Category: Fiction

Posted in Black Interest Fiction

Strange Fruit by Lillian Smith

Lillian Smith | Strange Fruit | One of the very earliest paperback Lesbian novels published in America.

Posted in Fiction

City Boots by Elizabeth Ward

Elizabeth Ward | City Boots | ‘City Boots is a bright first novel…fast-paced and clever. Ward is a new voice that deserves to be heard.’–Rosie O’Donnell, author, Find Me ‘City B

Posted in Fiction

The Second Coming of Curly Red by Jody Seay

Jody Seay | The Second Coming of Curly Red | A heartwarming, fesisty story about the transformative power of love… ‘The Liar’s Club’ meets ‘Fried Green Tomatoes’ in ‘The Second Coming of Curly

Posted in Fiction

The Education of Harriet Hatfield by May Sarton

May Sarton | The Education of Harriet Hatfield | From Publishers Weekly

Sarton’s 19th novel echoes many earlier themes: the comfort of friendship; relationships between women; the precarious bala

Posted in Award Winner Checklist by Marion Zimmer Bradley Fiction Grier Rated Pulp

The Well of Loneliness by Radclyffe Hall

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

Posted in Fiction

The Naked Eye by Catherine Ennis

Catherine Ennis | The Naked Eye | Ever since the woman of her dreams turned into a nightmare, prominent wildlife photographer Katherine Duncan vows to trust only the things she can see

Posted in Fiction

The Outcast by Anna Elisabet Weirauch

Anna Elisabet Weirauch | The Outcast | The Outcast” brings forward to its conclusion the story of Myra Rudloff, begun in “The Scorpion.” To those who read the previous work, the characters

Posted in Fiction Short Story Collection (Single Author)

Depending on the Light by Thea Hillman

Thea Hillman | Depending on the Light | Smart lessons in lust from a young lesbian upstart.

Depending on the Light contains 64 short works of smart sophisticated sudden fiction that erup

Posted in Fiction

Sidelines by Gina Cordaro

Gina Cordaro | Sidelines | Ever want to go back to that one moment in time where you think everything in your life changed and nothing seemed the way it was supposed to be? Woul

Posted in Fiction

That’s How It Was by Maureen Duffy

Maureen Duffy | That’s How It Was | I was just a girl and life offered only things I despised: houses, children, security, housework. I had to pass. I had to. I had to be different.’