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Authenticity and the Coming Out Process

By |2020-03-28T13:42:44-05:00March 29th, 2014|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|Tags: |

AUTHOR GUEST BLOG: J. Lee Graham             The coming out process, for people of all ages, always and forever will be, a transformational and sacred journey. It is not a one-time event. It is not always a giant party nor is it always a dramatic Act Three denouement. Often I see our society responding to splashy headlines of a celebrity who decides to come out and the tendency is to assume that that is all that ‘coming out’ means: a Public Relations moment that creates a five minute discussion at the supper table. [...]

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Guest Blog by E.M. Kokie

By |2020-03-28T13:42:47-05:00June 9th, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

By the time this post goes up we will know who won the Lambda Literary Award in all twenty-three categories in which it is given, including the winner for Children’s/YA LGBT Fiction.  In announcing the finalists for this year’s award, the Lambda Literary Foundation explained that for the fourth year in a row there was a record number of books nominated and a record number of publishers represented in those nominations.  For the first time this year, the judges were encouraged to choose more finalists in categories that drew a large number of submissions. I am absolutely thrilled [...]

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Marriage Equality is Only One Step

By |2020-03-28T13:42:47-05:00June 6th, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

Author Guest Blog: Catherine Ryan Hyde I’m not sure how many people are aware of the fact that I just published an ebook sequel to my 2006 LGBT YA novel Becoming Chloe. It’s called Always Chloe and Other Stories. This time Jordy gets to have a boyfriend. Actually, a husband. Jordy reunites with his old flame Kevin, and they decide to marry. While I was writing the first draft of the novel, the California Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional to deny marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Good timing! Well, it would have been good timing whenever [...]

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Author Guest Blog: Zoe Marriott

By |2020-03-28T13:42:47-05:00June 4th, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

In summer 2010 I had the best idea. It was one of those times when it feels as if the universe has just lobbed a gift directly into your brain, and within minutes I was madly scribbling down notes. The notes, which can still be found on a page in one of my notebooks, look something like this: Ancient warrior (soul? spirit?) trapped in blade for centuries. Heroine accidentally releases? Sets magic/curse in train... Blade belongs to... heroine? Heroine's FAMILY. Warrior heroine - sword-fighter, like a manga heroine. OMG JAPANESE! British born Japanese heroine. Ancestral katana! Forbidden! Kitsune, [...]

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The Grey of Gender: Intersex and Gender Variant/Non-Binary Characters in YA

By |2020-03-28T13:42:47-05:00June 3rd, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

Author Guest Blog: Laura Lam Caveat: What I reveal about characters in Pantomime does somewhat “spoil” a “twist” that is revealed 20% into Pantomime. Some people have enjoyed being surprised, but if you’d prefer to read the book without knowing, please skip this post! I will say that I don’t think knowing this going in unduly colours the reading experience, but then again it’s impossible for me to know, as I can never read the book I’ve written for the first time. Another note on gender pronouns: I use the pronoun the character identifies as at the point [...]

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AWAKE: A YA Anthology for the Trevor Project

By |2016-05-24T14:52:15-05:00May 17th, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

When I approached Mark Probst, owner of Cheyenne Publishing, about releasing a young adult book for charity, I did so with no clear idea of what to expect—only a vision of the end result as my guide. To my delight, Mark was enthusiastic: if I could organize the authors, he would take on the book at Cheyenne. Just the one snag. Organize the authors. If you work in the arts, you’ve heard it before: “Will you donate your time/talent for … ?” Now it was my turn to ask, with nothing but a pretty-please and assurance that they [...]

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Guest Blog: Shaun Hutchinson

By |2016-05-24T14:52:15-05:00May 16th, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

I was having a conversation with an author whose first book comes out next year, and he was worried that his book, written from a female point of view, wouldn't be well received because he's a man.  We got onto the topic of writing gay characters and having gay protagonists, and he said something that echoed exactly how I felt before my debut in 2010.  He didn't want to be labeled a "gay author." I didn't write Oliver Travers, my horny, teenage narrator from The Deathday Letter as heterosexual because I was worried about being a gay author, [...]

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If Only There Were a Gay Version of…

By |2020-03-28T13:42:47-05:00May 9th, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

I recently read Ask the Passengers by A.S. King. Before I’d even finished, I knew it was that book for me ― the book I wished I’d had as a teen. The book that would have validated what I was feeling at that time in my life. It would’ve shown me that it was okay to spend time figuring out my sexuality, that I didn’t have to define myself by someone else’s rules. That it was acceptable, even good, to think outside the lines when it comes to identity and where you fit within a community. YA books [...]

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Guest Blog: Kelly York

By |2020-03-28T13:42:47-05:00May 8th, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

Recently, fellow author and friend, Brigid Kemmerer and I were discussing how we’ve both gotten some reviews on our books that included something along the lines of: “I hadn’t realized there was gay material in this book. I wish I had been warned.” Warned. Okay. Right-o. Nevermind everything else in the book that should be a lot more astonishing. There are people who are unhappy because two people of the same gender locked lips. This was particularly puzzling when it happened to me with HUSHED. When review copies went out, the blurb went along with it. The blurb [...]

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FML

By |2020-03-28T13:42:47-05:00May 7th, 2013|Categories: Archive, Author Guest Blog|

by: Shaun Hutchinson  Books have come a long way when it comes to gay characters.  About A year ago I read John Donovan's book, I'll Get There. It Better Be Worth the Trip.  Written in 1969, it was one of the first, if not the first young adult book to deal with the issue of homosexuality.  When I finished, I found myself underwhelmed.  I'd expected more. The themes were danced around but never addressed.  I'm not even sure if they used the word "gay" at all. But I tried to put it into context, imagining how a kid [...]

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