Saturday, October 2, 2010

October Mini-Challenge



The October mini-challenge here at the Challenge That Dare Not Speak Its Name challenges you to read a classic. Many of the classics were written by GLBT authors, or suspected GLBT authors, and any of these would be great for the challenge. There are also some classics with GLBT themes. We would love to see links to the classic you pick in the Mr. Linky below.

If anyone would like to volunteer to do a guest post on GLBT-related classics, please contact us - our emails are in the sidebar!

Friday, October 1, 2010

Reviews - 4th Quarter



Thanks to everyone who participated in the GLBT Challenge this past quarter. We appreciate your links and your support.

Below, you can link to your reviews in October, November, and December. We're looking forward to hearing about your reads!

Monday, September 6, 2010

Guest Post: Bisexual, Gender-bending, Romance is Still Romance by Cecilia Tan

Today's guest post is by Cecilia Tan, writer, editor, and sexuality activist. Learn more at http://blog.ceciliatan.com.

*****

Romance is a genre where heterosexuality is widely celebrated, but in recent years gay male partnerships have also been emerging as the defining feature of a significant sub-genre. Lesbian publishers, meanwhile, have always had their share of lesbian romances, from the days of New Victoria Press to the current successes of Bold Strokes Books.

But if true love truly is for everyone, where are the bisexual and transgender romances? We use the acronym "GLBT" as a catch-all, but the B and the T are easily marginalized by the mainstream. A friend pointed out to me recently that the only transgender character to be a romantic lead in a relatively mainstream book is Chris Parker in Laura Antoniou's "Marketplace" books (which, by the way, are coming back into print via Circlet Press's new alt-sexuality erotica imprint, Luster Editions). And bisexual characters are usually secondary characters, as well, rarely seen in the leading role.

I'm trying to change that, though. I started writing paranormal romance in 2008. My first one was het, just to get my feet wet, but I couldn't stand to see the book be completely straight, so in MIND GAMES I gave our heroine a gay best friend. My editor kept telling me that in paranormal romance, it's completely normal for a main character to actually have more than one partner, even a threesome, and that this was the one of two places I'd see bisexuality making a niche in romance. ("Menage" is the other.)

I had been reading Laurell K. Hamilton, Anne Bishop, and various other paranormal "crossover" authors for years, and decided if they could go into that territory, then a bisexuality activist like myself ought to also, even while writing in the strict format of romance. I started work on a series of books called Magic University.



The premise of the books is a bit like what if we had a Harry-Potter-like scenario, where our hero suddenly discovers he magical, except he's going to college rather than grade school? My imaginary magic school isn't much like Hogwarts; it's Harvard, or more specifically the hidden magical university hidden in plain sight, called Veritas.

In book one (THE SIREN AND THE SWORD) our hero Kyle has his first serious girlfriend, falls in love the first time, loses his virginity--all that good stuff you'd expect for a young man living away from home for the first time. The story is rather heterosexual, but I figured it would be believable to start out that way, and in the meantime the secondary characters are well populated with both gay, lesbian, and transgendered characters.

However, by Kyle's sophomore year (THE TOWER AND THE TEARS), he decides to study sex magic, and is told that to be a practitioner of the Esoteric Arts, bisexuality is pretty much a requirement. (Not to mention multiple-partner rituals, some of which are downright kinky...) Kyle isn't sure what to make of that, but he's open to experimentation and finding out if he really can be attracted to another man.

I worry a little that some readers who enjoyed the first book will be put off as the subsequent books stray further from the heterosexual norm with each passing chapter. One of Kyle's mentors is revealed to have undergone a gender change earlier in life, and then even later, Kyle find himself attracted to a character whose gender isn't even simple to define. But there is no doubt that these books are Romance with a Capital R, as Kyle's ultimate quest is not to defeat evil like Harry Potter, but to find true love. By book three (THE INCUBUS AND THE ANGEL) he is coming to realize that he may only find it in places he didn't expect to look.

Ultimately, if there is a "lesson" to be learned at the Magic University, for Kyle or the reader, it is that true love knows no bounds of gender or socially constructed norms. And that may be the most romantic idea I can imagine.

