"A parking ticket in the morning always feels portentous. Is this going to be a 'bad day?' or, since it’s Monday, a bad week? As if there were such a thing. I eat good food, I hang out with friends. But a parking ticket is the flash of a hex." Read More
"[...] Rabih Alameddine’s An Unnecessary Woman sets forth a different definition of a 'reader’s novel': this is a novel for voracious readers of literary fiction and fiction in translation." Read More
An assortment of writers, including Michelle Tea, Malinda Lo, Darnell Moore, and Miguel Morales, answer a few questions about the nature of queer writing. Read More
Signing your very first book is a landmark moment for all writers. It’s like your first crack at kissing or screwing or loving. Possibly, it’s a moment you recall in Technicolor. Or, maybe, it’s a sliver of time coated with murk and fuzz. Read More
As world leaders converge on South Africa this week to pay tribute to Nelson Mandela, the rest of us are...
"The Uncanny X-Men offered me a path forward before I even knew I needed one; each of them had to come to terms with the fact that their supposed curse was a blessing." Read More
“…good writing—good fiction—begins with an idea. And this idea has to have a soul, a pulse, a heartbeat; it has...
"If you’re writing a big sprawling book about America, and racism doesn’t come up at all, well, I would wonder about that."
Author Chavisa Woods was kind enough to talk to Lambda Literary Review about her new book, The Albino Album, her responsibilities as a writer, and what’s next in her literary career. Read More
"...I woke up with the same thought I always wake up with: This is the week I’ll get more writing done."
“The Banal and the Profane” is a monthly Lambda Literary column in which we lift the veil on both the writerly life and the publishing industry.
This month’s “Banal and Profane” column comes to us from book publicist and author Martin Wilson. Read More