paperback).

    Short stories by Richard McCann, David B. Feinberg, Joseph Pintauro, James Purdy, Albert Innaurato, Lev Raphael, Allen Barnett, Christopher Coe, David Leavitt, James McCourt, Anderson Ferrell, David Groff, David Brendan Hopes, Tim Barrus, Melvin Dixon, Gary Glickman, Christopher Davis, and Allan Gurganus.

  • Claude J. Summers, (editor), (1997), "e;The Gay and Lesbian Literary Heritage: A Reader's Companion to the Writers and Their Works, from Antiquity to the Present"e;, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc., 786 pages, ISBN 0 7475 3295 8 (hardback).

    • Blurb:"e;The Gay and Lesbian Literary Heritageprovides valuable overviews of the gay and lesbian presence in a variety of genres and historical periods; it includes in-depth critical essays on gay and lesbian authors in world literature and coverage of topics and figures important in appreciating the rich and varied gay and lesbian literary traditions. Included are more than 350 alphabetically arranged articles."e;

      "e;More than 150 scholars from around the world have contributed to the volume, making this long-overdue work complete, informative, and indispensable for anyone interested in this important part of the literary tradition."e;

    • An index is provided. Very brief notes of the contributors are also provided.

    • The entries areJ R Ackerley, aestheticism, African literatures, African-American literature, AIDS literature, Edward Albee, Paula Gunn Allen, Dorothy E. Allison, Lisa Alther,Amazons, American literature (colonial, nineteenth century, gay male 1900-1969, lesbian 1900-1969, gay male post-Stonewall, lesbian post-Stonewall), American writers on the Left, Gloria Anzaldúa,Reinaldo Arenas, John Ashbery, Asian American literature,W. H. Auden, Augustine of Hippo, Australian and New Zealand literatures, Manuel Azaña,Sir Francis Bacon,James Baldwin, Honoré de Balzac, Ann Bannon,Djuna Barnes, Natalie Clifford Barney, Richard Barnfield, Roland Barthes,Neil Bartlett, Charles Baudelaire, Sylvia Beach, Beat generation, William Beckford, Aphra Behn, E. F. Benson, Jeremy Bentham, The Bible, bisexual literature, Elizabeth Bishop, Marie-Claire Blais,Bloomsbury, Elizabeth Bowen,Jane Auer Bowles,Paul Bowles, Bertolt Brecht, Brigid Brophy, Nicole Brossard, Olga Broumas, Rita Mae Brown, John Horne Burns, William S. Burroughs, butch-femme relations, Lady Eleanor Butler and Sarah Ponsonby, Samuel Butler, Lord George Gordon Byron, camp, Canadian literature in English,Truman Capote,Edward Carpenter, Willa Cather, Catullus, C. P. Cavafy, censorship, Luis Cernuda, Jane Chambers, Geoffrey Chaucer, John Cheever, children's literature, Chinese literature, Hélène Cixous, John Cleland, Jean Cocteau,Colette, coming out stories, I. Compton-Burnett, Marie Corelli,Noël Coward,Hart Crane, cross-dressing, Countee Cullen, Alighieri Dante, decadence, Emily Dickinson, John Donne, Hilda Doolittle,Alfred Douglas,Norman Douglas, dramatic literature (modern drama, contemporary drama),Maureen Duffy, Robert Duncan, Lawrence Durrell, Dutch and Flemish literature, Elana Dykewomon, elegy, Thomas Stearns Eliot, English literature (medieval, renaissance, restoration and eighteenth century, romanticism, nineteenth century, twentieth century), eritica and pornography, ethnography, feminist literary theory, Robert Ferro, Hubert Fichte, Edward Field, Michael Field Katherine Bradley and Edith Cooper, Harvey Fierstein,Ronald Firbank,Janet Flanner, folklore,E. M. Forster, Michel Foucault, Diana Frederics, Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman, Alice French, French literature (before the nineteenth century, nineteenth century, twentieth century),Patrick Gale,Federico García Lorca, gender, Jean Genet, Stefan George, German and Austrian literature (before the nineteenth centuary, nineteenth and twentieth