Lot Six is an Exploration of What it Means to Create Giancarlo Latta Reviews November 16, 2020 3 min read“In some way, exile was my native state,” David Adjmi writes early in Lot Six, explaining somewhat playfully that “Adjmi”...
The Watcher Balances a Noir Sensibility With a Sensitive Portrait of a Young Gay Man John Copenhaver Reviews November 4, 2020 2 min readIt’s not unusual for LGBTQ+ people to play caretaker or fixer roles in their families—and of course, the irony is...
Memorial Raises Thought-Provoking Questions about Race, Class, and Family Charles Green Reviews November 2, 2020 4 min readMemorial, Bryan Washington’s debut novel, is a powerfully subtle book about family and relationships. Benson, known as Ben, and Mike...
Born to Be Public is a Thoughtful Comedic Memoir Alexander Carrigan Reviews September 23, 2020 2 min readAs the new decade opens and millennials begin to enter their 30s, it is interesting to see how this generation,...
Film Critic Robin Wood Found the Horror Lurking in a Judy Garland Classic Hanna Schoenbaum Film August 18, 2020 5 min readSome people enjoy the thrill of a roller coaster teetering towards the inevitable drop. The sensation creeps in your gut...
Broken People Follows a Character in Search of Personal Transformation Rajat Singh Reviews June 29, 2020 5 min readBroken People follows a lonesome, queer character named Sam in his search for a total transformation of himself. Sam Lansky’s...
The Prettiest Star Offers a Look at the Beginning of the AIDS Epidemic Alexander Carrigan Reviews June 11, 2020 2 min readAs we come upon the 40th anniversary of the AIDS epidemic, and begin to see more media about the AIDS...
For Gay Parents, the Familial and the Political are Inextricably Linked Ken Harvey Nonfiction May 28, 2020 3 min readThere’s a brief section in Richie Jackson’s Gay Like Me: A Father Writes to His Son (Harper) that moved me...