|
|
Film Qlub
Sunday, February 16, 2pm
Riley Room, Central Library
Adults and teens ages 17 and up are invited to view and discuss LGBTQ-themed movies. Films will be shown in Central Library's Riley Meeting Room.
|
|
|
Bloom
by Kevin Panetta
After graduation, Ari is desperate to move to the big city with his band, but he has to find someone who can replace him at his parent's struggling bakery, so when he meets Hector he thinks his prayers have been answered.
|
|
|
Forward
by Lisa Maas
Still smarting years after a horrible breakup, Rayanne finds herself drawn to one of her crushes--Ali, who is still feeling numb after the death of her wife one year ago.
|
|
|
Heavy Vinyl. Riot on the Radio
by Carly Usdin
Starting her dream job at a local vinyl store, Chris is stunned to discover that her coworkers are all part of an underground fighting club that takes on the patriarchy and fights crime.
|
|
|
Maggie the Mechanic: A Love and Rockets Book
by Jaime Hernandez
The first of three volumes chronicles the globe-trotting adventures and exploits of Maggie, her best friend and occasional lover Hopey, and their companions, Peggy Century, her weirdo mentor Izzy, aging wrestler Rena Titanon, and Maggie's new love interest, Rand Race.
|
|
|
Nimona
by Noelle Stevenson
Lord Blackheart, a villain with a vendetta, and his sidekick, Nimona, an impulsive young shapeshifter, must prove to the kingdom that Sir Goldenloin and the Institution of Law Enforcement and Heroics aren't the heroes everyone thinks they are.
|
|
|
On a Sunbeam
by Tillie Walden
Interweaves the story of a crew traveling into deep space to rebuild beautiful, broken structures, with that of a pair of teen girls who meet at boarding school and fall deeply in love.
|
|
|
When I Arrived at the Castle
by Emily Carroll
This new gothic horror comic full of mystery and eroticism from Emily Carroll is sure to make your skin crawl. Because the horrors that hide in the Countess’s castle and the mysteries underneath its turrets have eluded all those who’ve sought to snuff out its dangers before her…and now she’s arrived. But how could she ever prepare herself for what she finds inside?
|
|
|
Afro-Fabulations: The Queer Drama of Black Life
by Tavia Amolo Ochieng' Nyongó
In Afro-Fabulations: The Queer Drama of Black Life, cultural critic and historian Tavia Nyong'o surveys the conditions of contemporary black artistic production in the era of post-blackness. Moving fluidly between the insurgent art of the 1960's and the intersectional activism of the present day, Afro-Fabulations challenges genealogies of blackness that ignore its creative capacity to exceed conditions of traumatic loss, social death, and archival erasure.
|
|
|
Cleanness
by Garth Greenwell
In a follow-up to What Belongs to You, set in Sofia, Bulgaria—a landlocked city in Southern Europe—an American teacher grapples with the intimate encounters that have marked his years abroad as he prepares to leave the place he’s come to call home.
|
|
|
My Two Moms and Me
by Michael Joosten
A heartwarming board book tribute to same-sex parents and their children is comprised of scenes featuring diverse, hardworking moms sharing family days of eating breakfast, going on playdates and enjoying a swim at the pool before settling down with a bedtime story.
|
|
|
On Swift Horses
by Shannon Pufahl
A lonely newlywed immerses herself in postwar Los Angeles’ horseracing circuit to navigate her mother’s loss, while her Las Vegas casino worker brother searches for a beloved young card cheat who has been run out of town.
|
|
|
Real Queer America
by Samantha Allen
A transgender reporter for the Daily Beast visits Red States in America's "flyover country" and tells the stories of extraordinary LGBT people who decided to stay, rather than leave for the more liberal coasts, and describes their work for change.
|
|
|
Indianapolis Public Library P.O. Box 211 Indianapolis, Indiana 46206-0211 317-275-4100www.indypl.org/ |
|
|
|