(illustration by
Robert Maguire), originally published as
Torchlight to Valhalla in 1938 In the early to mid-20th century, only a
handful of books were published that addressed lesbians as characters in relationships with women. Those notable novels were published in
hardcover and were as follows: •
The Well of Loneliness (1928)
Radclyffe Hall,
Jonathan Cape •
We Too Are Drifting (1935)
Gale Wilhelm, Random House •
Pity for Women (1937) Helen Anderson, Doubleday •
Torchlight to Valhalla (1938, later titled
The Strange Path when reissued in paperback in 1953) Gale Wilhem, Random House During World War II, the military distributed small paperbacks to its forces, causing a large population of Americans to become accustomed to having access to cheap books and thus creating a demand for the same easy access to reading material when the soldiers returned home. As a result, in the years after the war, there appeared a new and often subversive trend in publishing that allowed for books to be written, cheaply produced, and widely distributed using technology previously unavailable. These books were dubbed "pulp" fiction because they were inexpensive and usually sensational or low-brow, much like the "pulp" magazines of the first half of the 20th century. Pulps were not necessarily "low brow." Many pulp authors are now celebrated with commemorative hardcover editions. These mass market paperbacks, printed and bound on cheap paper, often addressed "dirty" topics like drugs, gangs,
white slavery, crime, murder, and
homosexuality. Because the literature was not respected, it was not
censored as readily, although most of the larger paperback publishers were wary of postal censorship, and, for instance, took care not to publish works that were overly supportive of "deviant" lifestyles. In terms of lesbian fiction, these books were the only ones available in many locations to people who had no previous access to information or stories that involved lesbian characters. Several publishing houses created special imprints, such as
Fawcett's "
Gold Medal" division, to satisfy the demand for pulp fiction. Unlike many publishers, Fawcett made a point of publishing lesbian pulp written by lesbians, or sometimes by heterosexual women, rather than by heterosexual men. It made a significant contribution to the lesbian community to have lesbian authors writing more or less authentic stories about what it was like to be a lesbian, as opposed to only having heterosexual men writing stories about lesbians for the titillation of other men. During the time it was unlikely for most lesbians to find a “happily ever after” outside of these pulps, However prevalent the books were, purchasing and reading them for many women was the equivalent to
coming out to the cashier. Author
Joan Nestle called them "survival books" and described purchasing them: The act of taking one of these books off the drugstore rack and paying for it at the counter was a frightening and difficult move for most women. This was especially true during the atmosphere of the
McCarthy trials...Although tame by today's standards...these volumes were so threatening then that women hid them, burnt them, and threw them out.
''Women's Barracks'' The first paperback to address a lesbian relationship was published as early as 1950 with ''
Women's Barracks'' by
Tereska Torrès, published by
Gold Medal Books. The story was a fictionalized account of Torres' experiences in the
Free French Forces in London during World War II. ''Women's Barracks'' sold 4 million copies and was selected in 1952 to become an example of how paperback books were promoting moral degeneracy by the
House Select Committee on Current Pornographic Materials. The Committee concluded their investigation with a report that required publishers to conform to certain moral standards in the content and publicizing of their books, or else face fines or imprisonment. As a result, authors were forced to limit their stories to fit these requirements. However, as the decade went on, publishers became bolder in printing material that might be judged as immoral.
Spring Fire and the establishment of a formula After the success of ''Women's Barracks
, Gold Medal Books published another paperback with lesbian themes, Spring Fire.'' Golden Medal Books eventually published some of the least homophobic books in the genre. )
Spring Fire, by
Marijane Meaker written under the pseudonym "Vin Packer," is considered to be the first lesbian paperback novel, since the plot focused on the relationship of the two main characters, as opposed to the various relationships examined in ''Women's Barracks
. It is also the first modern lesbian novel written by a lesbian. Spring Fire
, which was published by Gold Medal Books in 1952 and sold more than 1.5 million copies, is about two college girls, Mitch and Leda, who fall in love and have an affair. Spring Fire'' inspired one of the best-known authors of lesbian pulp,
Ann Bannon. Bannon wrote to Meaker after reading the novel, and Meaker convinced her to submit her own manuscript to Gold Medal Books for publication in the genre. The tragic endings of ''Women's Barracks
and Spring Fire'' (
suicide and
insanity) are typical of lesbian pulp novels. Meaker was told by her editor that because the books traveled through the mail and anything sent through the
U.S. Postal Service was subject to government
censorship, publishers had to make sure that the books seemed in no way to
proselytize homosexuality. No character was allowed to be both homosexual and happy at the story's end. A character had either to turn
heterosexual and end up coupled with a man or, if she remained homosexual, suffer death, insanity or some equally unappealing fate. The first exception to this formula, and technically not a pulp fiction, is the 1952 romance novel
The Price of Salt by
Patricia Highsmith, published in hardcover by
Coward-McCann under the
pseudonym of "Claire Morgan". It was republished in 1953 as a
Bantam Books lesbian pulp fiction paperback. Satisfactory endings for women who accepted their homosexuality were rare. Some authors defied the tragic endings. Ann Bannon published six lesbian novels between 1957 and 1962, a series known as the Beebo Brinker Chronicles. Bannon's novels ended happily, which changed the societal perception of lesbianism. Rather than being seen as "neurotic, frigid, immature, and even psychotic", lesbians were viewed as warm and loving. Bannon's novels paved the way for social acceptance of lesbianism and the queer sexual revolution. ==Content==