Books tagged: queer literature

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Found: 5 results

Letters from the Sea    by Magen Toole
Price: $0.99 USD. 4910 words. Published on September 25, 2010. .

Letters from the Sea is a chapbook anthology featuring five short pieces set in the universe of the queer lit novel, The Diving Bell. This chapbook is a glimpse into Noam Patel's tiny world of typewriters and daydreams, five moments in time that follow the events of the novel. From leaving England to meeting Elliot, from the betrayals to the affair, and more. Keep your head above water, Noam.
Notes of a Deaf Gay Writer: 20 Years Later    by Raymond Luczak
Price: $0.99 USD. 10380 words. Published on November 8, 2010. .

Raymond Luczak revisits the essay that brought him national attention for the first time. Originally published as a cover story in CHRISTOPHER STREET magazine in December 1990, rereading the essay prompted him to compare his feelings against what he'd felt back then. His reactions may surprise you.
Zach's Secret    by Matthew W. Grant
Price: $3.99 USD. 37170 words. Published on February 13, 2011. .

Senior Zach Denham, editor of a small town high school newspaper, struggles to act like a "normal" guy by dating Meghan, his religious friend. Key, the newly arrived attractive jock, forces Zach to confront the truth about his sexual identity. Unsure of himself, Zach is reluctant to help start a support group for gay students. Friends will become enemies as the explosive issue divides the school.
Refuse    by Elliott  DeLine
You set the price! 80460 words. Published on April 8, 2011. .

‘Funny, cynical, tough, vulnerable, honest, deluded, sagacious, self-loving and self-loathing, Refuse is irresistible.’-Mark Simpson, author of Saint Morrissey.
Foodsluts at Doll & Penny's Cafe    by Tony Correia
Price: $4.99 USD. 55490 words. Published on February 26, 2012. .

In 1988, twenty year-old Tony Correia flies to Vancouver with a plane ticket he found in a classified ad. What begins as adolescent revenge soon becomes a lesson in Vancouver’s counterculture when Tony gets a job at Doll & Penny’s Café. With a cast of characters that include drag queens, prostitutes and the religious right, Foodsluts reminds us it’s not prostitution if you would do it for free.