Category: Books and Authors

Ricky Martin’s memoir due November 2

LGBTQ Nation • Thursday, August 19, 2010 • Filed under: Books and Authors, Celebrities, MusicComments (1)

Ricky Martin is set to release his memoir, Me, on November 2.

Martin said in a statement Thursday that the project led him to extract memories that he had erased from his mind. He said the book was not easy but allowed for an “incredible spiritual journey.”

USA TODAY’s Cindy Clark reports that the Grammy-Award winning artist opens up for the first time about his early childhood, his experiences as a member of the boy band Menudo, and coming to terms with his sexuality. Martin also talks about being a father and his work with children around the world.

Martin has said that preparing to write the book was one of the reasons he decided to reveal earlier this year that he is gay.

There will also be a Spanish language edition released in Spanish the same day, titled Yo, which is Spanish for “I.”

NJ library bans gay teen book over complaint from Glenn Beck follower

LGBTQ Nation • Saturday, August 7, 2010 • Filed under: Books and Authors, New JerseyComments (7)

A controversial book aimed at gay teens has been banned in the Burlington County, NJ, public library, the decision of a lone librarian acting on a single complaint by a Glenn Beck follower.

The book, Revolutionary Voices: A Multicultural Queer Youth Anthology — a collection of first-person essays by LGBT teen sharing their stories of coming out of the closet — was pulled from the county library after objections from Beverly Marinelli, a Lumberton, NJ woman and a member of the 9.12 Project, a conservative group founded by Beck, a Fox News Channel pundit.

Marinelli described the book as “pervasively vulgar and obscene.”

According to series of emails obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey through a Freedom of Information Act, the Library Commission supported the decision by Gail Sweet, the library’s director, to remove “Revolutionary Voices” from circulation, though “no official challenge” was made, and “no actual vote by the commissioners” was taken.

The emails reveal that Sweet not only wanted the book pulled off the library shelf, she wanted to get rid of any trace of it.

“How can we grab the books so they never, ever get back into circulation?” Sweet wrote to a fellow staffer. “Copies need to totally disappear, as it is not a good idea to send copies to the book sale.”

In April, Marinelli, along with others in the local chapter of the 9/12 Project, successfully lobbied in to have the book removed from Rancocas Valley Regional High School in Mount Holly, NJ.

The Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) describes “Revolutionary Voices,” edited by Amy Sonnie, as “the first creative resource by and for queer and questioning youth of every color, class, religion, gender and ability.”

The book features first-hand coming-out accounts from gay students, and “reflections on identity,” according to the School Library Journal, the largest and most authoritative reviewer of children’s and young adult content. It was named as one of the best adult books for high school students by the Journal in 2001.

Sweet cited her decision to remove the book was that it constituted “child pornography.”

The emails can be read here (PDF).

Spiderman comics to feature gay kiss on October cover

LGBTQ Nation • Friday, July 30, 2010 • Filed under: Books and AuthorsComments (3)

A comic classic, The Amazing Spiderman, will debut what is likely the first gay kiss to be featured on the cover of a mainstream comic book.

The comic, out this October by Brian Michael Bendis, is about a bummed out Spider-Man, on the outs with his buds, girlfriend, and the world at large.

The cover art by David LaFuente Garcia captures Spiderman feeling sorry for himself in a couples-crowded Central Park. Among them, two men embrace as they lean in, eyes closed, for a kiss. (Look center-right.)

Kudos to Marvel Comics for simply illustrating that the LGBT community is a normal part of everyday society.

Archie comics to introduce first openly gay teen at Riverdale High

LGBTQ Nation • Thursday, April 22, 2010 • Filed under: Books and AuthorsComments (0)

Riverdale High School, the stomping grounds of comic books’ favorite teens is opening its doors to an openly gay student – a first in the 69-year history of Archie comics.

“We’re trying to reflect society and we’re just trying to show Riverdale is a diverse place,” says Dan Parent, the artist-writer behind the series.

