If you’re asking yourself who this Charles Jackson is, or why you’d want to read anything he wrote, you’re probably not alone. Read More
This spring the books that most caught my attention were a trio by old friends — Neil S. Plakcy, Jack...
Mystery writer Amanda Kyle Williams first made her mark on the publishing world in the early 90s with the Madison McGuire novels from Naiad Press. Madison was Williams’ answer to The Avengers’ Emma Peel – a redheaded, kick-ass, deep cover operative, who happened to be a lesbian. Twenty years later, Williams is now with Random House and her new kick-ass heroine is Keye Street, a former FBI analyst tracking serial killers across the south, who happens to be straight.
Williams took some time to talk with Lambda about her inspirations, her writing process, and creating well-rounded characters. Read More
"I started writing because all odds were against me and I wanted to share my own unique experiences so that others like me would know they are not alone in this world."
“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. In each installment, we ask a different LGBT writer, or LGBT person of interest in the book industry, to guide us through a week in their lives.
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Books like this aren’t supposed to exist anymore. Didn’t I just read an article on the front page of the...
The VIPs (Broadway Books/Random House), Scott Poulson-Bryant’s first novel, is no let-down. The author must have spent many a night...
Opera, HIV, and The Velvet Underground Blogger and novelist Matthew Gallaway sat down at his computer to answer a few...
The highly influential and much imitated David Levithan and Rachel Cohn have changed the young adult genre in new, exciting...
September signals the start of the official fall book season, one of the busiest times of the year for publishers...