Letters have a long, queer history. They are often the site of private discoveries and vulnerable expression, quiet confrontations with self and other, fanciful musings and dreamings—possibilities. We bring things to letters we have been privately exploring in the murkiness of half-thought so that we may simultaneously discover and divulge what's inside us. Letters are objects of interiority and points of tender connection, reaching across the spaces between us. Read More
Can you ever really know someone else? The cliche is you can’t know someone until you’ve walked in their shoes. Perhaps that’s true. But does that mean you don’t know your partner? Will you ever? And if one wanted to, what would it take to get there? Read More
The Review’s fancy new website has only been up for 9 months, but we still wanted to round up our...
In a compelling exploration of racial capitalism, Monica Huerta illuminates the intricate relationship between photography, property, and the body commodity through a critical analysis of copyright law. By intertwining queer performance theory with legal discourse, Huerta skillfully reveals the profound implications of juridical power on photographic mediums, offering readers a rich and thought-provoking perspective on the intersection of art, law, and societal structures. Read More
Vinnie Heaven takes on everything from queer homelessness to magical queer deer in their third play Faun. Read More
It’s that special time of the year when the trees are losing their leaves, there’s a chill in the air,...
As the genocide in Gaza continues, we want to remind our community that we are here as support and a resource. In the spirit of that mission, we present a list of queer Palestinian/Anti-Zionist Jewish writers/activists/scholars. Buy, read, support! Looking for more information on queerness and Palestine? Check out our resources at the bottom of the page! Read More
In her new memoir Love and Money, Sex and Death, theorist and professor McKenzie Wark faces these questions. Told as a sequence of letters to everyone from her mom to ex-lovers to herself, she takes readers into her past and the experiences and people who made her what she is today. The book travels from her youth in Newcastle through time spent in China and as a professor in Sydney before ultimately settling in New York City. Read More
In Robyn Gigl’s third novel in the Erin McCabe legal thriller series, we find Erin surrounded by a hellscape of villainous men. She can hardly turn around without one or more of them trying to frame her for crimes she didn’t commit, ruin her reputation as an honorable and highly skilled lawyer, or, quite often, kill her. Read More


