For The May Queen by Kate Evans
Kate Evans | For The May Queen | It’s 1981 and 17-year-old Norma Rogers’ parents drop her off at the college dorms. Soon, Norma finds herself drunk and nearly naked with three strange
Kate Evans | For The May Queen | It’s 1981 and 17-year-old Norma Rogers’ parents drop her off at the college dorms. Soon, Norma finds herself drunk and nearly naked with three strange
Pat Arrowsmith | I Should Have Been A Hornby Train | A memoir of childhood and adolescence from one of Britain’s best known lesbian figures. Cover art ‘The Carol Singers’ by Pat Arrowsmith [ watercolour
Nett Hart; Lee Lanning | Awakening | We are unable to provide a description at this time.
Deborah Wiese | Hodag Winter | When first grade teacher Colleen O’Hare’s principal fires her because she is a lesbian, she , her lover Sandra, and supportive friends plan their cour
Edwina Mark | The Odd Ones | Beautiful young Jean Grant had always known she wasn’t like the other girls in her home town. She had never been able to understand their interest in
Ann Allen Shockley | The Black and White of It | Short stories about interfacial lesbian relationships.
Sylvia Sharon | Obey Me, My Love | Her strange assignment took her from disclotheques to dens of iniquity that thrived on new kinds of sin and vice.
Cover copy reads: ‘Suzanne
Harold Acton | Nancy Mitford | The only biography in print of Nancy Mitford, written by her friend Harold Acton shortly after her death. Defining an exceptionally witty era whose va
Bill Marshall | Hollywood Madness | We are unable to provide a description at this time.
Luke Savarese | Lust’s Bedmate | ‘The men in her life were all lacking . . . so she swung to women’