Three Women by March Hastings
March Hastings | Three Women | One of the best novels to come out of the golden age of lesbian pulps, this 1958 classic returns to delight a new generation of readers. Phil Carlson’
March Hastings | Three Women | One of the best novels to come out of the golden age of lesbian pulps, this 1958 classic returns to delight a new generation of readers. Phil Carlson’
Fletcher Flora | Most Likely to Love | Rouge Male In A Passion-Tormented Household
From the back:
Colleen was the mistress of the house, beautiful, rich and romantic, with
Charles Mergendahl | The Girl Cage | Women–Waiting For Men
Martha hated “The Girl Cage”–the house she lived in with four other wives whose husbands were fighting in Korea. She
George Viereck | Nude in the Mirror | During a luxury cruise around the Mediterranean, professor Adam Greenleaf ‘falls in love with the devastating and exquisite Stella but before he can c
Gale Wilhelm | We Too are Drifting | This is the frank and unashamed story of the love of three women. First and foremost there is Jan, the artist, who put some of the lean symmetry of he
Maureen Duffy | The Microcosm | This novel, which opens and closes at a London club for the gay girls, is an expository, explicit, communal, interior view; while it occasionally refe
Sylvia Stevenson | Surplus | Often the road to heaven on earth which some call happiness, and some mirage is a tangled pathway, broadening slowly as it winds along, till as la
Guy Des Cars | The Damned One | ‘What made her act like a man?’
A haunting story of a love cursed by society and of lovers tortured by the guilt of their beautiful nights to
J.C. Priest | Private School | Cover blurb: ‘The girls taught each other about love!’
‘Every parent should read this shocking novel of adolescent girls who first tolerated
Mercedes De Acosta | Streets And Shadows | Contents include:
Song of 5th Avenue;
Litany of hands;
For rent;
New York;
Rest;
Newspapers;
Restaurant;
Bird