Topics :: fiction

Mary Ann In Autumn

By Kilian Melloy | Wednesday Nov 3, 2010
Novelist Armistead Maupin returns to his "Tales of the City" novels with Mary Ann in Autumn, the eighth book in the series that gay and straight fans worldwide have come to love.

Yield

By Christopher Verleger | Saturday Sep 11, 2010
Lee Houck’s impressive debut novel, Yield, is a young New York City hustler’s story of friendship, love and self-discovery.

Krakow Melt

By Kilian Melloy | Tuesday Sep 7, 2010
Daniel Allen Cox allows his second novel, Krakow Melt, to spill over the edges and create a meta-literary experience that illuminates--and singes.

Days of ’Empire’: Steven Saylor’s ’Big Gay Book’ Revisits Imperial Rome

By Kilian Melloy | Wednesday Aug 4, 2010
Two years ago, Steven Saylor garnered rave reviews for Roma, his novel of Ancient Rome. In a few weeks’ time, the sequel to Saylor’s multi-generational saga will hit the shelves: Empire is scheduled for an August 31 release.

Diana Comet And Other Improbable Stories

By M. M. Adjarian | Tuesday Jun 1, 2010
A feast of whimsy and imagination, Diana Comet brings together 15 short fiction pieces by that unknown gem of the fantasy and science fiction writing world, Sandra McDonald.

The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest

By Kay Bourne | Thursday May 20, 2010
The bisexual, master computer hacker, warrior waif Lisbeth Salandar, both victim and avenger, and the gimlet eyed activist journalist Mikael Blomkvist return as a crime fighting duo in The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest, the disturbing third and final installment in Stieg Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy.

Strings Attached

By Kilian Melloy | Wednesday May 19, 2010
Nick Nolan’s debut novel Strings Attached is a careering (and career-making) thrill ride for gay youth and the gay young-at-heart.

Recovering Apollo 8 And Other Stories

By Kilian Melloy | Friday Apr 30, 2010
The nine stories in Kathryn Kristine Rusch’s new anthology constitute a cornucopia of imagination, skill, heart, and daring.

Next

By Ken Harvey | Friday Apr 9, 2010
It is indication of Hynes’ skill as a novelist that, even as Kevin dips into the past, ponders the present, and projects into the future, we always know where we are.

The Wolf At The Door

By Lewis Whittington | Friday Apr 9, 2010
In his book Still Dancing, Jameson Currier introduced gay Manhattanites in post-AIDs era, with stories of quiet courage and rainbow spirit. His new book, The Wolf at the Door, is a raunchy gay comedy set in the French Quarter in N’auwlins, ever ripe with the author’s elegant and muscular prose.