Donna Minkowitz contributes to the long-standing Jewish-American literary tradition of agonizing self-excavation with her unadulterated new memoir. Read More
In the past year, Lethe Press has “queered” Sherlock Holmes (A Study In Lavender, Joseph DeMarco, editor) and Edgar Allan...
In his debut novel, The Tale of Raw Head & Bloody Bones, Jack Wolf leads the reader through an eighteenth-century Britain heaving under the strain of unprecedented change. Read More
The emotional honesty that inspires most of Morrissey's music is also what makes this book so riveting. Read More
Detective Daryl Chandler has a gift even she finds hard to explain. She has the uncanny ability to find missing...
There’s a new luxury condo building coming to Tribeca—a glass 60 foot skyscraper, with a Jenga-like design that the architect’s...
Roscoe knows his subject’s work and life thoroughly; he knows that the difference between Wescott’s first-person stories and first-person essays can be paper thin. He very smartly arranged the autobiographical material in A Visit to Priapus chronologically to trace for the newcomer the arc of Wecott’s life, and in the process he also happily satisfies the Wescott lover’s taste for more quality work.
Read More
There are primary and secondary definitions of sisterhood: one relating to blood sisters, and one relating to any community of women. In her second collection of poems, Julie R. Enszer holds both definitions close with evocative results. Read More
A confession: I like to read the endings first. Not for novels or narrative memoirs, but always for a collection...
Trask’s book makes an important contribution toward understanding how the conceptualizations of homosexuality of the New Left, the countercultural radicals, and the liberal establishment in the academy influenced how the Gay Liberation Movement emerged in the 60s. Read More


