Auuuggggh! All this talk of lesbians and scifi and, so I waded through the entire thread, but no JOANNA RUSS! :}
Russ is who I want to be like when/if I grow up. Much bowing in her direction. My partner introduced me to her when we first got together by handing me _On Strike Against God: A Lesbian Love Story_. I followed that up with my first read of _The Female Man_, _The Adventures of Alyx_, _The Zanzibar Cat_, _Extra(ordinary) People_, and _We Who Are About To..._. I've not gotten through everything she's written yet, sadly, but I've gone back and re-read several, because her more complicated work always leaves me thinking, "I missed something! Must go back and re-read!"
Other authors:
Louisa May Alcott: She isn't just about _Little Women_... in fact, she *hated* that book. There are several compilations of her "blood and thunder" stories on the market now. I've not read them all, but the ones I've read have been a hoot. With strong female characters!
James Tiptree Jr.: She was dark, dark, dark, but oh, GODS, could that woman write.
Melissa Scott: Only gotten through one of her books, _Dreamships_, but I have it on good authority that she's a pretty decent writer.
Dorothy L. Sayers: I can only agree with the earlier people who bowed down before her. What fabulous books--great mysteries, but better writing and characters.
Wilkie Collins: Surprisingly for a Victorian man, his books have a bunch of strong female characters, notably the admirable Marian Halcombe in _The Woman in White_.
BarbaraNeely: Her Blanche White mysteries are some of the hardest books I've ever read because of the racism and sexism she clearly depicts, and the kinds of things poor Blanche has to go through. The mysteries are compelling, though, and the books certainly make me think about race relations in a starker light.
Zilpha Keatley Snyder: Children's books, primarily, and I've not read any of her stories, but my partner loves her work... and my partner is mighty picky about her writers.
Louise Fitzhugh: I loved _Harriet the Spy_ when I was growing up. I loved Harriet, I loved her friends, and I loved Ole Golly.
Terry Pratchett: Yes, yes, yes. I agree with everyone who worships at pterry's feet. The man can write, he's funny, *and* he's never mean (unless someone *really* deserves it). His depiction of a fat woman (Agnes) is one of the most sympathetic I've ever seen -- and I was mighty nervous about how he would handle her.
Steven Brust: His Dragaera novels are fabulous fantasy bubblegum, and many of the characters that Vlad interacts with are wildly powerful women.
Terri Windling: _The Wood Wife_ is a well-written piece of modern fantasy, set in the desert southwest. Highly recommended.
Comments:
Anne McCaffrey has all sorts of issues about sex and queers in her novels. I loved her stuff when I was a teenager (and, in fact, screamed when I missed her final visit to the US, and her signing visit to the bookstore just down the street from my house), but as I got older, I lost my taste for her stuff. What completely put me off was a friend pointing out that all the sex in the early Dragonriders novels was rape. Period. Haven't really gone back since.
Suzette Haden Elgin's work is compelling, if difficult to read. However, I take issue with the fact that lesbianism just utterly FAILS to appear in her Native Tongue series. Hundreds of older women, locked up together in housing complexes, unsupervised, isolated. She mentions their sexual frustrations, etc. AHEM. While I believe that some women are straightity-straight-straight, I also believe that most of them could get OVER it, given the HUNDREDS OF AVAILABLE PARTNERS. These women aren't NUNS, after all. *whacks Elgin upside the head*
LL