Kevin Keller

“The introduction of Kevin is just about keeping the world of Archie Comics current and inclusive. Archie’s hometown of Riverdale has always been a safe world for everyone. It just makes sense to have an openly gay character in Archie comic books,” Archie Comics honcho Jon Goldwater said in announcing the news.

“Riverdale is a safe place for everybody. Everyone’s welcome with Archie and the Gang,” said Archie Comics Co-CEO Jon Goldwater, “and that’s the message we’re trying to send.” Continue reading…

Meredith Baxter signs book deal to write her memoirs

LGBTQ Nation • Saturday, December 26, 2009 • Filed under: Books and Authors, Coming Out, EntertainmentComments (0)

Meredith Baxter, who recently came out on national television, will soon be writing a memoir about her personal and professional experiences.

The Broadway Books imprint of Crown Publishing Group announced it has acquired a yet-to-be-written, yet-to-titled memoir by Baxter, who “will present a fully realized portrait of her life as an actress, mother of five children and grandmother, and will candidly discuss her fight with breast cancer, her 19 years of sobriety, entrepreneurship and her decision to come out,” the publisher said, according to The New York Times.

Baxter, best known for playing Elyse Keaton in the 1980′s sitcom “Family Ties,” recently made her public admission, “I am a lesbian,” in an interview with Matt Lauer on NBC’s TODAY show.

‘The Meaning of Matthew…’ – Judy Shepard’s journey, and crusade for gay rights

LGBTQ Nation • Tuesday, September 8, 2009 • Filed under: Advocacy, Books and AuthorsComments (0)

Meaning-of-Matthew-coverThe 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard shocked the nation.

The 21 year-old college student was viciously murdered in Laramie, WY, bludgeoned to death while tied to a fence. Matthew was targeted because he was gay.

Matthew’s death and the subsequent trial and convictions of his attackers incited demonstrations and debates over gay rights. For many, it revealed the dangers of being gay in America, and for most gays and lesbians, it reaffirmed the risk they live with every day.

More than 10 years since Matthews’ death, his mother Judy Shepard’s continues to lead a movement for hate crimes legislation, and says there hasn’t been nearly enough progress on gay rights.

In her new book, The Meaning of Matthew: My Son’s Murder in Laramie, and a World Transformed, Judy Shepard (pictured, below right) documents the terror and loss of her son, reliving her son’s life up until that fateful early morning in 1998, and the choice she made to become an international gay rights activist.

Judy ShepardAnd the release of Judy’s book comes on the cusp of new legislation as Congress moves closer to passing the hate-crimes bill she has lobbied for a decade to pass. The Matthew Shepard Act would extend federal protections to people victimized because of sexual orientation.

Lawmakers, however, have tried, and failed, to pass federal hate crimes protections five times since 1997, and continue to bow out because pressure from conservatives who argue that the law would censor free speech.

Shepard, who makes some 50 speeches a year advocating for hate crimes legislation that includes sexual orientation and gender identity, may finally see that day come. Now, a Democratic-controlled Congress and a willing President Obama offer the best odds so far to amend the law.

And in her book, Judy Shepard hopes people see her son in a different way. For the first time in book form, she speaks about her loss, sharing memories of Matthew, their life as a typical American family, and the pivotal event in the small college town that changed everything.

The Meaning of Matthew… not only captures the historical significance and complicated civil rights issues surrounding one young man’s life and death, but it also chronicles one ordinary woman’s struggle to cope with the unthinkable.

He was “so much more than ‘Matthew Shepard, the gay 21-year-old University of Wyoming college student,’ ” she writes in an author’s note. “He had a family and countless friends. He had a life before the night he was tied to that fence.”

Author E. Lynn Harris dead at 54

LGBTQ Nation • Friday, July 24, 2009 • Filed under: Books and Authors, In MemoriamComments (0)

E Lynn HarrisE. Lynn Harris, the author who introduced millions of readers to the “invisible life” of black gay men, died Thursday while on a business trip in Los Angeles.

Harris, 54, was a literary pioneer who wrote a series of novels that exposed readers to characters rarely depicted in literature: black, affluent gay men who were masculine, complex and, sometimes, tormented.

In Memoriam (CNN).

E Lynn Harris Official Website.

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