Read how I got ₤5 Absolutely free and won ₤200,000 at Prime Scratch.
www.PrimeScratchCards.co.uk(Sponsored Results)Alternative literary festival for the GLBT community held in New Orleans.
http://www.sasfest.org/American Library Association; with annual awards, suggested readings and newsletter.
http://www.ala.org/ala/glbtrt/Listings include fiction including drama and poetry, and informative non-fiction.
http://www.geocities.com/genxcelt/reading.htmlGroup for gay writers who live in London. Biographies, events, news, photo gallery, samples of published work, readings.
http://www.gaylondonwriters.comBibliography to reference sources and anthologies from Texas Tech University.
http://library.ttu.edu/ul/subjects/humanities/english/gayandlesbian.phpAwards organization for science fiction/fantasy writing.
http://www.spectrumawards.org/An extensive selection of lesbian poetry by various authors, beginning with Sappho up to more contemporary poets, mostly by women.
http://www.sappho.com/Producer of the Lambda Literary Awards. Includes information about the awards and a magazine they publish.
http://www.lambdaliterary.orgGay and lesbian writers' salon based in Chicago, Illinois.
http://www.newtownwriters.org/Contest to celebrate and brings media attention to unpublished authors of queer writing and to open doors for publication of their work.
http://www.projectqueerlit.com/Association of lesbians and gay men in publishing. Includes related resources, list of the top 100 novels, and awards.
http://www.publishingtriangle.org/Includes discussion boards, submission notices, news, and chat.
http://www.queerwriters.com/Essay about themes and methods in an educational context. Includes bibliographical references.
http://www.georgetown.edu/tamlit/essays/gay_les.htmlA non-profit organization supporting studies by students across Canada in gay and lesbian issues and hosts of Wilde About Sappho, an annual celebration of GLBT literature.
http://www.lambdafoundation.com/Chronicles some of the classic lesbian pulp fiction contained in the Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture at Duke University. These paperbacks were popular in the 1950s and early 1960s.
http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/women/pulp.html