Category: Pulp

Posted in Pulp

Wait for Tomorrow by Robert Wilder

Robert Wilder | Wait for Tomorrow | HERE’S THE FIRST FEW SENTENCES — — Winter’s first snow spun in from the distant ocean, whirling through the Narrows and across the river to fall u

Posted in Biographical Fiction Fiction Pulp

Claudine and Annie by Colette

Colette | Claudine and Annie | In this final novel in Colette’s famous series it is Claudine’s friend Annie who tells the story in the form of a private diary.

Claudine is

Posted in Pulp

The Grapevine by Jess Stearn

Jess Stearn | The Grapevine | About the Author: ‘He visited the secret haunts of lesbians, in bars, beaches, and resort areas; observed private get-togethers of attractive young w

Posted in Pulp

Three Kinds of Love by Jack Lynn

Jack Lynn | Three Kinds of Love | A Tokey Wedge private eye and crime and sleaze novel in which he tries to find out which of three dames is a passionate lesbian

Posted in Checklist by Marion Zimmer Bradley Grier Rated Pulp

The Hearth and the Strangeness by N. Martin Kramer

N. Martin Kramer | The Hearth and the Strangeness | An excellent novel of the fear of inherited insanity in a family. The youngest child, Aliciane, becomes a lesbian; this is one of the few realistic an

Posted in Pulp

The Ewings by John O’Hara

John O’Hara | The Ewings | Edna was the prettiest girl in town. When she met the son of a wealthy lawyer, she knew he was what she wanted, and what she had to do to get him.

Posted in Grier Rated Pulp

The Girls in 3-B by Valerie Taylor

Valerie Taylor | The Girls in 3-B |

Annice, Pat, and Barby are best friends from Iowa, freshly arrived in booming 1950s Chicago to explore different paths toward independence, self–e

Posted in Pulp

The Gay Ones by Eve Linkletter

Eve Linkletter | The Gay Ones | Were they pranks of nature? Or were they the third sex–the gay ones?

San Francisco Library says gay men, drag queens does not mention lesbia

Posted in Pulp

Our Furtive Love by Donna Richards

Donna Richards | Our Furtive Love | ‘These three . . . Pat, seeking new conquests, Jill, hiding a broken heart, and Sherry, out for anything . . . wove strange patterns’

Posted in Pulp

Bedroom Windows by Arthur Adlon

Arthur Adlon | Bedroom Windows | A community incensed by an anonymous peeper – who made use of what he saw!