Patricia
Nell Warren
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About
Patricia Nell Warren
In just three decades, Patricia Nell Warren has become one of
the most popular and respected authors of gay literature in
the world. With eight successful novels to her credit and an
estimated readership of over twenty million people worldwide,
her books are considered by many to be an intrinsic part of
the GLBT rites of passage as well as a literary synthesis of
the gay and lesbian experience.
In more
recent years, she has also become a distinguished
investigative journalist and columnist -- always willing to
test public opinion and her popularity to get at the facts of
any issue she explores.
Patricia
Nell Warren was born in 1936 and grew up on the prestigious
Grant Kohrs cattle ranch near Deer Lodge, Montana. She has
been writing professionally since she was a teenager in the
1950s, and a publishing professional since 1959. Her subjects
have a wide range of appeal-- from youth, Goddesses, Earth,
human rights, gay and lesbian life, mixed-blood people and
American history to sports, wild animals, eco-agriculture and
current events. Her provocative literary themes quite often
dramatize a conflict between individual liberty and
authoritarian culture while revealing unconventional social
perspectives and exploring the deepest vulnerabilities in
human nature.
Warren
enjoys telling a powerful and original story. "Even in my
editorials, I am a storyteller," she freely admits.
"Whenever I craft a story, I put myself within the
character, and look for every possible parameter in that
individual's world. I'm not interested in labels or being
politically correct. In fact, I often explore the disastrous
consequences of labeling people or merely going along with the
status-quo."
Her most
celebrated novel, The Front Runner, was first published
by William Morrow in 1974, and has become the most popular gay
love story of all time. This landmark classic about the
relationship between an ex-Marine track coach and his Olympic
athlete has sold an estimated 10 million copies worldwide and
been translated into 10 languages (English, Spanish, German,
French, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Japanese, Chinese, Latvian).
According to the Publishing Triangle, readers have acclaimed
The Front Runner as #1 of the 100 Best Lesbian and Gay Novels.
Selected by Book of the Month Club for its “Best of the
Paperbacks” series, as well as the InsightOut Book Club, The
Front Runner is now in development as a major motion
picture. 2004 marks the 30th anniversary of this gay literary
classic.
In 1994,
Warren completed Harlan's Race, the long-awaited sequel
to The Front Runner. This was the premiere title
offered by Wildcat Press, an independent press co-founded by
Warren and her business partner, veteran media specialist and
short story writer, Tyler St. Mark. Harlan's Race
received top reviews and remained on the Lambda bestseller
list for an entire year. In 1997, Wildcat Press released Billy's
Boy, the third book in The Front Runner series, which won
the Lambda "Editors' Choice" Literary Award that
year. Both sequels have been published in other languages as
well including German, Japanese, Latvian, and Spanish.
Warren's
most recent novel is The Wild Man, a harrowing
chronicle set in 1960s fascist Spain. Her newest bestseller
chronicles the illicit relationship between a disillusioned
Spanish bullfighter and a young idealistic peasant during the
fascist regime of Spain in the 60’s. Stunningly detailed and
startlingly accurate (Warren worked in Spain between 1964 and
1972 as a liaison for the Spanish edition of The Reader’s
Digest), The Wild Man has been acclaimed by literary
critics nationwide as perhaps Warren’s finest literary
effort to date. The Wild Man appeared on both the
Lambda and Amazon.com gay bestseller lists and was chosen for
imprint by both the Quality Paperback and InsightOut Book
Clubs. In 2003 it was published in Spain, under the title El
Hombre bravo. It's also available in German from Bruno
Gmuender.
Warren
has also published two mainstream novels. The Last
Centennial (Dial Press1971) is a set of three short novels
that take place in a small Montana town during the 70’s and One
Is the Sun (Random House/Ballantine 1991) is a historical
epic about a legendary woman chief of the Montana Territory
during the 1800’s. One Is The Sun took almost a
decade to research and is based on actual events. In 2002,
Wildcat Press published their edition of this amazing
adventure, which quickly sold out and is into a second
printing.
Warren
has also published four books of Ukrainian poetry between 1959
and 1973 as well as hundreds of short nonfiction pieces over
the years. Her incisive articles and essays have appeared in a
wide range of publications, including Los Angeles Times,
The Reader's Digest, San Francisco Chronicle, Chicago Tribune,
L.A. Woman, Mythosphere, Foreword and Persimmon Hill, to gay
publications like The Advocate, Out, Gay & Lesbian Review,
Genre, Philadelphia Gay News, and The Letter, Lodestar
Quarterly.
Now a
popular columnist, Warren writes regularly about gay pioneers
in sports history for Outsports.com, while her
provocative “Left Field” on the politics of AIDS and
public health appears monthly in A & U Magazine.
In
addition to her impressive literary record, Patricia Nell
Warren has, for many years, been a committed human-rights
activist. Her personal activism started during the 1960s, with
her efforts to have American media recognize the individuality
of Ukrainians and other ethnic groups in the USSR. In the
1970s she moved on to women's rights, where she was the
plaintiffs' spokesperson for Susan Smith v. Reader's Digest, a
landmark lawsuit that resulted in a class-action victory for
women. As a former amateur athlete, she helped lead a group of
women distance runners who forced the AAU to change
discriminatory rules in the mid-70s.
Currently,
Patricia Nell Warren focuses on free speech and issues
confronting youth. From 1996 to 2000, she voluntarily taught
at a GED program for GLBT youth, and served on the Gay and
Lesbian Education Commission of the Los Angeles Unified School
District, as well as the district’s Human Relations
Education Commission. She is one of several dozen plaintiffs
in ACLU v. Reno and ACLU v. Reno II, a case-setting lawsuit
seeking to stem unwarranted censorship of the Internet. She
was also one of the founders of Just Dissent, a California
activist group seeking to protect the rights of peaceful
protesters.
Her
literary and political work has been recognized by numerous
awards. They include the Arizona Human Rights Fund’s Barry
Goldwater Award, the National Cowboy Hall of Fame’s Western
Heritage Award, the Lambda Literary Award, the Saints &
Sinners Hall of Fame, and the Gay and Lesbian Literary Hall of
Fame.
Today,
Patricia Nell Warren’s novels have become essential gay
literature for bookstores, libraries and college courses
worldwide and, according to recent surveys of independent book
sales, are the most popular novels among classic gay
literature. Warren lectures nationwide, and conducts many
writer’s workshops. An entertaining and highly informative
speaker, she draws upon on her vast experience, as a writer,
editor and publisher, to help newcomers orient themselves
artistically and to be well informed on professional writing
standards and industry practices. Her personal web page
features a menu of help articles for this purpose titled “Secrets
of Writing and Publishing.”
Warren
and her company are now in the process of establishing the
Patricia Nell Warren Endowment Fund, which supports creatively
gifted but financially challenged youth. She is also in the
process of launching her new nationwide workshop series for
young writers, called “Youth
Writes!”
KEYNOTE FEE CATEGORY:
$10,000 *
*
Honorarium can
vary depending on presentation length, distance to venue and many
other factors. All fees are plus travel expenses and subject to
change, so please call for an exact quote.
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