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– 313 – Appendix A Sampling of 1960s Gay Pulp Authors *Asterisk denotes that an essay discussing this author appears in the present collection. *Richard Amory (Richard Love, 1927–1981). ABD, University of California– Berkeley; Spanish teacher. Seven pulps (Greenleaf, Olympia, Freeway, 1966–1974), including Loon trilogy, other westerns, and a mystery. See Cesar Love, “Biography of Richard Love,” in Song of the Loon, by Richard Amory (Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp, 2005), 215–17. Teryl Andrews (Thom Racina, b. 1946). MFA, Goodman School of Drama; television soap writer (five-time Emmy nominee). Five pulps (101, Greenleaf, Taurus, 1968–1970), beginning with Rough Trade, Italian Style. Literary hoax as Grant Tracy Saxon (Warner, 1975): The Happy Hustler. *Phil Andros (Samuel M. Steward, 1909–1993). PhD, Ohio State University; English teacher; tattoo artist. Seven pulps (Brian, Guild, Eros, Le Salon, Greenleaf, 1969–1975), beginning with $tud and including a series of erotic police stories. Memoir by Steward: Chapters from an Autobiography (San Francisco: Grey Fox, 1981). See Jim Kepner, “Steward,” in Gay & Lesbian Literature, ed. Sharon Malinowski (Detroit: St. James, 1994), 360–62; Hubert Kennedy, The Ideal Gay Man (New York: Harrington Park, 1999), 42–44; Justin Spring, Secret Historian (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2010); Contemporary Authors. James Barr (James Barr Fugaté, 1922–1995). Attended unknown university; US Navy veteran; activist; author of Quatrefoil (1950). One pulp (Paperback Library, 1966): The Occasional Man. Papers at Wichita State University. See Hubert Kennedy, The Ideal Gay Man, 36–39, and A Touch of Royalty (San Francisco: Peremptory, 314 – Appendix 2002); James T. Sears, Behind the Mask of the Mattachine (New York: Harrington Park, 2006). *Victor J. Banis (b. 1937). Over fifty pulps under his own name and various pseudonyms (Brandon, Greenleaf, Olympia, Barclay, Medco, 1966–1970), including the first nine volumes of the C.A.M.P. series, other mysteries, supernatural stories, and historical and contemporary romances. Memoir: Spine Intact, Some Creases, ed. Fabio Cleto (Genoa, Italy: ECIG, 2004); rev. ed. (Rockville, MD: Borgo, 2007). See Contemporary Authors. Shane V. Baxter (Victor Norwood, 1920–1983). US Marines veteran; adventure writer. One pulp (Greenleaf, 1969): The Sultry Stud. See Contemporary Authors. *Carl Branch. See James H. Ramp. James Colton/Coulton (Joseph Hansen, 1923–2004). Activist; mystery writer (Shamus Lifetime Achievement Award, 1992); teacher. Ten pulps (National Library, Greenleaf, Brandon, Olympia, 1966–1971), beginning with Lost on Twilight Road and including other psychological studies and two murder mysteries. See James W. Jones, “Joseph Hansen,” in Contemporary Gay American Novelists, ed. Emmanuel S. Nelson (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1993), 189–96; Jim Kepner, “Hansen,” in Malinowski, Gay & Lesbian Literature, 177–80; Ted-Larry Pebworth, “Hansen,” in The Gay and Lesbian Literary Heritage, ed. Claude J. Summers (New York: Holt,1995), 357–58; C. Todd White, Pre-Gay L.A. (Urbana: University of Illinois, 2009); Josh Lanyon , “The Play of Shadows and Light,” in The Golden Age of Gay Fiction, ed. Drewey Wayne Gunn (Albion, NY: MLR, 2009), 153–66; Contemporary Authors. John Coriolan (William Corington III, b. 1915). Stage producer; teacher. Three pulps (Award, Olympia, Renaissance, 1968–1975), beginning with A Sand Fortress. Carl V. Corley (b. 1921). Civil servant; artist. Twenty-one pulps (Publisher’s Export Co., Award, Greenleaf, 1966–1971), including Gay Trilogy, many with covers by the author. Fictionalized autobiography, published anonymously: The Different and the Damned (San Diego: Publisher’s Export Co., 1968). Papers at Duke University. See John Howard, Men Like That (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1999), 193–220. *Dick Dale. Nine pulps (Greenleaf, 1967–1968), beginning with Gay on the Range. *Guy Dandridge. Six pulps (Guild, 1967–1971), beginning with Jerry and Jim. Angelo d’Arcangelo (Josef Bush, b. 1933?). Author of Homosexual Handbook (Olympia, 1968), famous for outing J. Edgar Hoover. One pulp (Olympia, 1969): Sooky. See Jack Nichols, “Angelo d’Arcangelo: The World’s First Outer,” Gay Today, Feb. 16, 1998. [52.15.63.145] Project MUSE (2024-04-23 15:00 GMT) A Sampling of 1960s Gay Pulp Authors – 315 Chris Davidson (Christian Davies). Fifteen pulps (Greenleaf, 1967–1969), including Caves of Iron and Go Down, Aaron (both 1967). Douglas Dean (Douglas Dean Goodman, 1920–2006). Attended University of Washington; stage and film actor, director, drama critic, and playwright. Twelve pulps (Greenleaf, 1969–1972), beginning with Madder Music, Stronger Wine. Autobiography : Maria, Marlene, & Me (San Francisco: Shadbolt, 1993). Papers at University of Minnesota. Samuel L. Dodson. See Marcus Miller. Carl Driver (Philip H. Lee). Eleven pulps (Publisher’s Export Co., Cameo, Barclay, Pendulum, Le Salon, Greenleaf, 1967–1972), beginning with Gay Cruise...

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