Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Tune Into the National Book Ban Busters Read-In Tonight!

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):

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

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

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 book cover

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.

the cover of Rabbit Chase

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.

the cover of Fine by Rhea Ewing

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)

the cover of She Gets the Girl

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)

the cover of Burning Butch by R/B Mertz; illustration of Joan of Arc on a matchbook cover

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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Read These Trans Books for Transgender Day of Visibility

Happy Transgender Day of Visibility! Definitely take this opportunity to pick up some trans books (especially if you can buy from trans authors), but I also invite you to think about what else we can do as a bookish community to fight transphobia. Pay attention to your local politics, because many states are trying to pass transphobic legislation right now (and some already have). Show up, make some noise, call your local representative to defend trans rights.

There’s also been a lot of trans books targeted recently, especially in school libraries. Check out Book Riot’s Anti-Censorship Tool Kit to learn about how to fight censorship and book challenges in your community and on a larger scale.


Some of My Favorite Trans Books

It’s Transgender Day of Visibility, which is a day for celebrating trans people as well as raising awareness for the discrimination that trans people face. It’s been around since 2009, and it was created because at the time, the only widely recognized day dedicated to trans people was Transgender Day of Remembrance, which doesn’t celebrate living trans people.

In the past decade or so, there’s definitely been an increase in trans authors being published, but while sapphic and M/M books have seen a sharp rise in numbers, we’re still only seeing a gradual increase of trans and non-binary books hitting the shelves.

I’ve included some links later in the newsletter to other Book Riot articles for trans book recommendations, but I wanted to shout out a few of my personal favorites today. These are all ones that I’ve read and loved, but of course I have many more jostling for position on my TBR!

the cover of Nevada

Nevada by Imogen Binnie

This was originally published in 2013, but I am so happy to say that’s being rereleased in June! This book blew my mind when I first read it, because so many of the queer books I was reading back then were Good Queer Representation: they were very careful to have queer characters who were practically flawless. Then came Nevada, the first trans lesbian book I’d ever read, and it had a relatable complete mess of a main character. When Maria’s girlfriend breaks up with her, she steals her car and goes on an impromptu road trip, bumping into James, who reminds Maria of her pre-transition self. It’s funny, sometimes dark, and memorable from the very first lines.

A Dream of a Woman cover

A Dream of a Woman by Casey Plett

One of the prized books in my collection is Plett’s “Lizzy and Annie,” a short story illustrated by Annie Mok and bound zine-style. The story, which is about two trans women in love in New York, is a personal favorite. I loved her newest short story collection just as much. The collection centers trans women and deals with transmisogyny, but it’s also just about the complexities and messiness of relationships (of all kinds). It begins with a gut punch of a story that left me staring at the wall for a while afterwards in order to process it. The collection has a melancholic tone, but also moments of hope and connection. (A Dream of a Woman also has several sapphic stories.)

Light from Uncommon Stars book cover

Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki

This may be the best book I have no idea how to recommend. It’s about a woman who made a deal with the devil to become an expert violinist, and also about a refugee from an alien planet who runs a donut shop. And they fall in love. It’s also a coming of age story about a trans aspiring violinist who may well sacrifice her own soul just to find a place to call home. It’s part sci fi, part fantasy, part literary fiction. It’s hopeful and life-affirming, but it also has some of the most brutal scenes of abuse, transphobia, and racism I’ve read before. This is an event of a reading experience that I was itching to reread as soon as I finished it.

The Heartbreak Bakery book cover

The Heartbreak Bakery by A.R. Capetta

I love all of the books I’ve read by Capetta, and this is no exception. It’s a YA magical baking romance between an agender main character and a genderfluid love interest, which is just as good as it sounds. When Syd’s girlfriend breaks up with Syd, that pain gets funneled into brownies. Unfortunately, everyone who bought those brownies at the bakery ends up breaking up with their partner. So now Syd and the genderfluid bakery delivery person, Harley, are on a mission to track down everyone who ate a breakup brownie and fix Syd’s mistake. But along the way, fixing these breakups seems to be bringing Harley and Syd closer together…

Meet Cute Diary Book Cover

Meet Cute Diary by Emery Lee

This is a cute fake dating romance with a trans main character and a non-binary side character experimenting with pronouns (who I think steals the show). Noah writes Meet Cute Diary, a blog collecting happy trans meet cutes — except he secretly writes them all himself. When this gets exposed to the merciless audience of the internet, he decides to bring one of his meet cutes to life to prove they’re real, and Drew, the handsome stranger he bumped into, is game. My favorite thing about this story is that Noah is flawed and makes mistakes over the course of the book. I love a multidimensional main character, especially queer characters.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

And there you have it! Some fun, light reads, and some ones that brought me to tears. Remember to check out the links below for more trans book recs from other Book Riot writers!

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

the cover of Wild and Wicked Things

Wild and Wicked Things by Francesca May (Lesbian Fantasy)

Annie Mason has arrived at Crow Island to settle her late father’s estate and to reconnect with an old friend, but she soon stumbles into a world of witchcraft, secrets, and danger. This is supposed to have The Great Gatsby vibes, but sapphic and on an island… needless to say, this is at the top of my to read list.

