Philip Gambone
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philip Gambone (born in Massachusetts) is an American writer and Harvard professor.
His short-fiction collection The Language We Use Up Here was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award. His short stories have appeared in more than a dozen magazines and anthologies. His essays, reviews and feature articles have appeared in Bay Windows, the Lambda Book Report, the Advocate, Frontiers, and the New York Times Book Review. His essays have been included in the anthologies Hometowns, A Member of the Family, Sister and Brother and Wrestling with the Angel. He now lives in Boston, Massachusetts, teaching at Boston University Academy and the Harvard writing program, where he has received two Distinguished Teaching Awards.
[edit] Works
- Beijing: A Novel
- Something Inside:Conversations with Gay Fiction Writers (ed)
- The Language We Use Up Here and other stories
- Pushing Off
- (essay in) Men on Men 3: Best New Gay Fiction (1990)
- (essay in) Men on Men 6 (1996)
- (essay in)His 3: Brilliant New Fiction by Gay Writers (1999)
- (essay in)Boys Like Us:Gay Writers Tell Their Coming Out Stories, Patrick Merla(ed.) Avon Books. 1996