centuries), Mehemmed Ghazali, ghost and horror fiction, André Gide, Gilgamesh,Allen Ginsberg, Nikolai Gogol, Paul Goodman, gothicism,Juan Goytisolo, Judy Grahn, Thomas Gray, Greek literature (ancient, modern), Doris Grumbach, Thom Gunn,Radclyffe Hall,Richard Hall, Lorraine Hansberry, Joseph Hansen, the Harlem renaissance, Bertha Harris, Ernest Hemingway,Patricia Highsmith, Daryl Hine, Guy Hocquenghem, Andrew Holleran, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Horace,A. E. Housman, Richard Howard,Langston Hughes, humor, Joris-Karl Huysmans, identity, William Inge, interrelations of gay and lesbian literature,Christopher Isherwood, Italian literature,James VI and I,Henry James, Japanese literature,Derek Jarman, Alfred Jarry, Sarah Orne Jewett, Jewish-American literature, June Jordan, journalism and publishing, Maurice Kenny,Jack Kerouac, Heinrich von Kleist, Larry Kramer,Mikhail Aleksayevich Kuzmin, Nella Larsen, Latin American literature, Latina literature, latino literature, D. H. Lawrence,T. E. Lawrence, David Leavitt, Violette Leduc, Vernon Lee, Ursula K. Le Guin, Matthew G. Lewis, José Lezama Lima, literary theory: gay, lesbian, and queer, Audre Lorde, Amy Lowell, Lucian, John Henry Mackay, Klaus Mann,Thomas Mann, Katherine Mansfield, Jovette Marchessault,Christopher Marlowe, Adam Mars-Jones, F. O. Matthiessen,W. Somerset Maugham, Armistead Maupin, Carson McCullers,Herman Melville, James Merrill, Charlotte Mew,Michelangelo, Middle Eastern literature (Arabic, Persian), Edna Saint Vincent Millay, Isabel Miller, John Milton, Yukio Mishima, modernism, Paul Monette, Cherríe Moraga, musical theater, mystery fiction, myth, Native North American literature, Anaïs Nin, the novel, Frank O'Hara, opera,Joe Orton,Wilfred Owen, Sophia Parnok, Pier Paolo Pasolini, pastoral,Walter Pater,Robert Patrick, Sandro Penna,Fernando Pessoa, Petronius, Katherine Philips, David Plante, August von Platen, Plato, William Plomer, Plutarch, poetry, Poliziano, post-modernism, Reynolds Price,Marcel Proust,Manuel Puig, James Purdy, Québécois literature, reading across orientations,John Rechy, Mary Renault, Gerard Reve, Adrienne Rich, Arthur Rimbaud, John Wilmot (Early of Rochester), Frederick William Rolfe (Baron Corvo), Roman literature, romantic friendship, Ned Rorem, Christina Rossetti, Muriel Rukeyser, Jane Rule, Joanna Russ, Russian literature, Umberto Saba,Vita Sackville-West, Marquis de Sade, sadomasochistic literature, Ihara Saikaku, Denis Sanguin de Saint-Pavin, George Santayana,Sappho, Frank Sargeson, May Sarton, Sarah Schulman, science fiction and fantasy, Sarah Scott, Scriblerians, St. Sebastian, Anna Seward, William Shakespeare, Randy Shilts, Ann Allen Shockley, Edith Sitwell,Edith Somerville and Violet Martin, Susan Sontag, South Asian literatures, Spanish literature, Sir Stephen Spender, Jack Spicer, sports literature,Gertrude Stein, Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson, Charles Warren Stoddard,Lytton Strachey, Howard Overing Sturgis, May Swenson, Algernon Charles Swinburne,John Addington Symonds, Mutsuo Takahashi, Sara Teasdale, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Theocritus, Henry David Thoreau, travel literature, Michel Tremblay, Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva, Uranian poets, Carl Van Vechten, Paul Verlaine, Théophile de Viau,Gore Vidal, The Violet Quill, Virgil, Renée Vivien, Bruno Vogel, Alice Walker,Horace Walpole, war literature, Sylvia Townsend Warner, Patricia Nell Warren, Evelyn Waugh, Anna Elisabet Weirauch,Denton Welch,Edmund White, Patrick White,Walt Whitman,Oscar Wilde, Gale Wilhelm, Jonathan Williams,Tennessee Williams, Sir Angus Wilson, Lanford Wilson,Johann Joachim Winckelmann, Donald Windham, Christa Winsloe,Jeanette Winterson, Monique Wittig,Virginia Woolf, young adult literature, Marguerite Yourcenar, Luis Zapata.

