Beyond the Rainbow by Jenn T. Grace
Jenn T. Grace | Beyond the Rainbow | For more than a decade Jenn T. Grace, the Professional Lesbian, has helped organizations connect with the lucrative LGBTQ market. In this, her fourth
Jenn T. Grace | Beyond the Rainbow | For more than a decade Jenn T. Grace, the Professional Lesbian, has helped organizations connect with the lucrative LGBTQ market. In this, her fourth
John Browne | The Glass Closet: Why Coming Out Is Good Business | Part memoir and part social criticism, The Glass Closet addresses the issue of homophobia that still pervades corporations around the world and unders
Carlos A. Ball | The Queering of Corporate America | ‘The book explores the role that LGBT rights activism directed at corporations and corporate activism on behalf of sexual orientation and gender ident
Alix E. Harrow | The Once And Future Witches | In the late 1800s, three sisters use witchcraft to change the course of history in Alix E. Harrow’s powerful novel of magic and the suffragette moveme
Ivy Compton-Burnett | More Women Than Men | More Women Than Men takes place in a girls’ school, although the students are rather secondary (none of the girls say anything in the novel). It is th
Jane Gilmour | Colette’s France | French author Colette has a special place in French literary history, her life and writing novels Cheri, Gigli and the Claudine series spanned the ren
Colette | The Pure And the Impure | Colette herself considered The Pure and the Impure her best book, ‘the nearest I shall ever come to writing an autobiography.’ This guided tour of the
Judith Thurman | Secrets of the Flesh | Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette was this century’s first modern woman. She arrived in Paris around 1900 as the provincial child bride of a notorious rake an
T.B. Markinson | Reservations of the Heart | Can two wounded souls find solace together? 41-year-old doctor Stella Gilbert used to have it all. Her career was on fire, and she had a picture-perf
H. P. Munro | Mutual Benefits | Coming out to your loved ones is stressful, so when Hannah Melville’s family not only accept but celebrate her accidental announcement, it should be a