Dirk Vanden
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dirk_Vanden an entity of type: Thing
ديرك فاندن (بالإنجليزية: Dirk Vanden) (7 مايو 1933 - 21 أكتوبر 2014)؛ روائي أمريكي. درس في جامعة يوتا.
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Dirk Vanden (May 7, 1933 – October 21, 2014), born Richard Fullmer, was an American author and illustrator. He is considered the first gay Mormon writer and has been called a "pioneer of gay literature" by the Lambda Literary Review. A graduate of the University of Utah, his work appeared in ONE Magazine, Vector, and California Scene, as well as in Latter-Gay Saints: An Anthology of Gay Mormon Fiction. His novel I Want It All was the first book to explore San Francisco's leather subculture. His greatest success was his All trilogy: I Want It All, All or Nothing, and All Is Well. Vanden received a Lambda Literary Award for Gay Erotica in 2012 for the revision of this trilogy, All Together.
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ديرك فاندن
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Dirk Vanden
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43945914
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1073165864
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ديرك فاندن (بالإنجليزية: Dirk Vanden) (7 مايو 1933 - 21 أكتوبر 2014)؛ روائي أمريكي. درس في جامعة يوتا.
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Dirk Vanden (May 7, 1933 – October 21, 2014), born Richard Fullmer, was an American author and illustrator. He is considered the first gay Mormon writer and has been called a "pioneer of gay literature" by the Lambda Literary Review. A graduate of the University of Utah, his work appeared in ONE Magazine, Vector, and California Scene, as well as in Latter-Gay Saints: An Anthology of Gay Mormon Fiction. His novel I Want It All was the first book to explore San Francisco's leather subculture. His greatest success was his All trilogy: I Want It All, All or Nothing, and All Is Well. Vanden received a Lambda Literary Award for Gay Erotica in 2012 for the revision of this trilogy, All Together. In spite of his success, Vanden, together with Richard Amory, was highly critical of the way editor Earl Kemp and publisher Greenleaf Classics treated his work, citing Greenleaf's non-payment of royalties, employment of editors not familiar with gay literature, and insistence on inserting graphic sex into his books as examples of their heavy-handed approach to LGBT publishing. He died of cancer at his home in Carmichael, California in October 2014.
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4636