Martha Baer | As Francesca | Elaine, ambitious and hardworking, plays by the rules at the office so well that she’s on the brink of an impressive promotion. But in the cyberspace
Lydia Kwa | This Place Called Absence | In ‘This Place Called Absence,’ newcomer Lydia Kwa spins a breathtaking tale that slips back and forth, as smoothly as silk, between the past and pres
Radclyffe Hall | The Well of Loneliness | First published in 1928, this timeless portrayal of lesbian love is now a classic. The thinly disguised story of Hall’s own life, it was banned outrig
Jax Peters Lowell | Mothers | It would be hard to imagine parents more perfect than Claire and Theo. In the mid-1960’s, in a rambling apartment overlooking Central Park West, they
Finola Moorhead | Remember The Tarantella | A work of feminist, lesbian fiction, this experimental novel explores the lives of 26 women–each named for a letter of the alphabet–during the 1980s
Helen Walsh | Brass | Not since Irvine Welsh’s Trainspotting has an ambitious first novel created such a stir among readers of important new voices in fiction. Since its re
Kristen Garrett | Lady Lobo | Casey Ellison, dedicated hoops fanatic, dreams of playing major college basketball. While competing in a high-school tournament, her explosive speed a
Maria Thomas | The Rural Lesbian | Shelby was a small town girl with desires that could not be met by the small town that surrounded her. She wanted so much to live in a world that woul