Virtual Saints and Sinners Festival celebrates LGBTQ+ literary community

The Saints & Sinners LGBTQ+ Literary Festival returns for its 18th conference to be held online from March 11 to 14, 2021. As in past years, the virtual SASFest will also include literary discussions, writing workshops, readings, and special events, all via Zoom or YouTube.

SASFest also offers established and emerging LGBTQ+ authors, as well as students and readers, an opportunity to network via Padlet, a free community-building app, and nurture their craft with a diverse array of artistic and educational offerings. The Writing Workshop Series will feature Dorothy Allison, Michael Nava, Matthew Clark Davison, and Felice Picano. Acclaimed writer Jewelle Gomez will lead a poetry workshop, and also included is an instructional workshop from Kindle Direct Publishing to familiarize authors with their services and self-publishing options.

Literary panels and discussion topics include a wide array of genres including mystery, romance, young adult, poetry, memoir vs. fiction, and short fiction. We also have planned discussions featuring the “Literary Luminaries of the Violet Quill”—Andrew Holleran, Felice Picano, and Edmund White along with a discussion of “Jewish Lesbian Literature and Activism” with Elana Dykewomon, Judith Katz, Irena Klepfisz, and Michele Karlsberg.

The Reading Series includes new voices and literary icons sharing their work including Meredith Doench, Cheryl Head, Michael Lowenthal, Daniel W.K. Lee, David S. Pederson, JD Scott, Tammy Lynne Stoner, Jim Provenzano, and Sassafras Lowrey; along with the winners from the first annual Poetry Contest for SASFest—Danielle Bero, Ezra Adamo, and Steven Riel and the twelfth annual Short Fiction contest—Colby Byrne, Lisa Hines, and Laura Price Steele.

A new addition to the festival lineup is a Conversation Series featuring authors interviewing authors. Scholar and poet Julie R. Enszer will facilitate a dialogue with literary icon Judy Grahn regarding her new book, Eruptions of Inanna: Justice, Gender and Erotic Power; Journalist Merryn Johns will discuss sex and censorship and the modern gay rights movement with author and political activist Naomi Wolf; Founder of the Son of Baldwin media community, Robert Jones, Jr. discusses his groundbreaking new novel The Prophets,recently featured in the New York Times, with The Reading Life’s Susan Larson; and Jenn Shapland and Carlos Dews discuss their passion for the work of Carson McCullers. Dews is the founding president of the Carson McCullers Society and Shapland was a 2020 National Book Award finalist for her work My Autobiography of Carson McCullers.

Special Events

Fauxnique performs excerpts from her provocative cabaret works and reads passages from her forthcoming drag memoir Faux Queen with an introduction by Peaches Christ; The New Orleans based band The Slick Skillet Serenaders play a set of their ’20s and ’30s era Ragtime, Blues, and Jazz music stylings; and a partial screening and discussion of the Project Legacies documentary, In Her Words: 20th Century Lesbian Fiction.

Tickets and Bookstore: Tubby & Coo’s Mid-City Book Shop is the official bookstore of Saints and Sinners and donate a portion of sales back to the Festival. All events are free this year with the exception of the Writing Workshops. Tickets on sale at www.sasfest.org.

About Saints and Sinners

Since 2003, Saints + Sinners Literary Festival brings together the who’s who of the LGBTQ literary world. The Festival features panel discussions and writing workshops by authors, editors, and publishers for emerging writers and LGBTQ literature fans. Our website is www.sasfest.org. Follow @SASFest on Twitter and Facebook for updates. #SAS21

Saints + Sinners is made possible through the generous support of our premier sponsor, the John Burton Harter Foundation. Major support also provided by the National Endowment for the Arts, Kindle Direct Publishing, and by a grant from the Louisiana Division of the Arts, Office of Cultural Development, Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism, in cooperation with the Louisiana State Arts Council; additional funding by Bold Strokes Books, the Times Picayune | New Orleans Advocate, Tubby & Coo’s Mid-City Bookshop, and the Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies at the University of New Orleans.

SAS is a program of the Tennessee Williams & New Orleans Literary Festival (www.tennesssewilliams.net) For more on the Festival, follow us on Twitter at @TWFestNOLA and Facebook