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The Women of Cubbyhole A to Z started with pockets full of notes written on napkins, escapades, and chance encounters at lesbian bar in New York City's Greenwich Village. While this project could be seen as a tribute to the bar, Cubbyhole is merely the setting for this collection of stories, designed as a salute to Lesbian Pulp Fiction titles, presented as an A to Z series of book covers. That said, Women of Cubbyhole A to Z is not a self-help dating book. Nor is it intended to recount a series of pickup lines that do or don't work. Although the book is dedicated to the bar's founder, Tanya…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Women of Cubbyhole A to Z started with pockets full of notes written on napkins, escapades, and chance encounters at lesbian bar in New York City's Greenwich Village. While this project could be seen as a tribute to the bar, Cubbyhole is merely the setting for this collection of stories, designed as a salute to Lesbian Pulp Fiction titles, presented as an A to Z series of book covers. That said, Women of Cubbyhole A to Z is not a self-help dating book. Nor is it intended to recount a series of pickup lines that do or don't work. Although the book is dedicated to the bar's founder, Tanya Saunders, Ms. Gilbert believes the book has a broader appeal to anyone dating, meeting people in any kind of bar, and experiencing the mishaps of regulars, visitors, and staff. Please join Ms. Gilbert, her unnamed protagonist, and her alter-author Anon E. Mess, as they alphabetize their way through the ups and downs of being a heart-on-her-sleeve, sometimes tongue-tied, always dapper-tied, romantic raconteur.
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Autorenporträt
A born and bred Midwesterner from Lakewood, OH, Ms. Gilbert has been a New York City resident since 1981. As a regular at the bar known to volunteer as barback and bouncer, the author/designer collected quite a few dating stories, survived several of her own mishaps, and met other women with their own stories. Too shy to perform a standup act in public, she decided to collect the anecdotes into an illustrated coffee table/comic book. This is her first self-published book, although she collaborated with a friend on a limited edition, illustrated, and handmade chapbook of poems about 9/11, Stories from the Ruins, which is in collections of both the Detroit Institute of the Arts and NYC's Museum of Modern Art.