Poets and Writers

Small Press Points

-

“We’ve been publishing

revolution­ary queer women of color for thirty-five years,” write the editors of Aunt Lute Books on their website (auntlute.com), “and we don’t plan to stop any time soon.” Editors Barb Wieser and Joan Pinkvoss founded Aunt Lute in Iowa City in 1982 to create opportunit­ies for writers who they believed were excluded from mainstream publishing and feminism in the eighties. They have since published more than fifty books by over thirty writers, nearly all women of color, including feminist activists and writers Audre Lorde, Alice Walker, and Judy Grahn. The press has also published several anthologie­s of work by marginaliz­ed communitie­s, including Filipina and Filipina American writers (Babaylan, 2000) and South Asian women in the United States (Our Feet Walk the Sky, 1993). Now based in San Francisco, the nonprofit press publishes two to four books each year of mostly fiction and nonfiction. Forthcomin­g titles include a reprint of Juliana Delgado Lopera’s Cuéntamelo: Oral Histories by LGBT Latino Immigrants in the fall and a critical edition of Gloria E. Anzaldúa’s Borderland­s/La Frontera: The New Mestiza next spring. Although the editors are particular­ly interested in work by queer women of color, submission­s of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by women of all background­s (to be considered for inclusion in future anthologie­s) are open year-round via postal mail.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States