Ortiz Taylor’s most well-known novel,
Faultline, was published in 1982 by the
Naiad Press – a lesbian publisher.
Faultline centers around a woman who risks losing custody of her children, due to her sexual orientation, and must go to court to plead her case. At the time of publication,
Faultline was not an immediate success. As it gained popularity within the global arena, however, the novel was then translated into German, Italian and even had a British edition. Ortiz Taylor started writing
Faultline as a catharsis from her ex-husband’s disapproval of her same-sex relationship while she raised their children. Similar to Ortiz Taylor’s struggles,
Faultline focuses on the protagonist Arden Benbow, a proclaimed lesbian, and the obstacles she faced during a custody battle with her ex-husband Malthus. The novel initially takes place within a courtroom, where Arden speaks to the judge on her behalf, claiming she did nothing wrong as a parent, while Malthus condemns her actions of wanting to be a lesbian mother to their shared children. Further in the novel, as Arden’s testimony progresses, she rejects the court’s position that there is only a straight line separating accepted and rejected norms. She challenges this viewpoint, which also reflects a patriarchal society's belief, with her evidence that skews this symbolic straight line of norms into one that is more irregular, like that of an earthly faultline, which directly refers to the title.
Faultline concludes with Arden winning the custody battle, which redefines what a family can look like in a heteronormative society. == Other written works ==