The 26th Lambda Literary Awards were held on June 2, 2014, to honour works of LGBT literature published in 2013.[1] The list of nominees was released on March 6.[1]
The ceremony was held at Cooper Union, in conjunction with Book Expo America.[2]
Special awards
Category | Winner |
---|---|
Pioneer Award | Kate Bornstein[2] |
Trustee Award | Alison Bechdel[2] |
Betty Berzon Emerging Writer Award | Imogen Binnie, Charles Rice-González[2] |
Jim Duggins Outstanding Mid-Career Novelists' Prize | Michael Thomas Ford, Radclyffe[2] |
Nominees and winners
Category | Winner | Nominated |
---|---|---|
Bisexual Fiction | Susan Choi, My Education[2] |
|
Bisexual Non-Fiction | Maria San Filippo, The B Word: Bisexuality in Contemporary Film and Television[2] |
|
Gay Erotica | Alex Jeffers, The Padisah's Son and the Fox[2] |
|
Gay Fiction | Luis Negrón (tr. Suzanne Jill Levine), Mundo Cruel[2] |
|
Gay Memoir/Biography | Glenway Wescott (ed. Jerry Rosco), A Heaven of Words: Last Journals[2] |
|
Gay Mystery | Janice Law, The Prisoner of the Riviera[2] |
|
Gay Poetry | Rigoberto González, Unpeopled Eden[2] |
|
Gay Romance | TJ Klune, Into This River I Drown[2] |
|
Lesbian Erotica | Sacchi Green, ed., Wild Girls Wild Nights: True Lesbian Sex Stories[2] |
|
Lesbian Fiction | Chinelo Okparanta, Happiness, Like Water[2] |
|
Lesbian Memoir/Biography | Barrie Jean Borich, Body Geographic[2] |
|
Lesbian Mystery | Katherine V. Forrest, High Desert[2] |
|
Lesbian Poetry | Ana Božičević, Rise in the Fall[2] |
|
Lesbian Romance | Andrea Bramhall, Clean Slate[2] |
|
LGBT Anthology | Karen Martin and Makhosazana Xaba, Queer Africa: New and Collected Fiction Jim Elledge and David Groff, Who's Yer Daddy?: Gay Writers Celebrate Their Mentors and Forerunners[2] |
|
LGBT Children's/Young Adult | Sara Farizan, If You Could Be Mine David Levithan, Two Boys Kissing[2] |
|
LGBT Debut Fiction | Nik Nicholson, Descendants of Hagar[2] |
|
LGBT Drama | Michel Marc Bouchard, Tom at the Farm[2] |
|
LGBT Graphic Novel | Nicole Georges, Calling Dr. Laura: A Graphic Memoir[2] |
|
LGBT Non-Fiction | Hilton Als, White Girls[2] |
|
LGBT Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror | Melissa Scott and Amy Griswold, Death by Silver[2] |
|
LGBT Studies | Christina B. Hanhardt, Safe Space: Gay Neighborhood History and the Politics of Violence[2] |
|
Transgender Fiction | Trish Salah, Wanting in Arabic[2] |
|
Transgender Non-Fiction | Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore, The End of San Francisco[2] |
|
References
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