The Violet Quill (or the Violet Quill Club) was a group of seven gay male writers that met in 1980 and 1981[1] in
New York City to read from their writings to each other and to critique them.[2] This group and the writers epitomize the years between the
Stonewall Riots and the beginning of the
AIDS pandemic.[3][4]
Importance
What made this group important was that several of its members became some of the most important
Post-Stonewall gay writers in America, and the group includes writers and works that have been linked to gay writing as a literary movement. Edmund White and Andrew Holleran in particular stand out.[4][5]
Between 1988 and 1990, AIDS claimed the lives of four of these men.[3][4]
History
Felice Picano recalls that the group started because straight editors, agents, and fellow writers weren't being helpful with advice on gay themed writing.[3]
Gay fiction before the Violet Quill was of four classes. The first two were primarily or ostensibly for straight audiences where the gay characters are either minor to the main theme, or in which they live tragic lives and then died. The third was those of high literary values and were therefore valued by critics. The fourth was gay pornography.[3]
George Whitmore - The Confessions of Danny Slocum (1980)
References
^Edmund White remembers the group meeting from 1979 to 1983; see his essay
"Out of the Closet, Onto the Bookshelf", The New York Times, June 16, 1991, Section 6, Page 22.
^
abcdBergman, David, ed. (1994). The Violet Quill Reader: The Emergence of Gay Writing After Stonewall. New York:
St. Martin's Press. p. ages xi-xiii.
ISBN978-0-312-11091-8.
^Brozan, Nadine (1994).
"CHRONICLE". The New York Times. Published:May 9, 1994. Short piece on Felice Picano reading and reference to The Violet Quill.