List of lesbian fiction

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a List of lesbian-themed fiction. It includes books from the 18th century through the 21st century. It also includes lists of works by genre, a list of characters that make recurring appearances in fiction series, and a list of lesbian and feminist publishing houses.

Fiction and drama (2nd century)[]

  • Dialogues of the Courtesans, Lucian of Samosata

Fiction and drama (18th century)[]

  • Fanny Hill, John Cleland (1748) – Fanny has an encounter with Phoebe, a prostitute[1]
  • La Religieuse, Denis Diderot (1796) – a Reverend Mother wants to seduce a nun

Fiction and drama (19th century)[]

  • Mademoiselle Maupin, Théophile Gautier (1835)
  • Carmilla, Sheridan Le Fanu (1872)
  • (1895) – the only known exemplar is in the Berlin State Library (RVKO number Yx 27911).[2]
  • Nana, Émile Zola (1880), – an extended description of Chez Laure, a Parisian restaurant that caters to a lesbian clientele;[3] the relationship of Nana and the unfaithful Satin, "with her blue eyes and schoolgirlish look", "bitten and beaten and torn this way and that by the two women".[4]
  • Mademoiselle Giraud, My Wife, Adolphe Belot (1891)[5]
  • (Feng shuangfei) (A Pair of Male Phoenixes Flying Together), Cheng Huiying (程蕙英) (1899)[6]

Fiction and drama (20th century)[]

