<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>At a women's college in rural Virginia in the 1950s, a history professor who has hidden her sexuality faces an investigation into her private life that threatens her career.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>In rural Virginia in 1960, history professor Gen Rider has secured tenure at Baines College, a private school for white women. A woman in a man's field, she teaches "Negro" history, which has made her suspect with a powerful male colleague. Even while she's celebrating her triumph, she's also mourning the break-up of a long-distance relationship with another woman--a romance she has tightly guarded, even from her straight female mentor.<br> </br>As the fall semester dawns, a male instructor at the college is arrested for having sex with a man in a park. Homosexual panic envelops the college town, launching a "Know Your Neighbor" reporting campaign. The police investigation directly threatens Gen's friend Fenton, the gay theater director at Baines. But Gen finds herself vulnerable, too, when someone leaves mysterious "gifts" for her, including a suggestive pulp novel and a romantic card.<br> </br>As Gen tentatively embarks on a new relationship, a neighbor reports she's seen Gen kissing a woman, and hearings into her morality catch her in a McCarthy-like web. With her private life under the microscope, Gen faces an agonizing choice: Which does she value more, the career she's scraped to build against the odds or her right to a private life?</p><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>PAULA MARTINAC is the author of five published novels and a collection of short stories. Her debut novel <i>Out of Time</i> won the 1990 Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction, and <i> The Ada Decades</i> was shortlisted for the Ferro-Grumley Award. She has published three nonfiction books on lesbian and gay culture and politics as well as numerous articles, essays, and short stories. Also a playwright, her works have had productions with Pittsburgh Playwrights Theater Company, Manhattan Theatre Source, the Pittsburgh New Works Festival, No Name Players, and others. Martinac is a 2019-2020 Artist Fellowship Recipient of the North Carolina Arts Council and in 2019 she received a Creative Renewal Fellowship from the Arts & Science Council of Charlotte-Mecklenburg County. She teaches creative writing at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
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