Difference between revisions of "Pulitzer Prize Winning LGBTQ Authors and Poets"
From QueerBio.com
Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
* [[LGBTQ Mystery and Horror Writers]] | * [[LGBTQ Mystery and Horror Writers]] | ||
* [[LGBTQ Authors of Children and Teen Books]] | * [[LGBTQ Authors of Children and Teen Books]] | ||
− | |||
* [[LGBTQ Writers and Illustrators of Comic Books]] | * [[LGBTQ Writers and Illustrators of Comic Books]] | ||
* [[LGBTQ Science Fiction Writers]] | * [[LGBTQ Science Fiction Writers]] |
Revision as of 14:58, 21 August 2017
Authors
- A. Scott Berg, 'Lindbergh' (1998)
- Willa Cather, 'One of Ours' (1923) first lgbt woman to win
- Michael Cunningham, 'The Hours' (1998)
- Edna Ferber, 'Showboat' (1926)
- Steven Naifeh, co-author of 'Jackson Pollock: An American Saga' (1989)
- Gregory White Smith, co-author of 'Jackson Pollock: An American Saga' (1989)
- Alice Walker, 'The Color Purple' (1982)
- Thornton Wilder, 'The Bridge of San Luis Rey' (1928)
Poets
- John Lawrence Ashbery, 'Self-portrait in a Convex Mirror' (1975)
- W. H. Auden, 'The Age of Anxiety' (1948)
- Elizabeth Bishop, Poet Laureate of the United States (1949-1950)
- Richard Howard, 'Untitled Subjects' (1970)
- Amy Lowell, 'What's O'Clock' (1926)
- William Morris Meredith, Jr., 'Partial Accounts: New and Selected Poems' (1988)
- James Merrill, 'Divine Comedies' (1976)
- Mary Oliver, 'American Primitive' (1984)
- James Schuyler, 'The Morning of the Poem' (1980)
- Edna St. Vincent Millay, 'The Ballad of the Harpweaver' (1923)
- Sara Teasdale, 'Love Songs' (1918) first woman to win
- William Carlos Williams, 'Pictures From Brueghel and Other Poems' (1963)