  • , Minna Wettstein-Adelt (1901)
  • Thirty-Three Abominations, Lydia Zinovieva-Annibal (1907)
  • The Rainbow, D. H. Lawrence (1915)
  • 花物語 (Hana Monogatari, "Flower Tales") (short stories), Nobuko Yoshiya (1916-1925)[7]
  • Regiment of Women, Winifred Ashton (under the pseudonym Clemence Dane) (1917)[5]
  • The Scorpion, Anna Elisabet Weirauch (1919) (1930) (1931)[8]
  • 屋根裏の二處女 (Yaneura no Nishojo, "Two Virgins in the Attic"), Nobuko Yoshiya (1920)[9]
  • The Bachelor Girl, Victor Margueritte (1922)
  • God of Vengeance (play), Sholem Asch (1923) – a girl has a lesbian relationship with a prostitute
  • Freundinnen, Maximiliane Ackers (1923)[10]
  • (play), Klaus Mann (1925)
  • The Captive (play), Edouard Bourdet (1926) – tragedy of a young woman who falls into a twisted relationship with another woman
  • The Well of Loneliness, Radclyffe Hall (1928) – subject of an obscenity trial that banned the book in the United Kingdom until 1949,[11] though "there are no descriptions of sex in it, no rude words, and the lesbian lovers do not live happily ever after"[12]
  • Ladies Almanack, Djuna Barnes (1928)
  • Orlando: A Biography, Virginia Woolf (1928)
  • Extraordinary Women, Compton Mackenzie (1928)
  • Kariera Nikodema Dyzmy by Tadeusz Dołęga-Mostowicz has a lesbian character having an affair with her father's wife. The wife eventually marries the main character, but there is no question of the lesbian feeling any sentiments towards a man.
  • The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Gertrude Stein (1933) – one of Stein's more accessible works. Others, whose lesbian content may not be apparent to the uninformed reader, include , , and .
  • , Christa Winsloe (1933)[13]
  • The Children's Hour (play), Lillian Hellman (1934)
  • Nightwood, Djuna Barnes (1936)
  • Lulu, Alban Berg (1937)
  • Young Man with a Horn, Dorothy Baker (1938) – Amy has a relationship with the singer Josephine Jordan[14]
  • Torchlight to Valhalla, Gale Wilhelm (1938)
  • The Friendly Young Ladies, Mary Renault (1943)[15]
  • Two Serious Ladies, Jane Bowles (1943)[16]
  • No Exit, Jean-Paul Sartre (1944) – Inès Serrano, a lesbian, is sent to Hell for murder
  • Women's Barracks, Tereska Torres (1950) – credited as the first US paperback-original bestseller[17][18]
  • Spring Fire, Marijane Meaker (as Vin Packer) (1952)
  • , Françoise Mallet-Joris (1952) – Helene, a 15-year-old schoolgirl, is seduced by her father's mistress, Tamara
  • The Price of Salt, Patricia Highsmith (under the pseudonym "Claire Morgan" before 1990) (1952) – considered the first lesbian novel with a 'happy ending'; basis for the 2015 film Carol.
  • Chocolates for Breakfast, Pamela Moore (1956) – portrays the bond between the protagonist Courtney Farrell and her boarding school teacher Miss Rosen, and the backlash against them from other teachers and students[19]
  • Odd Girl Out, I Am a Woman, Women in the Shadows, Journey to a Woman, and Beebo Brinker (a.k.a. The Beebo Brinker Chronicles), Ann Bannon (1957–1962)
  • The Girls in 3-B, Valerie Taylor (1959)[20][21]
  • Cassandra at the Wedding, Dorothy Baker (1962)[14]
  • The Group, Mary McCarthy (1962)
  • Winter Love, Han Suyin (1962)
  • The Killing of Sister George, Frank Marcus (1963) – basis for the 1968 film The Killing of Sister George (1968)
  • Desert of the Heart, Jane Rule (1964) – basis for the 1985 film Desert Hearts
  • From Doon with Death, Ruth Rendell (1964)
  • The Microcosm, Maureen Duffy (1966)
  • , Sybille Bedford (1968)
  • Patience and Sarah, Isabel Miller (1969)
  • Rubyfruit Jungle, (1973), Rita Mae Brown
  • Lover (1976), Bertha Harris
  • The Color Purple (1982), Alice Walker
  • (1983), Lee Lynch
  • Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (1985), Jeanette Winterson
  • (Monsoon of Women) (1985), Elula Perrin
  • (1985), Lee Lynch
  • (1986), Monique Wittig
  • (1986), Ann Allen Shockley
  • (1987), Jane Rule
  • , (1991), Jane Eaton Hamilton
  • (1991), Ibis Gómez-Vega
  • Six of One (1991), Rita Mae Brown
  • (1993), Carol Anshaw
  • Bastard Out of Carolina (1993), Dorothy Allison[citation needed]
  • Stone Butch Blues (1993), Leslie Feinberg
  • Chelsea Girls (1994), Eileen Myles
  • Empire of Dreams (1994), Giannina Braschi
  • Written on the Body (1994), Jeanette Winterson
  • (1995), Katherine V. Forrest
  • (1996), Carole LaFavor
  • Fall on Your Knees (1996), Ann-Marie MacDonald
  • Memory Mambo (1996), Achy Obejas
  • (1997),
  • Sweet Bitter Love (1997),
  • Loving Her (1997), Ann Allen Shockley
  • (1997), Jeanette Winterson
  • (1997), Lucy Jane Bledsoe
  • Hood (1998), Emma Donoghue
  • (1998),
  • Like (1998), Ali Smith
  • (1999), Emma Donoghue

Fiction and drama (21st century)[]

