AmazonThe New Press Edges of the Rainbow LGBTQ Japan By Michel Delsol & Haruku Shinozaki “The exquisite humanity in this book transcends all geographical and cultural difference to show us what is universal in ourselves, and germane to place. A triumph of insight and heart.”—Hilton Als, staff writer for the New Yorker and a […]
Author: dhusername
Delhi: Communities of Belonging
AmazonBarnes & Noble Delhi: Communities of Belonging By Sunil Gupta & Charan Singh “Between 2009 and 2013, there were many of us coming out to our families and society. We were beginning to lead our lives the way we wanted. But now we are back where we were. Now we fear the law and […]
Pride & Joy
AmazonBarnes & Noble Pride & Joy Taking the Streets of New York City By Jurek Wajdowicz “Captures the five-alarm sensory blast that is the NYC Gay Pride March.”—Kate Clinton “Pride and Joy is both an exuberant portrait of Pride, and a celebration of New York City. Jurek Wajdowicz’s rich collage of individual portraits forms […]
Five Bells
AmazonBarnes & Noble Five Bells Being LGBT in Australia By Jenny Papalexandris “These poetic and deeply personal portraits tell the stories of people in the LGBT community in their many interconnecting roles: as sons and daughters and mothers and lovers, as musicians and artists and students, as people alone yet part of the human family.”—from […]
Bordered Lives
AmazonBarnes & Noble Bordered Lives Transgender Portraits from Mexico By Kike Arnal “Photography can make a powerful contribution to the spread of tolerance simply by making people visible to each other. That is just what Bordered Lives does, without fuss or frills.”—Peter Galassi, former chief curator of photography, The Museum of Modern Art […]
Lyudmila & Natasha
AmazonBarnes & Noble Lyudmila and Natasha Russian Lives By Misha Friedman “Misha Friedman’s soulful collection of gorgeous portraits and fly-on-the-wall reportage pulls you in slowly, invites you to linger, and leaves you dying of curiosity to know more about these two women in love, living in a perplexing country where even the most banal public […]