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Köp båda 2 för 616 krMichael Grumley was an American artist and author. Born in Bettendorf, Iowa, he attended the University of Denver, the City College of New York and the Iowa Writers' Workshop. He received a B.S. Degree with a major in Philosophy from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.Grumley was interested in cryptozoology and was the author of a book on Bigfoot ("There are Giants in the Earth"). In the book Grumley concluded that anthropoid giants once roamed the earth, and that today there are still isolated survivors which he claimed are living in tunnels and caves.In 1970, with his partner Robert Ferro, he wrote "Atlantis" which attracted widespread attention. He wrote the column "Uptown" for the New York Native. He was a founding member of The Violet Quill, a New York writers group which included Ferro, Edmund White, Andrew Holleran and others who sought to authentic voice to gay fiction. He later documented life in Manhattan in a series of books. "Life Drawing" is his only long-form work of fiction.Grumley and Ferro are buried together under the Ferro-Grumley memorial in Rockland Cemetery, Sparkill, New York. Following their deaths, the Ferro-Grumley Foundation was created and endowed the annual Ferro-Grumley Award for LGBT fiction. Edmund White is the author of many critically acclaimed books; his most recent novel is "A Saint from Texas". He was made an officer in the French Ordre des Arts et des Lettres and won a literary prize from the Festival of Deauville. He now teaches at Princeton University. His acclaimed autobiography, My Lives, was published by Bloomsbury. In 2019, he was awarded the Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters by the National Book Foundation. George Stambolian was a writer, editor, and college professor and an important figure in the gay literary world of the 1980s. He was best known as the editor of the Men on Men anthologies of gay fiction. A graduate of Dartmouth College, he received a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in 1969. From 1966 until his retirement in 1991, Stambolian was a professor in the Department of French at Wellesley College. He taught courses in French literature, and wrote and edited academic works. As an early proponent of gay literature and gay studies, Stambolian also taught such interdisciplinary courses as "The Art and Politics of the Nude" and "New Literatures: Lesbian and Gay Fiction in America."