  • High Art (2000) Tanya Dolan
  • (2000), Emma Donoghue
  • Tipping the Velvet (2000), Sarah Waters
  • (2001), Lori L. Lake
  • Fingersmith (2002), Sarah Waters
  • Affinity (2002), Sarah Waters
  • Hotel World (2002), Ali Smith
  • (2002), Aren X. Tulchinsky
  • The Wanderground (2002), Sally Miller Gearhart
  • Hunger (2002), Jane Eaton Hamilton
  • (2003), Herlinatiens
  • (2003), Aren X. Tulchinsky
  • (2003), Karin Kallmaker
  • Southland (2003), Nina Revoyr
  • (2004), Judith Frank
  • Love's Masquerade (2004), Radclyffe
  • (2004),
  • Desert Blood (2005), Alicia Gaspar de Alba
  • (2005), Fiona Zedde
  • (2005), Aren X. Tulchinsky
  • (2005), Emma Donoghue
  • Back Talk (2006),
  • French Postcards (2006),
  • (2006),
  • (2006),
  • Of Drag Kings and the Wheel of Fate (2006),
  • (2006),
  • (2006), Lori L. Lake
  • The Night Watch (2006), Sarah Waters
  • (2006), Fiona Zedde
  • (2007), Fiona Zedde
  • (2007),
  • (2007),
  • (2007),
  • The Teahouse Fire (2007), Ellis Avery
  • Among Other Things, I've Taken Up Smoking (2008), Aoibheann Sweeney
  • (2008), Elana Dykewomon
  • (2008), Fiona Zedde
  • (2008), Emma Donoghue
  • (2008),
  • (2008), Edeet Ravel
  • (2009),
  • Girl Meets Boy (2009), Ali Smith
  • (2010), by Mikhail Volokhov[22]
  • Un Soir du Paris (2010), short story collection
  • ", (2010),
  • Buyer's Remorse (2011), Lori L. Lake
  • Cinnamon (2012), Samar Yazbek
  • Like Dark Minds (2013),
  • Ghostwriter (2012),
  • Tipping Over (2013),
  • Bury Me When I'm Dead: A Charlie Mack Motown Mystery (2016),
  • (2016), Jane Eaton Hamilton
  • Y Not, She Meowed (2017),
  • Death's Echoies (2018), Penny Mickelbury
  • Paper is White (2018), Hilary Zaid
  • Great America (2020), Clayton Overstreet
  • Between A Rock and A Soft Place: Selected Works (2021), S. Renee Bess

Mystery series by lead character[]

  • , a lesbian police officer in Denver, Colorado, in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian detective inspector in Wellington, New Zealand, in mysteries by
  • , an amateur lesbian detective in and by
  • , a private investigator of the weird in Tampa, Florida, in mysteries by
  • , a gangster/private investigator in Detroit, Michigan, in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian in mysteries by
  • , a 24-year-old Irish-Puerto Rican lesbian copy editor at her hometown newspaper in in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian detective inspector in Sydney, Australia in mysteries by Claire McNab
  • , a widely traveled lesbian translator in mysteries by
  • Cassidy James, a lesbian private investigator based in Portland, Oregon, in mysteries by Kate Calloway
  • Colleen Fitzgerald, a lesbian insurance investigator in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian French-Canadian RCMP officer in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian policewoman in St. Paul, Minnesota, in mysteries by Lori L. Lake[23]
  • Emma Victor, a lesbian private investigator in San Francisco, California, in mysteries by Mary Wings
  • Fleur de Roller, an undercover security agent who falls for her subject in The Woman Who Pretended To Love Men (Those Strange Women #2) by
  • Gianna Maglione, lesbian police lieutenant in Washington, D.C., in mysteries by Penny Mickelbury
  • (?), an androgynous lawyer in mysteries by Sarah Caudwell; in fact, Caudwell never specifies Tamar's sex
  • a lesbian gynecologist and diamond smuggler in Newcastle upon Tyne by
  • Jane Lawless, a lesbian restaurant owner and private investigator in Minneapolis in mysteries by Ellen Hart
  • , a lesbian college professor in mysteries by
  • , a charismatic lesbian in Buffalo, New York, in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian sheriff's detective in Montezuma County, Colorado, in mysteries by
  • Kate Delafield, a lesbian LAPD homicide detective and former Marine in mysteries by Katherine V. Forrest
  • Kate Martinelli, a lesbian homicide detective in San Francisco in mysteries by Laurie R. King
  • , a lesbian private investigator in mysteries by
  • , a therapist and a lesbian in Great Britain by Manda Scott
  • , the lesbian manager of a pub in tiny , Australia who inherits 51% of her father's private detective agency in Los Angeles, California, in mysteries by Claire McNab
  • , a charming lesbian patient at the Wonderdrug Psychiatric Center in The Woman Who Made Me Feel Strange (Those Strange Women #1) by
  • , a lesbian private investigator in Manhattan in mysteries by Sandra Scoppettone
  • , a lesbian police officer/fraud investigator in Portland, Oregon by Lori L. Lake[23]
  • , a lesbian crime reporter in Florida in mysteries by
  • Lindsay Gordon, a lesbian journalist and socialist in Glasgow, Scotland, in mysteries by Val McDermid
  • , a young, lesbian private investigator in San Francisco in mysteries by Jean Taylor
  • , a lesbian chemist with a specialization in forensics in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian private investigator based in Canada in mysteries by
  • , an FBI agent on medical leave and a bail bonds business owner; meets her first lesbian lover in Rainey Days, the first novel in the Rainey Bell mystery series by
  • , a lesbian private investigator in New Orleans in mysteries by J.M. Redmann
  • , a towering lesbian, the star player of the Leaping Lesbians of the Park Slope soccer team, and a graphic artist in New York City in mysteries by David Stukas
  • , a lesbian private investigator in London, England in mysteries by Amelia Ellis
  • , a lesbian small-town newspaper editor in Runnymeade by Rita Mae Brown
  • , lesbian printing company owner in Seattle, Washington, by
  • , a lesbian private investigator in London by Stella Duffy
  • Shay O'Hanlon, a lesbian coffee store owner in the humorous caper/mysteries by Jessie Chandler
  • , a lesbian travel agent in Boston, Massachusetts, by Sarah Dreher
  • , a lesbian private investigator in New York, New York, in the Stonewall Inn mysteries by
  • Toni Mendez, a lesbian private investigator in London by Sam Skyborne
  • , a lesbian district attorney specializing in borderline personalities in mysteries by
  • , a lesbian police detective in Kansas City, Missouri, in mysteries by
  • Virginia Kelly, a lesbian investment adviser in mysteries by Nikki Baker

