I've just had a look at my bookshelves and with the exceptions of Tolkien and Adams (that copy of Redshirts is Jim's), all of the adult fiction is by women. The children's hardbacks are their own thing.
'The Message'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Swords AND spaceships? Hmmm....tell me more.
It's Patricia Kennealy Morrison's Keltiad. Don't judge me. Out of print and not available as ebooks, I don't know that SPL would have copies? I found mine years ago trawling used bookstores.
I think I may have read one of that series ... but it would have been a LONG time ago.
Oh yes, I think I probably read those in high school, it rings a bell.
Yeah, the last in the initial trilogy came out in '89, and gives the titles of the next books with these characters - as the author turned 75 this month, I think it's unlikely they'll see print. She's also said that as a series, they didn't earn enough to be worth taking time away from paid work to edit them for reissue in electronic format.
(Also also, they are heteronormative AF and I would likely have stopped at one if I were encountering them for the first time as an adult?)
Oh, man, I read at least some of those, amyparker, back in the day. She's the rather unusual woman who was married to Jim Morrison for a hot minute, yeah?
It's King Arthur space fantasy, right?
We read Tomorrow Will be Better by Betty Smith for book club this month, and although it's nowhere near as famous as A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, I really appreciated it. Everyone is rather desperately poor, and there's both emotional and physical child abuse, but the characters are well-drawn and interesting even when they're awful. And there's a lot of meaty stuff around class and gender, and even a bit of racial consciousness (there's only one POC in the book). I didn't love it, but I thought it was well-done and held up a solid conversation in book club last night.
That's a lovely way of putting it, Suela - I would have gone with "what an interesting backstory she has".
The middle trilogy is straight up "King Arthur in SPACE!"; the first is set a few thousand years later and features one of his female descendants.
Beverly Cleary has passed away at the age of 104. [link]
And Larry McMurtry died as well.