Читать книгу Bobby Blanchard, Lesbian Gym Teacher - Monica Nolan - Страница 2
Outstanding praise for Lois Lenz, Lesbian Secretary!
Оглавление“Unabashedly campy and titillating, Nolan’s debut novel is a tale of 1950s lesbian career girls loose in the big city….”
—Publishers Weekly
“Nolan squeezes her kicky premise for plenty of juice, leaving the pulp in Lois Lenz, Lesbian Secretary deliciously intact.”
—Entertainment Weekly
“Monica Nolan’s first novel, Lois Lenz, Lesbian Secretary, is a delicious contemporary homage to queer pulp novels…”
—Bay Times
“In her second book, Monica Nolan gives us what we really want—a campy pulp filled with gratuitous lesbian sex, communism, reefer madness and ruthless dictation…”
—Curve magazine
And praise for The Big Book of Lesbian Horse Stories!
“Cleverly merging two genres that are a perfect match, but somehow have never met, The Big Book of Lesbian Horse Stories is a hilarious cross-breeding of the lesbian pulp novel and the horse-girl fantasia. Authors Alisa Surkis and Monica Nolan clearly know their stuff, sending up a century of girl-loves-horse and girl-loves-girl stories with pitch-perfect language, pacing and plots.”
—Bitch magazine
“You know how the old adage goes: You can’t judge a book by its cover. Well, The Big Book of Lesbian Horse Stories is an exception to the rule. The collection’s tawdry tales of equine-loving les-bos are as vibrant, juicy, and pulpy as the sexy cover illustration. The stories are wildly entertaining…saddle up for this fun ride.”
—Out
“The book can be loved for what it is—eight vintage stories of ladies, lust and the pretty ponies they love. It’s kind of like Black Beauty for big girls.”
—Portland Mercury
“If, like me, you have a section of bookshelf devoted entirely to books you purchased solely for the sake of their glorious titles, you will undoubtedly be delighted to add to it the wonderfully named The Big Book of Lesbian Horse Stories. You might, too—as I did—actually enjoy the stories. Part of the fun of picking one’s way through this book comes not just from anticipating which particular genre the authors will take on next, but also from discovering how they’ve worked an equine theme into possibly unlikely settings.”
—Sarah Waters, The Erotic Review