Romance novels[]

  • La Fille aux yeux d'or – Honoré de Balzac
  • The Interpretation of Love and the Truth – Barbara Winkes[24]
  • It's Complicated:MisconceptionsErika Renee Land
  • Owning Regina – Lorelei Elstrom[25]
  • Curious Wine, Emergence of GreenKatherine V. Forrest
  • All True Lovers, Cytherea's Breath, AmanthaSarah Aldridge
  • Legacy of Love, Love in the Balance, Dawn of the Dance, Never Ending, Mirrors, Under the Witness Tree, Dance in the Key of Love
  • Mulligan, House on Sandstone, Just this Once, Secrets So Deep, Out of Love – KG MacGregor[26]
  • Sunset Island, Awaiting My Assignment, The Interim, Anything Your Heart Desires – AJ Adaire[27]
  • Beyond Midnight, Beautiful Strangers (Hyacinth Dickinson Series) – [28]
  • Honor Series, Justice Series, Provincetown Series – Radclyffe
  • All the Wrong Places, Car Pool, Embrace in Motion, Finders Keepers, In Every Port, Just LIke That, The Kiss that Counted, One Degree of Separation, Painted Moon, Sugar, Unforgettable, Making Up For Lost Time, Substitute for Love, Touchwood, Wild Things, Watermark (the last the sequel to Touchwood) – Karin Kallmaker
  • Course of Action, Coffee Sonata, Sheridan's Fate, September canvass – Gun Brooke[29]
  • Define Destiny JM Dragon[30]
  • First Instinct, Forever Found, Rising Storm, Hotel Liaison – J. Lee Meyer[31]
  • More Than Paradise, the Moon Island Series: Passion Bay, Saving Grace, The Sacred Shore, A Guarded Heart, and the Dark Vista series: Dark Dreamer, Dark Valentine – Jennifer Fulton
  • I Found My Heart In San Francisco Series, Arbor Vitae – SX Meagher[32]
  • Sweet Bitter Love
  • Sierra City, Gulf Breeze, Hunter's Way, Behind the Pine Curtain, Coyote Sky, Dawn of Change, The Rainbow Cedar, One Summer Night – Gerri Hill[33]
  • The Light Fantastic – L A Tucker
  • Never Say Never, Class Reunion – Linda Hill
  • None So Blind, Prairie Fire, Tumbleweed Fever – LJ Maas
  • Galveston 1900: Swept Away, The Bluest Eyes in Texas, and Borderline – Linda Crist
  • The Price of Fame, The Cost of Commitment, The Value of Valor – Lynn Ames[34]
  • The Price of SaltPatricia Highsmith (originally under the pseudonym "Claire Morgan")
  • Infinite Loop – Meghan O'Brien[35]
  • Innocent Hearts, Love's Melody Lost, Love's Tender Warriors, Tomorrow's Promise, Passion's Bright Fury, Love's MasqueradeRadclyffe
  • Hunter's Pursuit, Force of Nature, Whitewater Rendezvous, Focus of Desire – Kim Baldwin[36]
  • A Gift of Time, Gloria's Inn – Robin Alexander[37]
  • Private Dancer – TJ Vertigo[38]
  • 96 Hours, Turning the Page, Thy Neighbor's Wife, Too Close to Touch, Fresh Tracks, Mine, Starting from Scratch – Georgia Beers[39]
  • Turning Point – Lara Zielinsky[40]
  • Such A Pretty Face
  • Trails Merge, Learning Curve – Rachel Spangler[41]
  • On the Air – Geonn Cannon[42]
  • Gemini – Geonn Cannon[42]
  • Out on the Sound, The Girl Back Home, Sweet Carolina Girls[43]
  • Zen and Tonic – Kris Howard (2011)
  • Like Lovers Do, Different Dress, Ricochet in TimeLori L. Lake
  • As You Were[44][45]
  • Broken Star – Joann Lee[46]
  • Aspen's Stunt – Melissa Grace[47]
  • Double Shot, Mile High Club, Switching Teams, Girlfriends With Benefits, Sugar in the Morning, Velvet Canyon, Care by Kera, Broken Wing, Commando Jane – Ella Wrylee
  • Heart of the Hurricane – 1920's female bisexual couple Eliza and Joanna survive the August gales of Nova Scotia and find love

