Jean M. Redmann
Jean M. Redmann | |
---|---|
Occupation | Novelist, activist |
Period | 20th century |
Genre | Mystery |
Subject | Lesbian fiction |
Literary movement | LGBT literature |
Jean M. Redmann (born June 9, 1955 in Mississippi, US) is an American novelist best known for her mystery series featuring New Orleans private investigator Micky Knight.
Main themes of Redmann's novels are the protagonist's troubled childhood and how it affects her adult life, discrimination based on sexual orientation and alcoholism. Her novels follow the tradition of hardboiled fiction.
Redmann has won the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Mystery three times: in 1996 for The Intersection of Law and Desire, in 2010 for Death of a Dying Man and in 2013 for Ill Will.[1]
Redmann is a gay rights activist and works as the director of prevention at NO/AIDS Task Force.
Work
Micky Knight Series
- Death by the Riverside (1990)
- Death of Jocasta (1992)
- The Intersection of Law and Desire (1995)
- Lost Daughters (1999)
- Death of a Dying Man (2009)
- Water Mark (2010)
- Ill Will (2012)
- The Shoal of Time (2013)
References
- ↑ "25th annual Lambda Literary Award winners announced". LGBT Weekly, June 4, 2013.