Happy Spring! The last few days here have had some of the worst rain and wind I’ve ever seen in my life. It was blowing completely sideways and was coming down in buckets. I took the dogs out during what I thought was a lull and then got caught in a (mild) hail downpour. Hopefully we’ll start seeing better outdoor reading weather soon.
Book Riot’s matching campaign to UNICEF’s relief efforts in Ukraine ended yesterday, but you can still donate to help UNICEF provide health care, safe water, emergency supplies, and more in Ukraine.
How To Have a Queer Readathon
Dewey’s 24 Hour Readathon is coming up at the end of the month, which is one of my favorite days of the year. I just went back in my blog to try to remember when I started doing it, and I found out that this month will be my tenth year celebrating it! I believe I’ve done it every year in that time.
Over the years, I have honed my strategy, and now I have it down to a science. I’ve written several posts on the topic: How to Last Through a 24 Hour Readathon, 12 Things That Happen When You Read for 24 Hours Straight, Beginner Mistakes To Avoid During a 24 Hour Readathon, and even essential readathon snacks. Surprisingly, I’ve found snack choices to be about as important as book choices for a successful readathon.
That’s all well and good for general advice, but what about if you want to specifically have a queer readathon? There are two components here: company and book choices.
I used to be a solo readathoner, but now I have a bookish roommate, and we readathon together. It’s a very cozy feeling to be reading with a friend (or partner) for hours on end, occasionally checking in about your process. Last year, we invited another friend, including having her stay the night so we could get started at 5 am. (Not mandatory, but that’s how seriously we take it.) It was such a success that we have a standing readathon date twice a year. I highly recommend gathering some queer bookish friends together if you want to have a queer readathon. You can swap books throughout the day and have a condensed book club!
Then there’s the TBR. Some people keep a strict one, while others pick their reads as they go. I like to gave a stack to choose from, including lots of quick reads: LGBTQ middle grade books, sapphic graphic novels, queer novellas, etc. Then, I pick from that the day of depending on my mood.
Here are just a few of the books on my readathon TBR right now (all queer books, all quick reads):
- Cheer Up! Love and Pompoms by Crystal Frasier, Val Wise and Oscar Jupiter (Trans and Sapphic YA Graphic Novel)
- Every Heart a Doorway by Seanan McGuire (Asexual Fantasy Novella)
- The Empress of Salt and Fortune by Nghi Vo (Sapphic Fantasy Novella)
- The Insiders by Mark Oshiro (Queer Middle Grade)
- Ivy Aberdeen’s Letter to the World by Ashley Herring Blake (Sapphic Middle Grade)
- A History of My Brief Body by Billy-Ray Belcourt (Queer Poetry)
And so many more! The readathon will be April 30th: check out Dewey’s 24 Hour Readathon for more information, and I hope to see you there! What will you be reading?
All the Links Fit to Click
- Long Relegated to Back Shelves, LGBTQ Romance Is Booming (Sorry, this one is behind a paywall!)
- 16 States Pushing “Don’t Say Gay” Bills and Censorship Laws Right Now
- Target removed many LGBTQ+ books from their website. No one knows exactly why.
- Trans and Nonbinary Writers to Read on This National Transgender Day of Visibility and Beyond
- For Trans Day of Visibility, LGBTQ Reads shared a post of books by trans and/or nonbinary authors and starring trans and/or nonbinary main characters. Check out the previous posts linked in the first paragraph for even more!
- For Arab American Heritage Month, LGBTQ Reads shared a post of queer Arab American book recommendations!
- 80 Queer and Feminist Books Coming Out Spring 2022
- Quiz: Which Humorous Queer Book Should You Read This April?
- 25 Must-Read Books by Queer Writers
- We Rise Above It: A Tribute to Gentleman Jack and Her Fandom
- Crush & Lobo by Mariko Tamaki, Amancay Nahuelpan, Tamra Bonvillain, Nick Filardi, and Ariana Maher and Cheer Up! Love and Pompoms by Crystal Frasier, Val Wise, and Oscar Jupiter won GLAAD Media Awards.
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
LGBTQ Book Riot Posts
- 10 Queer Romcoms That Will Make You Swoon
- 15 LGBTQ Books Out This Month You Need to Read
- Here are the Top 10 Most Banned and Challenged Books of 2021
- There’s a National Book Ban Busters Read-In of banned books tonight, including Leslea Newman, author of Heather Has Two Mommies and I.W. Gregorio, author of None of the Above
New Releases This Week
This week has one of the biggest new releases days of the year! I went back and forth over which books to feature, because there are so many great options. I talk about a few of these more in depth on the April 5th All the Books podcast episode.
Nothing Burns as Bright as You by Ashley Woodfolk (Sapphic YA Contemporary)
We begin at the end: with the two unnamed main characters walking away from each other after they set fire to a dumpster behind their school. Then we go back to see how they got there: their protective friendship that turned into a not-quite-romance and toxic codependency. This is a novel in verse, and it promises to be a fast-paced read with a very intense relationship.
Rabbit Chase by Elizabeth LaPensée and K.C. Oster (Non-binary Middle Grade Graphic Novel)
This is non-binary middle grade graphic novel Alice in Wonderland retelling! Aimée is a a non-binary Anishinaabe middle-schooler who finds themselves pulled into a world populated by Anishinaabe figures and has to fight the land-grabbing Queen of Hearts and team up with Trickster to get back home.
Fine: A Comic About Gender by Rhea Ewing (Graphic Nonfiction)
This is graphic nonfiction that’s part memoir, part documentary. Over the course of a decade, Rhea interviewed people from across the country, most of them trans, about their relationship to gender. The book is divided into themes, and each theme includes moments from Rhea’s life, excerpts from interviews on that theme, and finally Rhea’s own thoughts about it.
Little Foxes Took Up Matches by Katya Kazbek (Queer, Gender-Questioning Fiction)
Young Mungo by Douglas Stuart (M/M Fiction)
Portrait of a Thief by Grace D. Li (Thriller, Sapphic POV)
Reputation by Lex Croucher (F/F Historical Romance)
The Bladed Faith (The Vagrant Gods #1) by David Dalglish (F/F Fantasy)
She Gets the Girl by Rachael Lippincott and Alyson Derrick (F/F YA Romance)
Burning My Roti: Breaking Barriers as a Queer Indian Woman by Sharan Dhaliwal (Memoir)
Burning Butch by R/B Mertz (Genderqueer Memoir)
Content Warning: Everything by Akwaeke Emezi (Non-binary Poetry)
Time Is a Mother by Ocean Vuong (Queer Poetry)
Beast at Every Threshold by Natalie Wee (Queer Poetry)
That’s it for me this week! Until next time, you can find me at my bi and lesbian book blog, the Lesbrary, as well as on Twitter @danikaellis. You can also hear me on All the Books or you can read my Book Riot posts.
Happy reading!
Danika