Historical novels[]

  • Vulture's Kiss, Sistine Heresy, Mephisto Aria
  • Miss McGhee
  • The Seahawk
  • Snow Moon RisingLori L. Lake
  • What's Best for Jane
  • When Women Were Warriors
  • Branded AnnMerry Shannon
  • Heart of the Hurricane –
  • In The Blood of The Greeks
  • Where Shadows Linger
  • Hidden Truths
  • Snow White and Her Queen

Science fiction, fantasy, and horror[]

These science fiction works frequently address the issue of feminist/lesbian separatist communities. See Lesbian science fiction for a more detailed review.

  • Joanna Russ's The Female Man
  • Marion Zimmer Bradley's Renunciate series
  • Jane Fletcher's Celaeno series
  • Katherine V. Forrest's Daughters of a Coral Dawn, Daughters of an Amber Noon, Daughters of an Emerald Dusk, and Dreams and Swords, an anthology with the novella O Captain, My Captain
  • Jewelle Gomez's The Gilda Stories, Don't Explain
  • Nicola Griffith's Ammonite and Slow River
  • Patrick Califia's Doc and Fluff
  • 's Call of the Dark anthology
  • Karin Kallmaker, , Julia Watts and 's New Exploits books, including Once Upon a Dyke, Bell, Book & Dyke, Stake Through the Heart, and Tall in the Saddle
  • 's Hadra series
  • Laurie J. Marks's Dancing Jack, Elemental series (Fire Logic, Earth Logic, Water Logic)
  • 's The Three and Wild
  • 's Daughters of Darkness and Dark Angels
  • 's Supreme Constellations series
  • 's Lamplight
  • 's
  • 's and ''
  • Libba Bray's characters Felicity Worthington and Pippa Cross in her Gemma Doyle trilogy (A Great and Terrible Beauty, Rebel Angels, and The Sweet Far Thing) are at first thought to be very close friends, almost sisters, until it is revealed they are harboring a secret love for one another
  • 's When Women Were Warriors series: Book 1: The Warrior's Path, 2: A Journey of the Heart, and 3: A Hero's Tale
  • Malinda Lo's Ash and Huntress
  • Women on the Edge of Space, a space-opera anthology published by Circlet Press
  • Gay male author Geoff Ryman's Arthur C. Clarke Award-winning The Child Garden features a lesbian protagonist
  • Sam Skyborne's Simulation: The Dawn of a Superhero.
  • 's The Dark Wife
  • Raven c.s. McCracken's
  • 's Black Blade Blues, Honeyed Words, and Forged in Fire
  • 's Broken Wings, Promises, Promises, and Adijan and the Genie
  • 's Garoul series: Goldenseal,Ambereye, and Indigo Moon
  • Merry Shannon's Sword of the Guardian
  • 's "Tales of the Pack" series of novels including Lunatic Fringe and Hungry Ghost
  • 's Tainted Elite

