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Love Alters

Product Description With this anthology, honoured on first publication as a Lambda Literary Award finalist, Emma Donoghue offers an eloquent and timely definition of the modern lesbian short story. Breaking out beyond North American writer, she assembles an impressively broad array of twenty-nine writers from South Africa to Trinidad, from Australia to Ireland, and from Jamaica to New Zealand. The greater international range is evident not just in subject matter, but in style, too: the writers have little in common other than that they have written on lesbian themes. The intention was not to compile a 'Best of' collection; the focus is very much on new stories rather than those already much-anthologised. Well-known authors are represented, but not by their best-known work, and widely anthologised authors make way for less familiar names.Chronologically, the focus is on the modern side of the watershed marked by the June 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York and the ensuing Gay Liberation and Women's Liberation movements. Importantly though, these are stories that read like stories. The first section, 'Child's Play' deals with the taboo topic of the sexuality of young girls; 'Present Tense' is concerned with contemporary adult life; while 'Family Values' reclaims that term from right-wing fundamentalists by embracing very different angles on family life. 'Past Times' reflects the burgeoning cultural confidence evident in the growing genre of lesbian historical fiction, while the final, very eclectic 'Possibilities' points to new tendencies in lesbian fiction at the millennium, exploring beyond the boundaries of naturalism.The anthology includes stories by Dorothy Allison, Madelyn Arnold, Rebecca Brown, Anne Cameron, Christine Crow, Jane DeLynn, Elise D'Haene, Emma Donoghue, Mary Dorcey, Marion Douglas, Patricia Duncker, Dale Gunthorp, Susan Hampton, Jane Harris, Annamarie Jagose, Aileen La Tourette, Tanith Lee, Jenifer Levin, Anna Livia, Elizabeth A. Lynn, Ingrid Macdonald, Sara Maitland, Shani Mootoo, Sigrid Nielsen, Jane Rule, Ali Smith, Michelene Wandor, Marnie Woodrow and Shay Youngblood. Book Description An anthology of 29 modern lesbian short stories compiled by Emma Donoghue. From the Back Cover A wonderfully diverse collection of 29 stories which offers an eloquent definition of post-Stonewall lesbian short fiction The writers of these intriguing, provocative stories come from every part of the world. Their stories are set in South Africa, Trinidad, Australia, Ireland, Jamaica, New Zealand and elsewhere, bringing a thrilling diversity not only of subject matter, but of style, too. These are writers who have little in common other than that they have written on lesbian themes. Award-winning novelist Emma Donoghue, author of the bestselling Room, has chosen unexpected stories rather than ones already much anthologised; the chosen stories by the well-known writers tend not to be those for which those writers are best known; and there are many less familiar names. One section explores the taboo topic of young girls' sexuality, another reclaims Family Values from bigots, a third represents the burgeoning genre of lesbian historical fiction, while a fourth explores beyond the confines of naturalism, pointing a way to the future. This is, above all perhaps, a very readable anthology. Dorothy Allison, Madelyn Arnold, Rebecca Brown, Anne Cameron, Christine Crow, Jane DeLynn, Elise D'Haene, Emma Donoghue, Mary Dorcey, Marion Douglas, Patricia Duncker, Dale Gunthorp, Susan Hampton, Jane Harris, Annamarie Jagose, Aileen La Tourette, Tanith Lee, Jenifer Levin, Anna Livia, Elizabeth A. Lynn, Ingrid Macdonald, Sara Maitland, Shani Mootoo, Sigrid Nielsen, Jane Rule, Ali Smith, Michelene Wandor, Marnie Woodrow and Shay Youngblood. About the Author Emma Donoghue is an award-winning writer. Born in Dublin in 1969, she now lives in Canada with her family. Her novels are the international bestseller Room, whic
Product Overview
ISBN 9781472109859
Author(s) Emma O'Donoghue (Editor)
Publisher Robinson Publishing
Pages 496
Format Paperback
Weight 0.0 lb