      See other lists of entries in reference works.

  • Chris White, (editor), (1999), "e;Nineteenth-century Writings on Homosexuality: A Sourcebook"e;, Routledge, an imprint of Taylor & Francis Books Ltd, 392 pages, ISBN 0415153069 (paperback).

    • Synopsis:"e;A collection of texts concerned with same-sex desire in the 19th and early-20th century. This comprehensive collection ranges widely both generically and chronologically, including prose, poetry, fiction, history and polemic from 1810 to 1914. Containing a general introduction, section headnotes, a bibliography of primary and secondary source material, and sections on "e;The Law"e;, "e;Science"e;, "e;Love"e;, and "e;Sex"e;. It includes writing on: trials and scandals; censorship and homophobia; cultural and personal history; love and friendship; lesbianism; aestheticism and decadence; sexual tourism and colonialism; cross-class desire; and sodomy and sadomasochism."e;

    • We were amusedbyAlan SinfieldinGay Times, August, 1999, issue 251, page 82. "e;Much of the theoretical work on homosexuality in the past has been based on quite flimsy historical knowledge. Chris White makes a valuable quantity conveniently available (370 busy pages). To round out the topic, some familiar stuff has been included as well; there seems rather a lot ofJohn Addington Symonds.

      "e;The main thought that emerges from having this material collected together is thatWilde, upon whom we usually centre, was just one figure in an enthusiastic explosion of writing about illicit sexuality in the last years of the nineteenth century. 'Such people were not supposed to exist, let alone catalogue and describe their pleasures,' White observes. It amounts to a significantly resistant subcultural moment."e;

  • Edmund White, (editor), (1991), "e;The Faber Book of Gay Short Fiction"e;, London and Boston: Faber and Faber, 586 pages, ISBN 0-571-14473-X (paperback).

    Short stories by Paul Bailey,James Baldwin,Neil Bartlett,Paul Bowles, William S. Burroughs, Simon Burt, Alfred Chester, Dennis Cooper, James M. Step,Ronald Firbank,E. M. Forster,Patrick Gale, Robert Glück, Allan Gurganus, William Haywood Henderson, Andrew Holleran,Alan Hollinghurst, Timothy Ireland,Christopher Isherwood,Henry James, David Leavitt, David Malouf, Adam Mars-Jones, Armistead Maupin, David Plante, James Purdy, Lev Raphael,Gore Vidal,Tom Wakefield,Denton Welch,Edmund White, andTennessee Williams.

  • Terry Wolverton, (editor), andRobert Drake, (editor), (1996), "e;Hers"e;, Faber and Faber, 206 pages, ISBN 0-571-19867-8 (paperback).

    Synopsis:A book of short stories by Christina Sunley, Rebecca Brown, Michelle T. Clinton, Hildie V. Kraus, Sarah Jacobus, Eloise Klein Healy, Jane Thurmond, Kleya Forté-Escamilla, Jacqueline De Angelis, Cody Yeager, Lisa Asagi, Lisa Jones, Martha Tormey, Elise D'Haene, Aleida Rodríguez, Carol Maso, Wendi Frisch, Holly Hughes, Robin Podolsky, Sarah Schulman, and Sandra Golvin.

