Lesbian review

Harvard Gender and Sexuality Caucus: The Queer and Lesbian Review

In June , at the Caucus’s Annual Commencement dinner, Richard Schneider, Jr., Ph.D. ‘81, the long-time editor of the Harvard Gay & Lesbian Newsletter, announced plans for the publication of a new quarterly journal to be published by the Caucus and distributed to its members-in-good-standing—and anyone else who might care to study it. The first issue, Winter , of The Harvard Gay & Womxn loving womxn Review came out late the tracking fall and featured a 10,word memoir by Andrew Holleran entitled “My Harvard”—a transcript of the talk he had given in the spring of at the first annual Jon Pearson Perry lecture—a tantalizing description of what it was like to be gay at Harvard in the mid’s.
 

The survival and success of The Review is due to an enormous extent to the support received from the Caucus and The Unseal Gate during those early years. The latter provided some of the seed money needed to put out the first issue, while Caucus members furnished a “captive au

Book from The Lesbian Review’s “Best of the Best” List (Sapphic Reading Oppose #5)

This week’s category of the Sapphic Reading Test is a bit other . Instead of putting together a list of my own, I want you to read a novel from a list curated by The Lesbian Review.

If you haven’t heard of The Lesbian Review yet, you should definitely review them out. The Queer woman Review is the biggest website dedicated to scrutinizing women-loving women &  lesbian books. They review books (including audiobooks), fanfiction, and movies.

I’ve found a lot of great books by subscribing to their weekly newsletter with book recommendations, checking out their marvelous “best of” lists for every trope and theme you can think of, and joining their Facebook group, called The Woman loving woman Review Chat.

 

Read up on the rules of the Sapphic Reading Challenge

If you are just discovering the Sapphic Reading Challenge, read up on the rules before you pick a book for this category. You might also desire to download your PDF so you can maintain track of the books you read this year.

 

Re
[Following is the official review of "Turning Lesbian: When Bi Is Not Enough" by Sienna Wilder.]

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I rate this novella a 4 out of 4 stars. It is an intense engaging story, running the characters and the readers through a plethora of emotions in a short 44 page story span. Despite the focus being on erotica, the author manages to keep the story line intact, right from the beginning till the end, and also gives it a nice, karmic twist, which the readers will savor .

This is a story of a female protagonist Rachel, who loses the love of her life to another woman, after having given 4 years of her life to him. The story moves at a rapid pace, giving the reader a quick shot of her past with her boyfriend Jarrett who informs her that he has found someone else. In a few moments Rachel becomes his best friend from his girlfriend, and he happily shares his intention to marry the recent girl very soon. Dejected Rachel traces her past negative encounters with men so far in her life, and decides she has had enough of them. The author does not waste time in making her wallo

The Ladder: A Female homosexual Review

The Ladder: A Lesbian Review

San Francisco: Daughters of Bilitis, –

The Ladder was the journal of the Daughters of Bilitis, the primary corporation for lesbians in the United States in the s and 60s. Preceding issues of The Ladder often featured either cartoons or portraits in silhouette on the cover to preserve the privacy of the  people involved. In the early s when activists Barbara Gittings and Kay Tobin Lahusen took up editing The Ladder, they began featuring eliminate photographs of out lesbians on the cover of the magazine and added the subtitle “A Female homosexual Review.” Pictured at right is Ernestine Eckstein, one of the few African Americans active in the homophile movement. She helped push the movement to engage in public demonstrations based on her hold experience in the African American Civil Rights Movement.

Holding Division: Manuscripts and Archives Division, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building

Archival Collection: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Periodical Collection

Digital Collections:View Record