Rosenberg’s Jane Crow makes not only an important contribution to the fields of Black, feminist, and trans history, but also offers us the timely reminder that, as Murray herself once wrote, “one person and a typewriter make a movement.” Read More
So while After the Wrath of God is a book about HIV/AIDS, it is also very much a cultural history of Christianity in the US through the lens of the beginning of the AIDS crisis Read More
"[...]with Facebook, Pinterest, with other online modes, blogging....We are catching things [in the news and on the web] and passing them along. What I'm showing is how the past comments on, and is related to, what we're doing now."
Scholar and writer Ellen Gruber Garvey talks with Lambda Literary about her new book, Writing With Scissors: American Scrapbooks from the Civil War to the Harlem Renaissance, being a lesbian academic, and bringing hidden histories to light. Read More
A seemingly inexhaustible mix of talent, genius, exuberance, and mischievousness, this is the Bernstein that leaps off the page in Dinner with Lenny (Oxford University Press). Read More