Young adult fiction[]

  • Ruby (1976), Rosa Guy
  • (1978), Sandra Scoppettone
  • The Last of Eden (1980), Stephanie Tolan
  • (1981),
  • Annie on My Mind (1982), Nancy Garden
  • Death Wore a Diadem (1989), Iona McGregor
  • (1996), Nancy Garden
  • (1997), Jacqueline Woodson
  • The Year of Freaking Out (1997), Sarah Walker
  • (1997), Paula Boock
  • (1998),
  • (1998),
  • Summer Sisters (1998), Judy Blume
  • Tomorrow Wendy (1998),
  • (2000), Sue Hines
  • (2000),
  • Empress of the World (2001), Sara Ryan
  • Finding H.F. (2001), Julia Watts
  • (2003),
  • (2003),
  • Keeping You a Secret (2003), Julie Anne Peters
  • (2003), Lauren Myracle
  • (2004), Maureen Johnson
  • (2004), Claire Hennessy
  • (2004),
  • (2004),
  • (2004),
  • Sugar Rush (2004), Julie Burchill
  • (2005), Julie Anne Peters
  • The Will of the Empress (2005), Tamora Pierce
  • (2007), Julie Anne Peters
  • The Rules for Hearts (2007), Sara Ryan
  • (2007), Brent Hartinger
  • (2008),
  • (2008),
  • (2008),
  • (2008), Jennifer McMahon
  • Pretty Little Liars (2008–present), Sara Shepard
  • () (2008), Tamara Bach
  • (2008),
  • Rage: A Love Story (2009), Julie Anne Peters
  • Ash (2009), Malinda Lo
  • (2007),
  • Torn (2009),
  • (2011),
  • The Miseducation of Cameron Post (2012), Emily Danforth
  • (2013),
  • (2014),
  • (2015),

Fan fiction[]

Fanfiction writers have produced many works in which female characters from fictional sources (such as television shows, movies, video games, anime, manga or comic books) are paired in romantic, spiritual, or sexual relationships. The genre is known by a variety of terms, including femslash, saffic, yuri and f/f slash. Lesbian content in fanfiction dates at least to 1977, but has become more popular during the 1990s and 2000s.

Lesbian and feminist publishing houses[]

Further reading[]

  • The Lesbian in Literature by Gene Damon (Barbara Grier) – bibliography of any title with lesbian content through 1969
  • Chloe plus Olivia – An Anthology of Lesbian Literature from the Seventeenth Century to the Present, ed. Lillian Faderman, Penguin Books 1995

See also[]

References[]

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  2. ^ Dobler, Jens: "Der Liebe Lust und Leid der Frau zur Frau. Ein wiederentdeckter Lesbenroman von 1895". Online-Projekt Lesbengeschichte
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  58. ^ "Home". Regal Crest Enterprises.
  59. ^ "Supposed Crimes LLC - LGBTQA Fiction". Supposed Crimes Publishers.
  60. ^ "Quality Lesbian Books, Lesbian Romance, Lesbian E-Books". Ylva Publishing.

External links[]

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