About the Author: Cecilia Tan is a writer, editor, and sexuality activist. She is the author of Mind Games, The Hot Streak, White Flames, Edge Plays, Black Feathers, The Velderet, and Telepaths Don't Need Safewords, as well as the Magic University series of paranormal erotic romances, and the currently ongoing gay web serials The
Prince's Boy and Daron's Guitar Chronicles. She has the distinction of being perhaps the only writer to have erotic fiction published in both Penthouse and Ms. magazines, as well as in scores of other magazines and anthologies including Asimov’s, Best American Erotica, and Nerve. She is the founder and editor of Circlet Press, publishers of erotic science fiction and fantasy. She is also the Media Relations Director for the New England Leather Alliance (NELA). Learn more at http://blog.ceciliatan.com.

Related Links:
The Magic University Series - Info page

Print Book buy links:
The Marketplace
Mind Games
The Siren and the Sword
The Tower and the Tears

Ebook buy links:
Mind Games
The Siren and the Sword
The Tower and the Tears
The Incubus and the Angel

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

September Mini-Challenge



The September mini-challenge here at the Challenge That Dare Not Speak Its Name is all about picture books. There are quite a few GLBT-related picture books, and the goal is to take a moment to read one of those. We welcome all links about picture books in the Mr. Linky below.

If anyone would like to volunteer to do a guest post on GLBT-related picture books, please contact us - our emails are in the sidebar!

Sunday, August 1, 2010

August Mini-Challenge



The August mini-challenge here at the Challenge That Dare Not Speak Its Name is all about GLBT speculative fiction. Fantasy, science fiction, dystopia, and all the rest. Your challenge is to read a GLBT speculative book or short story. We welcome all links on this topic in the Mr. Linky below.

Also, keep an eye on the blog - we hope to have some guest posts about GLBT speculative fiction! If you've like to volunteer to write something on the topic, we welcome that too!

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Giveaway Winners

It's time to announce the winners of our GLBT Reading 5-book giveaway. They are:

1) Raven Summer by David Almond - Ari from Reading in Color

2) Delilah by India Edghill - Heather from Book Addiction

3) The Lady and the Poet by Maeve Haran - Michelle from The True Book Addict

4) Give a Little by Wendy Smith - Travis from Inked Books

5) Mirrorscape by Mike Wilkes - Adam from Roof Beam Reader

Congratulations everyone! I'll be in contact with you soon to get your mailing addresses. Thanks again for entering and for everyone's patience with the changes we're making here at GLBT Reading.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Guest Post: The Hip Hop Façade

Today's guest post comes from Bea at The Hardknock Radio. Thanks for being with us, Bea!!

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The Hip Hop we know of nowadays has strayed far beyond its origins. Back in the day, it was all about getting people amped for parties as well as providing a forum for expression. Forty years after, what we see on TV, hear on the radio and read in magazines has become a distorted version of the fundamentals that had given voice to the urban youth.

The present image portrayed by Hip Hop is undeniably masculine. The majority of music videos depict men surrounded by a bevy of beautiful women, sipping champagne while sporting some of the most expensive cars available. The lyrics, too, emphasize how “gangster” the performers are, re-counting the many bullet wounds they received.

In reality, it has been said by insiders that some rappers, both male and female, actually lead a secret gay life. They hide it with their persona, often using their lyrics to discriminate against gays in order to divert attention from their “true selves”. Sad as it is, this situation with sexuality has become a major issue in the entertainment industry where there is massive homophobia.

Terrance Dean, an executive producer that used to work for MTV and BET, released a book 2 years ago entitled Hiding in Hip-Hop: On the Down Low. In it, he attempted to shed light on the fact that there actually were rappers hiding in the closet out of fear of what the industry might do to them if they ever came out. A pity because hip hop shouldn’t be that way.

From the looks of it, it seems like hip hop has become a facade of machismo when, in fact, one of its best features used to be self expression. For the male rappers, it does not come as a surprise that there isn’t a famous one who is openly gay. Men find it harder to deal with a gay public image, so they bury their real self in public denial. Aside from Man Parrish, who was among the few that set the path for Hip Hop, I don’t know anyone as big as Jay Z or lil Wayne who’ll admit they are gay.

In the meantime, people like Deadlee, Cazwell, Katastrophe and a lot more are here to stay. Although they are less famous, they are definitely realer than most and offer a voice to the minority, the GLBT.

Bea loves to write about hip hop and the history of rap music. Check her newest entry on the top 100 rap songs.