![]() Maybe you’d like a reimagining of a classic tale. Testimony by Paula Martinac entails a young professor attempting to balance love, work, and her personal safety while living in rural Virginia in 1960. Malinda Lo’s Last Night at the Telegraph Club takes you back to America in 1954 to tell of a romance threatened by the Red Scare. ![]() If you’re after more historical fiction, jump into Anna North’s western Outlawed to enter a reimagined frontier filled with treacherous plans and feminist stakes. In Torrey Peters’ sharp domestic novel Detransition, Baby, a group of urban denizens navigate the often angst-inducing contemporary ideas surrounding familial relationships and gender roles. Robert Jones Jr.’s lyrical debut novel The Prophetsfollows the fraught romantic union between two enslaved young men on an antebellum plantation. ![]() This month we are happy to report the release of two dynamic books by first-time novelists. ![]() While we may not necessarily know what 2021 holds in store for us, we do know that entering a new month means the promise of new LGBTQ literature. After a long three hundred sixty-six days, 2020 has ended its reign. ![]()
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