

The uprising was the seminal, although not the only, event to kick-start the gay liberation movement. In 1979, George Segal, the famous Pop artist, was commissioned to create a sculpture commemorating the 1969 Stonewall uprising in New York City. The Audacity of a Kiss is a moving and inspiring tale of how love, art, and solidarity can overcome oppression. Foremost among these was her 1976 cofounding of the groundbreaking women’s nightclub Sahara, which played host to such luminaries as Betty Friedan, Gloria Steinem, Pat Benatar, Ntozake Shange, Rita Mae Brown, Adrienne Rich, Patti Smith, Bella Abzug, and Jane Fonda. Transporting the reader to the pivotal time when brave gay women and men carved out spaces where they could live and love freely, she recounts both her personal struggles and the accomplishments she achieved as part of New York’s gay and feminist communities. In this evocative memoir, Cohen tells the story of a love that has lasted for over fifty years. The two women are part of George Segal’s iconic sculpture “Gay Liberation,” but these powerful symbols were modeled on real people: Leslie Cohen and her partner (now wife) Beth Suskin. One of the women touches the thigh of her partner as they gaze into each other’s eyes. Rendered in bronze, covered in white lacquer, two women sit together on a park bench in Greenwich Village. Shortlisted for Lesbian Memoir/Biography Lammy Award