  • Terry Wolverton, (editor), andRobert Drake, (editor), (1997), "e;Hers
    2
    "e;, Faber and Faber, 253 pages, ISBN 0-571-19909-7 (paperback).

    Synopsis:A book of short stories by Hannah Bleier, Elizabeth Crowell, Donna Allegra, Mary Gaitskill, Judy Grahn, Nancy Agabian, Ronna Magy, Pat Alderete, Carla Tomaso, Gerry Gomez Pearlberg, Wendi Frisch, Mary Bucci Bush, Ayofemi Folayan, Ellen Krout-Hasegawa, Nona Caspers, Martha K. Davis, Terry Wolverton, Elise D'Haene, Robin Podolsky, Alice Bloch, and Robin Strober.

  • Terry Wolverton, (editor), andRobert Drake, (editor), (1999), "e;Hers
    3
    "e;, Faber and Faber, 270 pages, ISBN 0-571-19962-3 (paperback).

    Synopsis:A book of short stories by Pat Schmatz, Amelia Maria De La Luz Montes, Ellen Hawley, Gwendolyn Bikis, Nona Caspers, Peggy Munson, Natasha Cho, Judith Barrington,Emma Donoghue, Donna Allegra, Pat Alderete, K. E. Munro, Barbara Wilson, Karleen Pendleton Jiménez, K. L. Robyn, Paula Langguth Ryan, Cherry Smyth, Carellin Brooks, Catherine Lord, and Jane Thurmond.

  • Terry Wolverton, (editor), andRobert Drake, (editor), (1995), "e;His"e;, Faber and Faber, 244 pages, ISBN 0-571-19866-X (paperback).

    Synopsis:A book of short stories by Mark A. Shaw, Bernard Cooper, Tim Miller, Gil Cuadros, Henri Tran, Robert Rodi, David Kelly, Rick Sandford, Matthew Stadler, Luis Alfaro, David Vernon, Peter Cashorali,Patrick Gale, Jason Friedman, David Watmough, Scott W. Peterson, Paul Attinello, and Frank DiPalermo.

  • Terry Wolverton, (editor), andRobert Drake, (editor), (1997), "e;His
    2
    "e;, Faber and Faber, 297 pages, ISBN 0-571-19908-9 (paperback).

    Synopsis:A book of short stories by Richard C. Zimler, Eitan Alexander, William J. Mann, Viet Dinh, Mark A. Shaw, David A. Newman, G. Winston James, Alex Jeffers, Gil Cuadros, Jay Ruben Dayrit, Joe Resjan, Drew Limsky, Robert Drake, Peter Cashorali, Kevin Bentley, David Watmough, David Vernon, Thomas Glave, and Rick Sandford.

  • Terry Wolverton, (editor), andRobert Drake, (editor), (1999), "e;His
    3
    "e;, Faber and Faber, 280 pages, ISBN 0-571-19963-1 (paperback).

    Synopsis:A book of short stories by Robert Ordoña, Rick Sandford, Philip Gambone, Reginald M. Harris, Jr., David A. Newman, Lawrence Reilly, Jim Tushinski, Scott Allen Bowles, Alexander Chee, Gary Bowen, Michael Skiff, Drew Limsky, Michael Anthony Gold, David Pratt, Reginald Shepherd, Henri Tran, Declan Meade, David Ebershoff, David Watmough, and Christopher Lord..

  • Terry Wolverton, (editor), andRobert Drake, (editor), (2000), "e;Circa 2000: lesbian fiction at the millennium"e;, Alyson Books, 331 pages, ISBN 1-55583-518-X (paperback).

    Synopsis:A book of short stories by Dorothy Allison, Cynthia Bond, Beth Brant, Rebecca Brown, Ana Castillo, Elise D'Haene,Emma Donoghue, Mary Gaitskill, Larissa Lai, Carole Maso, Amelia Maria de la Luz Montes, Shani Mootoo, Mai Ng, Achy Obejas, Gerry Gomez Pearlberg, Robin Podolsky, Patricia Powell, Sarah Schulman, Jane Thurmond, Terry Wolverton, and Shay Youngblood.

