Winner
AB
Award History
| Award | Year | Book | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lambda Literary Award for Fiction | 1991 | The Body and Its Dangers | Winner |
Award-Winning Books
About Allen Barnett
Allen Barnett (1955-1991) was an American short story writer, activist, and AIDS educator whose sole collection, The Body and Its Dangers (1990), is regarded as a landmark depiction of gay life during the AIDS crisis, winning the Ferro-Grumley Award and Lambda Literary Award for Gay Fiction in 1991, along with a special citation from the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award. Born near Joliet, Illinois, he studied at Loyola University Chicago and Columbia University, co-founded GLAAD, and worked as an educator for Gay Men's Health Crisis before dying of AIDS-related causes at age 36. Stories like "Philostorgy, Now Obscure" appeared in The New Yorker.
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