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GLBT Literature & Fiction
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Fiction - Gay
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They Change the Subject
by Douglas Martin
Treacherously comic and poignant, the autobiographical stories in
They Change the Subject follow a young man’s quest for identity
through love and desire. Sustained by a single voice, the stories
simultaneously offer a fractured novel and stand, powerfully, on
their own. At the center of each tale is the heightened, visceral
possibility of unexpected emotional encounters—from an escort’s
dates in Manhattan hotels to a photo shoot that doubles as
seduction. Always pushing toward a bigger shiver of passion,
Martin’s young-man-on-the-make learns how to adapt his persona to
suit his lovers’ needs and tries to embrace his own experience—and
his self—by becoming the purest object of desire. |
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Three Junes
by Juila Glass
This strong and memorable debut novel draws the reader deeply into
the lives of several central characters during three separate Junes
spanning ten years. At the story's onset, Scotsman Paul McLeod, the
father of three grown sons, is newly widowed and on a group tour of
the Greek islands as he reminisces about how he met and married his
deceased wife and created their family. Next, in the book's longest
section, we see the world through the eyes of Paul's eldest son,
Fenno, a gay man transplanted to New York City and owner of a small
bookstore, who learns lessons about love and loss that allow him to
grow in unexpected ways. And finally there is Fern, an artist and
book designer whom Paul met on his trip to Greece several years
earlier. She is now a young widow, pregnant and also living in New
York City, who must make sense of her own past and present to be
able to move forward in her life. In this novel, expectations and
revelations collide in startling ways
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Sellevision
by Augusten Burroughs
Light and funny, with a bitter aftertaste, the action of Sellevision
takes place behind the scenes (and on the set) of a successful
television shopping network, where a feminine role model, Peggy Jean
Smythe, the married, Christian mother of three, begins receiving
suspicious e-mail from a viewer who insists that Peggy's hairy
earlobe is obscuring her presentation of jewelry during the
broadcast. When Peggy fails to respond to the e-mail, but silently
waxes her lobe, the cruel notes escalate, until Peggy believes
herself to be suffering from a hormonal crisis that has given her a
mustache, a gruff voice, and the manner of a lumberjack. Meanwhile,
one of her cohosts, Max Andrews, has been fired for accidentally
exposing himself during a children's special, and learns just how
undesirable a commodity a penis-baring ex-Sellevision host can be on
the job market |
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The Sluts
by Dennis Cooper
Set largely on the pages of a website where gay male escorts are
reviewed by their clients, and told through the postings, emails,
and conversations of several dozen unreliable narrators, The Sluts
chronicles the evolution of one young escort's date with a satisfied
client into a metafiction of pornography, lies, half-truths, and
myth. Explicit, shocking, comical, and displaying the author's
signature flair for blending structural complexity with direct,
stylish, accessible language, The Sluts is Cooper's most
transgressive novel since Frisk, and one of his most innovative
works of fiction to date. |
Fresh Men 2
by Don Weise
Fresh Men 2 collects the best new writing by emerging gay authors
from around the nation. With equal parts sensitivity and
irreverence, the anthology speaks to the broad range of gay
experiences. From stories of coming out, coming of age,
self-representation and family to sex and love in the time of AIDS,
from living in the closet to loving in a post-gay world, this book
highlights the complexities of gay life. Fresh Men 2 is a
groundbreaking collection that also embodies a wide spectrum of
literary tastes, from works rich in experimental, transgressive
elements to more conventional, traditionally crafted stories.
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A House Is Not a Home
by James Earl Hardy |
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