Fun lgbt


Andrew Sean Greer’s Less won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Is this sequel necessary? Does it live up to the original? … More Turns Out Less Really Is More: My Review of Less Is Lost by Andrew Sean Greer

Andrew Sean Greer’s Less was a surprise winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Did it deserve to win? And what does that imply anyway? … More Is Less Secretly Toxic? And What Type of Manual Deserves to Defeat Major Literary Prizes? The Case of Less (A Pulitzer Prize Deep Dive)

Alison Cochrun’s queer holiday romance follows a chick who agrees to a fake engagement with someone who turns out to be the brother of the girl of her dreams. Chaos ensues. … More The Cinnamon Bun Romance I Needed Right Now: Kiss Her Once For Me by Alison Cochrun

The author of the gay classic Dancer From the Dance has released a new novel about a gay man facing vintage age and death. Is it worth reading? … More Life, Decline, and Death: The Kingdom of Sand by Andrew Holleran (Book Review)

Douglas Stuart returns with Y

10 Fun LGBT Games for the Classroom

Creating an inclusive classroom environment where all students feel represented and understood is very important. Here are some entertaining classroom games and LGBT-related activities that you could examine for your classroom:

1. LGBT Jeopardy Game

Students will learn about significant LGBT figures, milestones, and concepts in a adj, interactive way.

How to Play: Create categories like “Important Figures,” “Historic Milestones,” “Symbols & Flags,” “LGBT Literature,” and “Global Perspectives.”

Setup: Use a tool like JeopardyLabs or create a simple PowerPoint/Google Slides presentation to setup your game board.

Execution: Divide the class into teams. Each team picks a category and a point value. Study the prompt or question, and the first team to raise their hand gets to address. Keep score and perhaps offer a small prize or extra credit to the winning team.

2. “Coming Out” Stars

This game can facilitate students understand the diverse experiences within the LGBT community


If Nate Ruess, Jack Antonoff and Andrew Dost own taught us anything, it's this: You can be enjoyable. and still upright up for something serious.
The breakout single that sent the New York-based band's sophomore album, "Some Nights," soaring, "We Are Young" entered the pop-culture zeitgeist almost overnight with commercial spots and a "Glee" rendition. Their ubiquitous earworms gave them a platform, and they stood on it and told the world – time and hour again, during sold-out shows and in online essays – how they back equal rights.
In this interview with Jack Antonoff, the 28-year-old guitarist talks about being drawn to the gay community's "inspiring" ways of uniting in the face of oppression, the stigma of being a straight man who doesn't care about the fight and how he loves Lena Dunham enjoy a lesbian.

You're one of the gay community's biggest supporters, and you've been very outspoken about it. When and why did gay issues become so important to you?
I verb there was a great story or a poetic reply, but I just don't know how anyone could not be outspoken and enraged