有声读物: Out of the Closet: A Collection of Early LGBTQ+ Fiction
- Download The Child's Champion audio
- Download In the Tules audio
- Download The Falling in Love of Fedora audio
- Download The Man who thought Himsek a Woman audio
- Download Pearl Hunting in the Pomonous audio
- Download Twin Love audio
- Download Portrait of W.H. Chapter 1 audio
- Download Portrait of W.H. Chapter 2 & 3 audio
- Download Felipa audio
- Download My Visitation Part 1 audio
- Download My Visitation Part 2 audio
- Download A Scrap of Paper part 1 audio
- Download A Scrap of Paper part 2 audio
- Download The Man who became a Woman part 1 audio
- Download The Man who became a Woman part 2 audio
- Download Out of the Deeps audio
- Download There and Now audio
- Download Marjorie Daw audio
- Download Two Friends audio
- Download Martha's Lady audio
- Download My Lorelei: A Heidelberg Romance audio
- Download Our Aromatic Uncle audio
- Download The True Story Of A Vampire audio
- Download The Heart’s Desire audio
- Download Two Gentlemen of Kentucky" (part one) audio
- Download Two Gentlemen of Kentucky" (part two) audio
- Download A Boy's Discovery audio
- Download Paul’s Case: A Study in Temperament audio
- Download The Prussian Officer (Chapter 1) audio
- Download The Prussian Officer (Chapter 2) audio
- Download "Aquae Multae Non––" (Part I) audio
- Download "Aquae Multae Non––" (Part 2) audio
有声读物类型
作者
描述
This is a collection of 22 LGBTQ+ stories published between 1841-1923, covering a wide span of authors, genres, and literary traditions. Some stories are coded and euphemistic, often framing their central relationships as friendships or familial bonds. Others are surprisingly brazen and bold for their time, courting controversy for their refusal to obscure the sexuality of their chararcters. Some tales come from canonical, widely known authors (Whitman, Chopin, Wilde, Cather), while others emerge from obscurer and less recognized writers (Thanet, Cooke, Bunner). Some are tragic and self-critical, clearly the byproducts of when they were written. Others are lightly comedic or triumphant, bucking the conventions of the time. Throughout each story, however, persists a desire to represent the seemingly unrepresentable, finding expression for the “love that dare not speak its name.” - Summary by ChuckW
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