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Lesbian Hero: Nancy Garden

29 Jul Posted by in Lee Lynch | 1 comment
Lesbian Hero: Nancy Garden

People all over the world were heartbroken to hear of Nancy Garden’s death in June. The Golden Crown Literary Society (GCLS) was only weeks from presenting her an award for her beloved 1982 novel Annie On My Mind. Thousands upon thousands of kids worldwide found understanding of themselves or others by reading the classic young adult romance between two teenage girls. Annie made a difference in adult lives too. I fell in love with the book in my forties; what a comfort it would have been to read it at age 15!

Nancy grew up in New England and New York. She worked in publishing and wrote ten books before Annie, thirty-five in all. Her lifelong partner, Sandra Scott, survives her. Nancy has been honored by numerous awards. According to her website, Annie On My Mind was banned by the Kansas City school system in 1993 and burned in demonstrations. Courageous students brought a First Amendment lawsuit in 1995 and won two years later. Not to be deterred, Nancy began yet another career and became an avid speaker on First Amendment rights.

Members of GCLS were slightly comforted that she knew ahead of time about her award and her work continues to be celebrated, and by lesbians. In her speech of thanks, she wrote about the impact on her of Radclyffe Hall’s 1928 novel The Well of Loneliness. She said, “[ The Well ] ends with an impassioned plea for justice and understanding. That plea made me vow, at 16 or so, to write a book one day for and about my people that told the truth about who we are –and ended happily.”

That was my early story too; I found the same ambition and inspiration from Hall’s book. I had the opportunity to work with Nancy’s GCLS acceptance speech, inserting her handwritten edits. There is no way to express how moved I was to be trusted with the task, to handle her words. What an incredible honor, experience and sad pleasure.

There were no Nancy Garden books when I was 16, but “Annie” has been around for other lesbians for 30 plus years. I wondered what readers might say about the book today and thought I’d let them speak for themselves here. Their Twitter comments over the past few years attest to the amazing longevity and power of Nancy Garden’s enchanting and enlighten storytelling.

Lesbian-Classics>This is so dumb but i found a copy of Annie On My Mind at the library in seventh grade and was horrifascinated by the cover & stole it.

>I see why this book has been so frequently challenged & I adore it all the more!

>Did you discover Annie On My Mind as a teen at the public library, like me? Were you scared to check it out, but did anyway?

>the reaction of Liza’s friends, of her family, or her teachers, of her school to the character being gay …Garden made it so real, and I couldn’t help but cry at how unjust it was. Because even though this is a piece of fiction, it has actually happened to so many people. It was awful, but Garden captured that cruelty and misjudgment perfectly.

>Author Katherine Applegate, winner of the Newbery Medal: “Free to a Good Mind”: Left banned book Annie On My Mind in an airport luggage cart.

>Annie on my Mind was the second LGBTQ book I read & hid under my mattress.

>Author Karin Kallmaker: It’s World Book Day! I recommend a banned book – read something dangerous! Annie on My Mind by Nancy Garden comes to mind. Lots of really narrow-minded people have tried for decades to make sure you can’t read it. Screw ‘em! Read it!

>I so loved selling Annie on My Mind when I worked at a bookstore.

>Nancy Garden’s Annie On My Mind is One of the Most Important #LGBT Teen Novels Ever Written.

>I read tht buk wn I ws 12- It gave a realty to something I was feeln.

>Author Lesléa Newman tweeted: Paying homage to Nancy Garden by re-reading Annie On My Mind. It’s so good! No wonder it’s a classic.

>Went to check-out Annie on my Mind in celebration of a long lived life. All 3 copies were out and I’m 7th hold. Love it!

 

 

Lee’s new book The Raid is now available in both paper and electronic format from Bold Strokes Books

The Raid by Lee Lynch
Before Stonewall, having a drink with friends or your girl could mean jail. In 1961, The Old Town Tavern is more than just a gay bar. It’s a home to strangers who have become family. They drink, they dance, they fall in lust and in love. They don’t even know who the enemy is, only that it is powerful enough to order the all-too-willing vice squad to destroy the bar and their lives. Would these women and men still have family, a job, a place to live after…The Raid? This was how it was done then, this was the gay life, and this is the resilient gay will.

Lee Lynch’s novel Rafferty Street concludes her epic Morton River Valley Trilogy (Dusty’s Queen of Hearts Diner and Morton River Valley). In this stand-alone novel Annie Heaphy, beloved hero of Lynch’s classic Toothpick House, reunites with her old crowd. She loves her job driving people with disabilities to and from work – until being gay becomes an issue. Valley gays unite to defend her as she revels in love with the right, and wrong, women. Lynch’s warm, engaging prose deeply affects her readers as she tells her story – even more powerful today when civil rights for gays are still denied. Now available in electronic format from Bold Strokes Books.

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