I think it was Kurt Vonnegut who said that writing a novel was like making popcorn: the characters were the...
One of the heroes responsible for changing the medical establishment’s understanding that gay people can be sane, Silverstein helped sway the American Psychiatric Association to remove homosexuality from its list of mental illnesses in 1973. What’s most disturbing (or exonerating) about For the Ferryman is that even a shrink of Silverstein’s stature can be sucked into a tumultuous psycho-dependent relationship. Read More
Set in the declining town of Leominster, Massachusetts in the 1980s, Michael Graves’ blistering debut collection Dirty One (Chelsea Station...
“Writing these pieces was almost like putting together an album. I wanted fifty-dollar words and I wanted to create literary...
It’s easy to forget that there once was a time when there was no gay literature, and when the act...
The first chapter of Jameson Currier’s new novel, The Third Buddha (Chelsea Station Editions), begins with a Chelsea dinner party...
This week, two poems from Craig Moreau’s Chelsea Boy–out this week on Chelsea Station Editions....
Towards the end of Walter Holland’s book Circuit (Chelsea Station Editions) a few sonnets suddenly arrange what had been a...
& Books Not Found Anywhere Else Compiling this list every month is bar none my most challenging duty. Gathering a...
AWP 2011 was abuzz with old friends and new friends alike. In between the lectures, panels, readings, and receptions we...


