Susan Stinson’s substantial and delicious historical novel, Martha Moody, has been reissued by Small Beer Press, and it is certainly...
Martha Moody by Susan Stinson was first published in 1995 by Joan Drury at Spinsters Ink. In December 2020, Small...
"[...] what happens to a couple when one person changes so much he or she becomes almost unrecognizable to the other?"
Author Judith Frank talks to Lambda Literary about her new novel, All I Love and Know, exploring relationship dynamics through her characters, and her literary inspirations. Read More
Griffith moves easily between genres, from science fiction to noir thriller and back, always with a taut language sense and an elegant, fast-moving story. In Hild, she has written a historical novel of thrilling depth. Read More
"I am an out lesbian writing about Jonathan Edwards, who many consider the most important Christian theologian this country has ever produced, an icon for many, including many who don’t accept queer people – to go into that territory was scary."
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“The point, I think, isn’t the quality of the advice, which can never be taken in by its alleged recipient, but how...
We must use what we have to invent what we desire. Adrienne Rich, What is Found There: Notebooks on Poetry...
"... I think homosexuality and fatness are two items that have definitely been infused with intense feelings of disgust, moral feelings of disgust. Religion plays a part in that."
Lynne Gerber is the author of the insightful, surprising new book, Seeking the Straight and Narrow: Weight Loss and Sexual Reorientation in Evangelical America (University of Chicago Press). The book is an astute examination of evangelical programs that have "attempted to contain the excesses associated with fatness and homosexuality. "
Lambda took some time to talk with Gerber about the "sin" of being fat and/or gay, how she conducted the research for her latest book, and the morality of health. Read More
Lambda Literary queried a cadre of authors (Edmund White, Susan Stinson, Jewelle Gomez, Dennis Cooper, Kelli Dunham, and many more) to answer the question: what was your favorite LGBTQ book of 2011? Read More