Anna Cove; Cara Malone | Thick As Thieves | Keep your lover close and your enemy closerÂ… especially if they’re the same person.Madison Blackstone is a lone wolf thief on a mission to win back th
Lorraine Hansberry | To Be Young, Gifted And Black | A long-running success of the 1968/69 Off-Broadway season. Fast paced, powerful, touching and hilarious, this kaleidoscope of constantly shifting scen
Serena Owusua Dankwa | Knowing Women | Knowing Women is an ethnography on friendship, same-sex desire, and intimacy among urban, working-class women in southern Ghana who engage in erotic r
Astrid Ohletz; Alex K. Thorne | After Happily Ever After | What if the story didn’t have to end? Nine best-selling authors have come together to imagine what happened after the happily-ever-after in some of Y
Lorraine Hansberry | To Be Young, Gifted And Black | In her first play, the now-classic A Raisin in the Sun, Hansberry introduced the lives of ordinary African Americans into our national theatrical repe
Weiman-Kelman Zohar | Queer Expectations | Jewish women have had a fraught relationship with history, struggling for inclusion while resisting their limited role as (re)producers of the future.
S.N. Nyeck | Routledge Handbook of Queer African Studies | This handbook offers diverse perspectives on queer Africa, incorporating scholarly contributions on themes that reflect and inflect the trajectories o
Spronk, Rachel; Thomas Hendriks | Readings in Sexualities From Africa | Images and stories about African sexuality abound in today’s globalized media. Frequently old stereotypes and popular opinion inform these stories, an
Astrid Ohletz; Lee Winter | Language of Love | From erotic fun and music-filled streets in Jamaica to delicious curries and carols in India, and toasty fireplaces in Wales, Ylva’s festive anthology
Astrid Ohletz; Fletcher DeLancey; Lois Cloarec Hart; Erzabet Bishop; J.L. Merrow; Sandra Barret; T.M. Croke; Alisha Kelley | Spread the Love | Learning to Ride’ by Fletcher DeLancey They say that riding a bike is as easy as falling in love: you never really forget how. Or is it the other way