  • Terry Wolverton, (editor), andRobert Drake, (editor), (2000), "e;Circa 2000: gay fiction at the millennium"e;, Alyson Books, 331 pages, ISBN 1-55583-517 (paperback).

    Synopsis:A book of short stories by Eitan Alexander, M. Shayne Bell, Bernard Cooper, Mitch Cullin, Jameson Currier, Robert Drake, David Ebershoff, Thomas Glave, Scott Heim, David Leavitt, Russell Leong, Michael Lowenthal, William J. Mann, Jaime Manrique, David A. Newman, Andy Quan, Trevor Renado, Keith Ridgway, Frank Ronan, Colm Tóbín, and David Vernon.

  • Reed Woodhouse, (1998), "e;Unlimited Embrace: A canon of gay fiction, 1945-1995"e;, Amherst: Massachusetts University Press, 338 pages, ISBN 155849 132 8.

    • Synopsis:"e;In this text a gay literary critic evaluates a half-century of fictional works 'by, for and about' homosexual men and situates them in the context of an emerging American gay culture. It attempts to show how the best gay fiction of the period both reflected and anticipated social changes."e;

    • Review:by Michael Bronski on Amazon.co.uk. "e;While gay male literary criticism abounds, much of it is based in the academy and uses the critical perceptions of postmodernism and queer theory to elucidate both popular and literary work. In this context, Reed Woodhouse's Unlimited Embrace shines out like a beacon. Covering work from the 1950s (James Baldwin's Giovanni's Room and the short stories ofTennessee Williams) to contemporary novels such as Dennis Cooper's Frisk and Dale Peck's Martin and John, Woodhouse attempts to create a cohesive tapestry out of diverse, imaginative styles, attitudes, and intentions. Such a project is fraught with difficulty, and Woodhouse is careful not to misrepresent or misread specific works to make them fit his theories. The best part of Unlimited Embrace is the author's own exuberance, excitement, and enmity to individual works. Like the film critic Pauline Kael - known for her sharp intelligence and even sharper tongue - Woodhouse is unafraid to venture opinions when he knows they are idiosyncratic or even contrary to 'accepted' opinion. Whether praising Dennis Cooper's transgressive narratives over David Leavitt's assimilationist novels, or preferring Samuel Delany's perversely brilliant The Mad Man over Stephen McCauley's popular The Object of My Affection, Woodhouse makes his cases with flair and panache and will delight and infuriate even the most stolid lover of literature."e;

  • Gregory Woods, (1997), "e;A History of Gay Literature: The Male Tradition"e;, New Haven, Conn. and London: Yale University Press, 456 pages, ISBN 0300072015,SBU Library Main Bookstock 809.89206642

    • Pick of the pinkeratiby Adam Mars-Jones inThe Observer Review, 1st. February, 1998, page 18. "e;It is the extraordinary achievement of this book to go into its subject in simultaneous breadth and depth, and to virtually create the tradition it so boldly assumes, in the act of tracing it."e;

      "e;Woods gives space to Arabic poetry, suggesting persuasively thatAbu Nuwas(c760-c815) was challenging cultural orthodoxy in one poem by hinting that puberty might enhance a young man's attractiveness ('...as the hair grows longer/It's a sign his thighs are stronger') rather than spelling the end of it."e;

      "e;Gregory Woods tries to rise above biographical evidence or innuendo, and at one point decisively 'ins'Sir Francis Bacon, by examining in detail the passages in Bacon's essays on friendship and on beauty which some commentators have used as evidence for his homosexuality."e;

      "e;When he comes to the Holocaust, Gregory Woods is faced with a particular problem: Nazi persecution of homosexuals was so systematic that little testimony survives. Instead of a literature there is a bare history of extermination, extermination that hardly bothered to list its victims"e; "e;Premo Levi, listing the categories of prisoners at the beginning ofIf This Is A Man, omits those who wore thepink triangle, just as Solzhenitsyn, documenting another persecution, can't seem to find a space in the three-volumeGulag Archipelagoto mention prisoners whose crime was sexual orientation."e;

