"[...A] quick-witted and moving novel that acutely explores the ways in which families mourn, the toll death takes on relationships and the resilience that allows people to survive [...]" Read More
Many of the characters in The Days of Anna Madrigal may be from the past, but they fully inhabit a contemporary world. Maupin’s Tales of the City novels are nothing if not a reflection of the times in which they were written, and Anna Madrigal is no exception. Read More
"Life will proceed without you, and there is 'no ending,' per se, to anything. The only way to wrap-up a story that involves a dozen or more people would be to drop a bomb on them." Read More
Lamb often leaves his characters on a limb right before changing perspectives, and so we want to read further because of the most basic--and essential--reasons: we need to know what happens next. Read More
"Definitely the set of gay men who are now under 30 are distinctly different from those of us who are older. Many of the young people I've met who were born in the 90s don't, for instance, give a damn about being gay. For some of them, it's really almost a non-issue, and they don't care."
Writer Choire Sicha spoke with Lambda Literary about his new book, A Very Recent History, the Michael Bloomberg years, and capturing contemporary gay life in New York City. Read More


