On Tuesday, June 18 the FBI added Walter Lee Williams, 64, to its Ten Most Wanted List. Williams was being...
There’s been a great deal of snarkiness about this literary prize. “Why only women?” “Isn’t this sexism in reverse?” Read More
The impact of obituaries for those relegated to the margins of mainstream society cannot be overstated... Read More
While many of Mead’s contemporaries from the Warhol days either died young or moved on to different things, Mead continued to live his eccentric and artistic life in lower Manhattan, painting, and writing poetry... Read More
Award-winning novelist and screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala died April 3 in New York from complications of pulmonary disease. She was...
A new Kate Scarpetta novel is always highly anticipated by devotees of lesbian detective fiction. Patricia Cornwell has been much...
https://lambdaliteraryreview.org//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Bits-and-pieces.jpg Read More
The Ladder, the first lesbian magazine to be nationally distributed in the U.S., began publishing in 1956 and continued to...
Julia Penelope was from another era, an era that is truly bygone. Unlike those other theorists, her work was so controversial, so revolutionary, so for lesbians only that what she said often created outrage, even among other lesbians and feminists. Read More
Some of our finest writers are authors of crime fiction. Russell Banks, James Ellroy, Patricia Highsmith, P.D. James and of course, Val McDermid. These writers don’t just tell a detective tale, they peel back the layers of human experience to reveal all the gory bits we try never to see up close. Read More


