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Revision as of 23:54, 13 April 2012 editEdReason (talk | contribs)3 edits Changes "is" to "was" based on her death April 2, 2012 ref: Douglass Funeral Service, 87 No. Pleasant St. Amherst, MA www.douglassfuneral.com← Previous edit Revision as of 01:04, 14 April 2012 edit undoDru of Id (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled10,146 edits Change category Living People to 2012 deaths, per help page request.Next edit →
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Revision as of 01:04, 14 April 2012

Sarah Dreher
OccupationNovelist, Playwright, Psychologist
Period20th century
GenreMystery
SubjectLesbian fiction
Literary movementLGBT Literature

Sarah Dreher was an American lesbian novelist and playwright, and best known for her award-winning lesbian mystery series featuring amateur sleuth Stoner McTavish. Dreher was born in Hanover, Pennsylvania in 1937, and died April 2, 2012 in Amherst, Massachusetts.

Her themes include "the anguish of lesbian relationships beginning, ending or mending. Dreher's lesbian protagonists are modern heroes searching for integrity and identity..." In the resolution of her mysteries, solutions other than resorting to traditional justice system intervention are part of the exploration of society outside the existing social paradigm.

Dreher has contributed essays and writings to a number of projects, including Off the Rag: Lesbians Writing about Menopause by Lee Lynch and Akia Woods, "Waiting for Stonewall" in Sexual Practice/Textual Theory: Lesbian Cultural Criticism, and a contributed chapter to They Wrote the Book: Thirteen Women Mystery Writers Tell All.

In addition to writing, Dreher was a clinical psychologist in private practice, graduating first from Wellesley College, then gaining a Ph.D. in psychology from Purdue University.

Work

  • Stoner McTavish Series, New Victoria
    • Stoner McTavish (1985)
    • Something Shady (1986)
    • Gray Magic (1987)
    • Otherworld (1993)
    • Bad Company (1995)
    • Shaman's Moon (1998)
    • Love Murders (unpublished)

Plays: 8 x 10 Glossy, Alumnae News: The Doris Day Years, (list under development)

Awards

See also

  • Markowitz, Judith A, foreword by Katherine V. Forrest. The Gay Detective Novel (MacFarland)
  • Munt, Sally. Murder by the Book?: Feminism and the Crime Novel, 1990, (Routledge)
  • Zimmerman, Bonnie. Safe Sea of Women: Lesbian Literature 1969-1989, 1992 (Beacon)

References

  1. Griffin, Gabriele. Who's Who in Lesbian and Gay Writing, Routledge (59).
  2. Douglass Funeral Service, 87 No. Pleasant St. Amherst, MA www.douglassfuneral.com
  3. Zimmerman, Bonnie. Lesbian Histories and Cultures, Taylor and Francis (763).
  4. Wolfe, Susan J. and Penelope, Julia. Sexual Practice/Textual Theory: Lesbian Cultural Criticism. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 1993
  5. Windrath, Helen (editor), They Wrote the Book: Thirteen Women Mystery Writers Tell All, 2000 Spinsters Ink
  6. Pollack, Sandra and Denise D. Knight (Editors). Contemporary Lesbian Writers of the United States: A Bio-Bibliographical Critical Sourcebook, 1993 (p. 186-191)

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