|  | From Erik Wander, your About Books & Literature Editor June is LGBT Pride Month, a worldwide celebration and occasion for parades, concerts, parties and sometimes more somber events like memorials. Pride Month is celebrated each June in honor of the Stonewall riots in New York City's Greenwich Village; the police raid on the Stonewall Inn occurred on June 28, 1969, forever changing the meaning of the words "pride" and "liberation" for millions. Here's some reading to consider. | | James Baldwin, Author of 'Giovanni's Room' One of Baldwin's most "socially significant" novels, according to our Gay Life guide, was Giovanni's Room. Published way back in 1956, Baldwin's work fearlessly brought themes of homosexuality, interracial relationships and same-sex desire to the forefront. Baldwin, who was born in 1924 in Harlem, would go on to become an American master. | David Sedaris Tells 'Naked' Truth If you've only read some of Sedaris' essays or short stories, you may only know that he's really funny, but you probably also know that he's gay. If you're a regular reader or a real fan, however, you surely know that his writing is highly autobiographical and that he doesn't shy away from openly discussing his relationship with his longtime partner Hugh, who pops up in most of Sedaris' books, or being gay. It's irreverent, it's dark, it's laugh-out-loud funny and it's tragic, but can reading Naked help relieve stress? | Same-Sex Marriage, Adoption, Religion & the Law Sing You Home is a novel that "explores what it means to be gay in today's world, and how reproductive science has outstripped the legal system," according to author Jodi Picoult's website. The reviewer for our Contemporary Literature site calls Picoult's novel "so engaging, so enraging, so sympathetic as to arrest one's attention and demand to be read in one sitting." Whether you read it in one sitting or not, Sing You Home is a book you might not want to skip. | Christopher Isherwood's 'A Single Man,' the Movie Colin Firth plays George Falconer, a despondent English professor grieving the loss of his partner, Jim, in Tom Ford's adaptation of Isherwood's 1964 novel of the same name. Ford, a fashion designer, took some liberties with the book's plot, but the result was a successful film that garnered Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations. The story unfolds over a single day in the life of a now single man. | | | | Related Searches | | | | Featured Articles | | | | | | | | Sign up for more free newsletters on your favorite topics | | | | You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed to the About.com Books & Literature newsletter. If you wish to change your email address or unsubscribe, please click here. About.com respects your privacy: Our Privacy Policy Contact Information: 1500 Broadway, 6th Floor New York, NY, 10036 © 2012 About.com | | | | | | Advertisement | |