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Archive for the ‘LGBT novel’ Category

In celebration of my novel The Unicorn, The Mystery being featured on Sapphic Book Bingo, I’m posting this excerpt from the book. The book was inspired by “The Unicorn Tapestries” currently housed at The Cloisters division of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan. A unicorn from the Middle Ages is speaking and has come across two lesbian nuns who also live in The Cloisters.

Chapter Thirty

I was captured because I was entranced by a patch of English daisies. The petals were tinged with pink and there was a yellow center. There was a patch of the flowers near the place in the abbey where the silent women lived. 

I was just about to approach the path, when I heard voices.

“Oh, look — a patch of Mary flowers,” said a woman.

“Shhhh. We’re not allowed to speak,” said a lower female voice.

“What does it matter, the Mother Superior is not here,” said the first woman.

I quickly hid behind a medlar bush. I suspected that these women were the ones I had left behind a short while ago. They must have finished their loving and were wandering around like me, looking at flowers.

“But we have been gone so long, that she might come looking for us and hear us,” replied the one with the lower voice.

“Maybe, the Mother Superior will think that she is delusional and hearing voices. Maybe she will think that she hears the voice of God and that She is female…” The woman with the higher voice paused. “Maybe I shouldn’t say that to you. Surely you think me blasphemous.”

She was met by silence. Finally, the woman with the lower voice spoke:

“Actually, I think you may be on to something. Maybe God is a woman. How are we to know?”

Now, it was the other woman’s turn to be silent.

Then she spoke:

“Yes, you are right, my beloved. How are we to know?  Certainly, the church fathers would cover it up if God was a woman. I bet the Mother Superior would cover it up too. If she had the time, I bet she’d wander the abbey too because it is so beautiful and when she found the Mary flower, she would pick its petals slowly, saying ‘He loves me, He loves me not.’  Or maybe she’d be saying, ‘She loves me, She loves me not.’” Then the woman with the higher voice had been speaking.  She broke into a titter.

The other one giggled so gruffly that she sounded like she was giggling reluctantly. Then she said, “I never got that impression from her. She’s probably so miserable that she never has any kind of attraction. Seriously, though, we should go back before someone comes looking for us.”

“Ok,” said the first one.  “I’ll follow you but then wait a while after I enter the convent. We don’t want anyone to think we’ve been together.”

I waited a long time behind the medlar bush. Then when the coast was clear, I retraced my steps to the English daisy, lowered my head and inhaled the spicy sweet fragrance of the succulent flower. I discovered that there was a trail of English daisies. Intoxicated by the vapors, I followed the flowers.

To see the book on Sapphic Book Bingo, click here:
https://jae-fiction.com/butch-character-who-is-shorter/

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I am delighted to be able to bring you this review by the esteemed author Maria G. Fama on my novel Loving Artemis, An Endearing Tale of Revolution, Love and Marriage (Thorned Heart Press; August 16, 2022):

In her absorbing new novel, Loving Artemis, Janet Mason gives her readers a coming-of-age tale masterfully framed by the story of Thalia and Grace, two professional, middle-aged women in a long-term relationship in 2015. We are then taken back in time to the turbulent late 1970s, when the Civil Rights, Gay Rights, and Women’s Rights Movements were making inroads into the national consciousness. There we meet bright, talented, working-class teenage girls, Artemis, Grace, and Linda, among other interesting characters, both male and female. The girls grapple with their sexuality, family expectations, education, relationships, and life decisions, while finding their way in a world with many pitfalls, including drugs and alcohol. This novel contains an added bonus of providing engrossing facts about history, science, culture, and religion, as Artemis and Grace ponder them.

We are taken back in time to the turbulent late 1970s, when the Civil Rights, Gay Rights, and Women’s Rights Movements were making inroads into the national consciousness. There we meet bright, talented, working-class teenage girls.

 Loving Artemis offers within its pages, stories of romance, danger, disappointment, love, and the ultimate vindication of the human spirit. This novel is very rich and satisfying and is not to be missed.


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I was delighted earlier this week to learn that my recently published novel Loving Artemis, An Endearing Tale of Revolution, Love and Marriage (from Thorned Heart Press in Oregon) is on Q Spirit’s important list of the top LGBTQ Christian books in 2022.

Q Spirit includes the following listing:

Loving Artemis: An Endearing Tale of Revolution, Love and Marriage” by Janet Mason.

A lesbian romance novel set in the 1970s captures what it was like to come of age in the post-Stonewall but pre-AIDS era. Church and other spiritual traditions are woven into the narrative, including the goddess Artemis. The author is an award-winning creative writer and Unitarian Universalist lay minister. Q Spirit’s annual list of the top LGBTQ Christian books included her novels in in 2018 (THEY, a biblical tale of secret genders) and 2020 (The Unicorn, The Mystery) published by Adelaide Books in New York and Lisbon.

To view the entire list, click here.

Since the Q Spirit ministry which includes an online newsletter promotes LGBTQ spirituality in all forms and prominently includes the saints, I decided to include an excerpt from Loving Artemis that references the saints. (I spent a lot of time on Catholic.com researching this.) In this chapter, one of my main characters, Grace, drops acid at a party and imagines that Artemis, the other main character, is Saint Anne. The novel is set in the 1970s.

Grace followed Saint Anne outside and got onto the back of her motorcycle. Grace wrapped her arms around her. They started to move. The night air felt good against Grace’s face. She could feel purple streamers of light trailing behind them. She hadn’t jumped out of a window, but she was flying.
“What is your house number?” Saint Anne asked when they were stopped at a red light.
“Seven,” replied Grace over the purr of the engine.
Seven was her house number, and it was also the number of glowing angels that descended from the stars and spoke her name. When they pulled up at the curb outside her house, Grace got off the bike. She knew she lived there, but at the same time she wasn’t sure if she was really the girl who lived there. She sat down in the street.
“Whoa,” said Saint Anne. “Are you okay?”
She got off her bike and helped Grace to her feet.
Grace wondered if she really had met Saint Anne. Could it be true?

Loving Artemis, by Janet Mason

For information on my novel Loving Artemis click here

For information on my novel Loving Artemis click here

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I’m very excited to announce that my novel Loving Artemis, an endearing tale of revolution, love and marriage from Thorned Heart Press is now available in eBook form, paperback and hardback.

Reading Loving Artemis is a full-body immersion into the 1970s, with the smells of joints and musk oil, the tastes of beer and lip gloss, and the sounds of motorcycles roaring down a highway. It captures perfectly the days when young queers searched library catalog cards to find “homosexual” books, when teen lesbians felt they were the only ones in the world. More than a coming-of-age story, more than the love story of Artemis and Grace, the novel is also an illuminating and thoroughly enjoyable journey through the decades. I cared about these characters and loved seeing their lives come full circle by the book’s end in the 21st century.

Kathy Anderson, novelist and playwright

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