Link Round Up: Nov 6-20

      

AfterEllen posted Your New School Library: Ivan Coyote, A.S. King, and Mariko Tamaki.

Autostraddle posted

      

Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian posted Hello, Queer YA: An Introduction to Queer Canadian Young Women’s Fiction.

F/F Fan Fiction Reader’s Corner posted Reunion Week and Women Dressed as Men … Sorry not my list.

Lambda Literary posted E.J. Levy: Theories of Art and Love and Queer Rites: November 2012.

Women and Words posted One Question, Twenty Answers – November and A Hodge-Podge of Fabulousness from Radclyffe, Including a Free Book or Five.

      

emily m. danforth, author of The Miseducation of Cameron Post, was interviewed on “The Write Question”.

Sarah Diemer posted

Emma Donoghue was interviewed at Austin Culture Map.

Malinda Lo posted Write from the gut, not from fear of prejudice and My policy on reviews, November 2012.

      

Catherine Lundoff posted Mentees wanted.

Chana Wilson posted The Opposite of Being Visibly Out: Hiding in Plain Sight.

Jeanette Winterson calls for library expansion, also posted about at The Independent.

“Dorothy Allison speaks on the power of the writer’s voice” was posted at Windy City Times.

“LGBT Authors and Books at the Miami Book Fair” was posted at South Florida Gay News.

“Queer icons Ivan E. Coyote and Rae Spoon step “out of the box” for Gender Failure Show” was posted at the Montreal Gazette.

      

Are You My Mother? by Alison Bechdel was reviewed at This Wheel of Many Parts.

My Awesome Place: The Autobiography of Cheryl B by Cheryl Burke was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

The Sealed Letter by Emma Donoghue was reviewed at Seattle PI and A Little Blog of Books and Other Stuff.

Hello, Groin by Beth Goobie was reviewed by Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian.

Crossroads by Radclyffe was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

      

Come and Go by Lee Harlem Robinson was reviewed at The Rainbow Reader.

Say Please: Lesbian BDSM Erotica edited by Sinclair Sexsmith was reviewed at Lambda Literary.

Tipping the Velvet by Sarah Waters was discussed at For Books’ Sake.

Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? Jeanette Winterson was reviewed at Hazlitt.