7:30PM: Lesbian Bar Chronicles

from $10.00

Gather at Sub Rosa at 7:30PM on Monday, June 1st to celebrate the release of The Lesbian Bar Chronicles! Event starts at 8PM.

The Lesbian Bar Chronicles is made up of stories from 38 lesbian bar communities across the country. What better way to welcome this book into the world than by gathering to share some stories of our own from Noho and beyond?! 

Have a story that you know we’d all love to hear? Submit it here!

Come hear a bit of the book, along with YOUR stories!!! All of this sapphic goodness followed by a book signing!

Brought to you by Sub Rosa, Broadside Bookshop, and Cruising Podcast.

Tickets are LIMITED! Pricing is SLIDING SCALE! Your ticket fee goes to support the arts & culture programming at Sub Rosa…lez help keep Sub Rosa around!

There is an option to ADD A BOOK to your sliding scale entry ticket! (If you do not want to purchase a book, select ‘NO THANK YOU’ on the book drop down menu.)

About the book:

Lesbian bars are so much more than a place to get a drink. For over a century, they’ve acted as community posts, political organizing grounds, and sanctuaries. Yet whereas in the 1980s there were an estimated 200 lesbian bars across the US, the current count sits at a few dozen.

In
The Lesbian Bar Chronicles, author and co-creator of the hit podcast Cruising Rachel Karp embarks across the country with her wife and best friend to chronicle the stories of the remaining US lesbian bars. Recent narratives have claimed lesbian bars are dying, but Karp’s group finds many of the places they visit to be thriving, their communities sustaining themselves over decades of change and challenges.

Weaving together over 100 hours of immersive interviews with bar owners, staff, and regulars, Karp highlights places like:

Nobody’s Darling in Chicago where readers meet “the mayor” Shirley J, who in the 1970s was instrumental in the birth of house music

Frankie’s in Oklahoma City, where readers attend a “family night” to learn how a lesbian bar can birth a chosen family

Redz a Chicana lesbian bar in East LA involved in the precedent setting court case that followed years of arrests for patrons wearing men’s clothing

A heartfelt reclamation of queer history and queer lives, Karp’s narrative examines how these beacons for community and inclusion can teach us to live openly, cultivate connection, and continue to take up space
🌹

SLIDING SCALE ENTRY:
ADD A BOOK?:

Gather at Sub Rosa at 7:30PM on Monday, June 1st to celebrate the release of The Lesbian Bar Chronicles! Event starts at 8PM.

The Lesbian Bar Chronicles is made up of stories from 38 lesbian bar communities across the country. What better way to welcome this book into the world than by gathering to share some stories of our own from Noho and beyond?! 

Have a story that you know we’d all love to hear? Submit it here!

Come hear a bit of the book, along with YOUR stories!!! All of this sapphic goodness followed by a book signing!

Brought to you by Sub Rosa, Broadside Bookshop, and Cruising Podcast.

Tickets are LIMITED! Pricing is SLIDING SCALE! Your ticket fee goes to support the arts & culture programming at Sub Rosa…lez help keep Sub Rosa around!

There is an option to ADD A BOOK to your sliding scale entry ticket! (If you do not want to purchase a book, select ‘NO THANK YOU’ on the book drop down menu.)

About the book:

Lesbian bars are so much more than a place to get a drink. For over a century, they’ve acted as community posts, political organizing grounds, and sanctuaries. Yet whereas in the 1980s there were an estimated 200 lesbian bars across the US, the current count sits at a few dozen.

In
The Lesbian Bar Chronicles, author and co-creator of the hit podcast Cruising Rachel Karp embarks across the country with her wife and best friend to chronicle the stories of the remaining US lesbian bars. Recent narratives have claimed lesbian bars are dying, but Karp’s group finds many of the places they visit to be thriving, their communities sustaining themselves over decades of change and challenges.

Weaving together over 100 hours of immersive interviews with bar owners, staff, and regulars, Karp highlights places like:

Nobody’s Darling in Chicago where readers meet “the mayor” Shirley J, who in the 1970s was instrumental in the birth of house music

Frankie’s in Oklahoma City, where readers attend a “family night” to learn how a lesbian bar can birth a chosen family

Redz a Chicana lesbian bar in East LA involved in the precedent setting court case that followed years of arrests for patrons wearing men’s clothing

A heartfelt reclamation of queer history and queer lives, Karp’s narrative examines how these beacons for community and inclusion can teach us to live openly, cultivate connection, and continue to take up space
🌹