"Ladies & Gentlemen, this is a reminder that it is illegal to panhandle on the Subway. Please do not give to criminals, and instead give to the charity of your choice. That includes anybody playing horrible music."
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Anonymous
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Overheard in Pikeville, TN during a class in how to do non-Google research, "I'll come around to each of you (6 of them) and see how you're doing with your topics." Topics chosen by the students were: wife beating, NASCAR, child abuse, welfare injustice, minimum wage, and gay bashing. I almost cried.
Lee Houck was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee and now lives in Brooklyn, NY. His novel, Yield was the winner of Project QueerLit, and was published by Kensington Books in 2010. His writing appears in several anthologies including From Boys to Men and Hair, and in Collection, a limited-edition chapbook. Additionally, he has worked with Jennifer Miller's Circus AMOK! for many, many seasons. Also: LeeHouck.com.
"A sparkling entry from a promising young queer author." --ANX National
"Brisk and buoyant, Yield is an engaging debut that captures big city hustle with small-town heart." --Richard Labonte; series editor, Best Gay Erotica
"Yield is a subtle novel that creeps into your soul...a story of unexpectedly finding your place in the world." --Emanuel Xavier, author of Christ Like
"Witty and wrenching, Yield is required reading for anyone who wants to know what it means to be young, gay and without a roadmap in today's world." --Vestal McIntyre, author of Lake Overturn
"Yield is a bold and shocking story concerned with humanism. It's a dazzling and sometimes dangerous foray into post-queer realism." --Charlie Vázquez
"...Literary, subtle and heartfelt poems..." --John Stahl, Ganymede
"A complex, evocative, and unforgettable book." --Jeff Mann, author of A History of Barbed Wire
"...if Ernest Hemingway and Zelda Sayer had status updates." --Stephanie Hughes
1 comment:
Overheard in Pikeville, TN during a class in how to do non-Google research, "I'll come around to each of you (6 of them) and see how you're doing with your topics." Topics chosen by the students were: wife beating, NASCAR, child abuse, welfare injustice, minimum wage, and gay bashing. I almost cried.
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