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Many science fiction and fantasy stories involve LGBT characters, or otherwise represent themes that are relevant to LGBT issues and the LGBT community. This is a list of notable stories, and/or stories from notable series or anthologies, and/or by notable authors; it is not intended to be all-inclusive.
[120] This novel is set in a women's prison in London, explores the "Victorian world of spiritualism," and won the Somerset Maugham Award for Lesbian and Gay Fiction. [121] Like her first novel, Affinity contains overarching lesbian themes, and was acclaimed by critics on its publication, and later turned into a feature film .
Apart from the above-listed examples, there are some other characters that stand out apart from the rest. For instance, like Pythio in Head Over Heels is non-binary, [ 42 ] Musidorus in the same play comes out by saying that they are both a son and daughter to their mother-in-law, [ 43 ] [ 44 ] May in & Juliet is defined as a character who is ...
Bel Thorne is an intersex ship captain in this series of science fiction novels and uses it/its pronouns. [50] Fitz Wahram 2312: Kim Stanley Robinson: 2013 Fitz Wahram is an intersex character in this science fiction novel. [45] Max Walker Golden Boy: Abigail Tarttelin: 2013 Max is a lead character in this award-winning novel. [51] Annabel ...
This play brings together the stories of an intersex person, Herculine Barbin, living in Paris, and a fictional trans woman named Herman Amberstone based loosely on Bornstein herself. [225] This play introduced audiences to the idea of "gender blur," and began the career of Justin Vivian Bond who plays Barbin. Grace Sarah Kane: Cleansed: 1998
Fictional lesbian characters. See also Category:Fictional bisexual women for women who identify as bisexual. Some women may dual-identify and therefore will be included in both categories.
The form is also frequently used for fiction about adult women's lives, [5] some notable examples being Bridget Jones's Diary, The Color Purple, and Pamela. The second category lists fictional works that are not written in diary form, but in which a character keeps a diary, or a diary is otherwise featured as part of the story.
The book is a collection of thirteen short stories. The sexual topics covered are quite varied, ranging from pedophilia to lesbianism, but linked by an interest in female subjectivity [3] and in the dialectic of discourse and intercourse. [4] Many of the same characters that appear in Delta of Venus, her first published book of erotica ...