    • A load of cockby Neil Powell inGay Times, May, 1998, issue 236, page 79. "e;Gregory Woods's hugely ambitious, scrupulously documented and ultimately dismaying new book is clearly meant to provoke passionate dissent. His title embodies a familiar form of shorthand (for 'gay literature', narrowly defined, would begin around 1969 rather than the eighth century BC); it also, more problematically, makes incompatible claims of separateness and universality: on the one hand the book is to establish a specifically gay canon; on the other, it will embrace many of the world's literary texts. And it raises niggling, not to say exasperating, questions of how and why we read."e;

    • You can say that again . . .by Harvey Porlock inThe Sunday Times Arts & Books, 27th. December, 1998, page 10.

      DODGY UNCLE OF THE YEAR
      "e;As anyone knows who knows boys, reluctance can be undermined by a timely gift."e;
      Gregory Woods, A History of Gay Literature

    • Ian Young, (editor), (1981), "e;On The Line"e;, The Crossing Press, 208 pages, ISBN 0-89594-048-5/0-89594-049-3 (paperback).

      Short stories by Peter Robins,Edmund White, John F. Gilgun, David Watmough, Jerry Rosco, Felice Picano,Richard Hall, James Purdy, Tom Reamy, Daniel Luckenbill, William S. Burroughs, Graham Jackson, Peter Burton, John Mitzel, George Whitmore, and Daniel Curzon

    • Jaye Zimet, (1999), "e;Strange Sisters: The Art of Lesbian Pulp Fiction 1949-1969"e;, Viking Studio.

      Lingerie, lipstick and hot, hot sexby Mel Steel inThe Guardian: G2, 29th. November, 1999, pages 14-15. "e;In Strange Sisters: The Art of Lesbian Pulp Fiction 1949-1969 art director and compulsive collector of vintage lesbiana Jaye Zimet invites us into her private library and waxes lyrical on one of the few as yet unreclaimed literary lesbian fetishes: those sexy chicks on the covers of lesbian pulp novels. Zimet's collection is a lovingly collated retro romp: a sapphic smorgasbord of camp from an American era when, despite the combined impact of McCarthy and theKinsey Report, girl-on-girl action was still considered innocent enough to nestle between the gangsters, westerns and drug-crazed beatniks on the paperback racks."e;

      "e;These girls wouldn't know a sensible shoe if it stood up in their soup, but they know a lot about lingeries, lipstick and hot, hot sex. The brunettes are butch, and the blondes, it goes without saying, feminine. Like their B-movie sisters, in a parallel universe of lesbian vampires, biker-girl gangs and women's prison dramas, they say more about the lurid fantasies of their male creators (and assumed male readers) than they do about what lesbians of the time looked like. Unlike the movies, however, as Zimet points out in her breezy and informative introduction, a surprising number of these novels were actually written by women for women."e;

      "e;As Ann Bannon, probably the best-known of the pulp writers, recalls: 'If there was a solitary woman on the cover, provocatively dressed, and the title conveyed her rejection by society or self-loathing, it was a lesbian book. If there were two women on the cover, and they were touching each other, it was a lesbian book. Even if they were just looking at each other, even if they were merely on the same cover together, there was reason to hope that you had found a lesbian book. And if a lone male, looking embarrassed, hostile, or sexually deprived, appeared with two women, you had probably struck gold'."e;

      "e;Today, only a handful of these novels - mostly 80s reissues by lesbian publisher Naiad - survive in print, although many are cherished in special or private collections like Zimet's. Literary merits aside, it seems a shame. Strange Sisters, apart from being a great collection, is a great appetite-whetter."e;

    • Bonnie Zimmerman
  • , (1992), "e;The Safe Sea of Women: Lesbian Fiction 1968-1989"e;, Only Women Press, 304 pages, ISBN 0906500427 (paperback)


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