New York’s Oldest Gay Bookstore to Close
>New York City’s only remaining gay and lesbian bookstore says it’s closing after 41 years. Oscar Wilde Bookshop owner Kim Brinster says “tough times” are… Read More »New York’s Oldest Gay Bookstore to Close
>New York City’s only remaining gay and lesbian bookstore says it’s closing after 41 years. Oscar Wilde Bookshop owner Kim Brinster says “tough times” are… Read More »New York’s Oldest Gay Bookstore to Close
>[…] in 1915, while other men fought the battles of Loos and Ypres, a comic novelist called Alfred Barrett, the former editor of Family Circle,… Read More »Classified: The Secret History of the Personal Column by HG Cocks
>In February Gay’s the Word, the first and now last surviving British gay bookshop, will be celebrating its 30th birthday with a month of special… Read More »Gay’s the Word to Mark 30th Anniversary
>His adventures have sold more than 200 million copies and been translated into 50 languages, and this weekend he celebrates his 80th birthday. But how… Read More »Of Course Tintin Is Gay. Ask Snowy
>What does your queer London look like? And how does it compare with queer London of yesteryear? The website www.untoldlondon.org.uk are launching a new annual… Read More »Write Queer London Competition
>Edward Carpenter was a radical socialist activist throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In his writings, he tore into the decadent middle classes… Read More »Edward Carpenter: A Man Before His Time
>Alan Bennett is to give a wealth of written work from nearly 50 years as an author and playwright to the Bodleian Library at Oxford… Read More »Alan Bennett Gives Papers to Bodleian Library
>Edward Carpenter was the Victorian Morrissey, the English Walt Whitman – and the original vegetarian, sandal-wearing socialist. So why is this gloriously eccentric figure almost… Read More »Edward Carpenter: A Life of Liberty and Love
>Two programmes in which best-selling author Val McDermid examines the development of the lesbian novel. She looks at the furore surrounding Radclyffe Hall’s The Well… Read More »From the Ban to the Booker
>In public, Dirk Bogarde was shy, reserved, polite to a fault. But in private, he was far more entertaining. These extracts published in the Daily… Read More »Dirk Bogarde’s Letters – Part Two