Cover of Survive the Dome by Kosoko Jackson; image of young Black man surrounded by a white circle

Survive the Dome by Kosoko Jackson (M/M YA Dystopia)

Jamal is an aspiring journalist who travelled to Baltimore to document the protests against police brutality in the wake of a Black man being murdered by police. But before the protests can even get properly started, the city enacts a security feature called “the dome,” and no one can get in or out. He and some new friends will have to find a way to escape — and to expose the corruption within the police department.

the cover of Conversations with People Who Hate Me by Dylan Marron

Conversations with People Who Hate Me by Dylan Marron (Nonfiction)

You might recognize the title of this book from Marron’s podcast, where he connects people who have feuded online. Can you imagine talking to the person who wrote terrible things about you online? It sounds like a nightmare, but in this book, Marron discusses what he’s learned from talking to people who hate him. It comes recommended by Glennon Doyle, Jason Sudeikis, Franchesca Ramsey, and many more.

The Most Dazzling Girl in Berlin by Kip Wilson (F/F Historical Fiction)

Going Public by Hudson Lin (M/M Romance)

so this is ever after book cover

Monarch by Candice Wuehle (Queer Thriller)

All the White Spaces by Ally Wilkes (Trans Horror)

Anything But Fine by Tobias Madden (M/M YA Contemporary)

Live, Laugh, Kidnap by Gabby Noone (Sapphic YA Contemporary)

So This Is Ever After by F.T. Lukens (M/M YA Fantasy)

My Dearest Darkest by Kayla Cottingham (Sapphic YA Horror)

The Secret Sunshine Project by Benjamin Dean (Two Dads Middle Grade) (UK Release)

cover of mama and mommy and me in the middle by nina lacour

Mama and Mommy and Me in the Middle by Nina LaCour and Kaylani Juanita (Two Moms Picture Book)

let the dead in by Saida Agostini (Queer Poetry)

Ten Steps to Nanette: A Memoir Situation by Hannah Gadsby (Lesbian Memoir)

Body Becoming: A Path to Our Liberation by Robyn Henderson-Espinoza (Non-binary Memoir)

Poetic Operations: Trans of Color Art in Digital Media by Micha Cárdenas (Trans Nonfiction)


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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

What Counts a Queer Book?

I finally got art to put up in my office. And by office, I mean one side of my bedroom. I’ve always been a bare walls kind of gal, and what do you know, it makes a big difference seeing some art there! I bought a Tea Dragon Society print, which is an adorable queer graphic novel series, and it makes me happy to see it every day.

Today, I want to highlight some charities that are helping LGBTQ people in Ukraine, including one I’ve mentioned before: Rainbow Railroad. For more places to help, check out this article from Queerty.


What Counts a Queer Book?

The funny thing about being on queer booktok as someone who’s been on the queer book internet for more than a decade is that you can see the same arguments recycle over and over. Where I lived through them on Tumblr, today’s young queer readers are rehashing them on TikTok. (And yes, I started a TikTok. I couldn’t resist.)

In a recent example of this, there was an ongoing argument about what counts as a sapphic book, and specifically about recommendations being rejected for not being sapphic enough, because they didn’t have an F/F romance. Sapphic is a term that’s only recently increased in popularity, and I saw it happening on Tumblr. It was used to be more bi-inclusive, and it refers to anyone who doesn’t identity as a man and is attracted to people who don’t identify as men. (So, all lesbians and bi or pan women, but also non-binary people who identify under that umbrella.)

Any book with a sapphic main character is, by definition, sapphic. Even if they just mention it in passing. Even if there’s no romance, or the romance is with a guy.

What many of these people were looking for was an F/F romance, which is a romance between two women. Simple enough. But for some reason, this term seems to have been lost in the newest iteration of the queer book internet, which means “sapphic book” is being used to signify a bunch of very specific, conflicting things by different people.

Even if we’re all seeking out more queer books to read, that doesn’t mean we’re looking for the same thing. Some people are looking for books that affirm their experiences and reflect their own identity, while some are looking to expand their horizons and read from other queer perspectives. Some people are looking for books where being queer is the focus and is explored in depth, while others want books where it’s not a big deal (for example, queernormative fantasy books).

There’s no need to fight over which kind of queer book is better: there’s room for all of them. We need books that grapple with prejudice/oppression and hopeful stories we can escape with. We need books with queer couples as well as book with queer single people, including those who have no desire to be in a relationship. Turning on each other isn’t helpful.

So what counts as a queer book? It’s a book with a queer main character (or, in the case of nonfiction, one that’s focused on queer people). That’s it. You may be looking for something more specific, but that doesn’t invalidate other queer books. There’s room for stories that speak to each one of us.

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to find many LGBTQ new releases by authors of color this week. Especially if you leave off the manga titles, this week’s list over-represents white authors. I am once again asking publishing to do better.

Cover of The City of Dusk by Tara Sim

The City of Dusk (The Dark Gods #1) by Tara Sim (Queer Fantasy)

This is a truly epic fantasy about a city abandoned by its four gods. The gods’ heirs try to save it, but it means turning their backs on the gods. There are seven point of view characters, complex world-building, and several queer main characters. Laynie Rose, one of my favorite booktokers, has been singing the praises of this for months, so I can’t wait to dive in.

the cover of Ellen Outside the Lines

Ellen Outside the Lines by A.J. Sass (Sapphic Middle Grade Contemporary)

This is a middle grade novel with a queer, Jewish, autistic main character on a school trip to Barcelona. During a school project that throws her together with some different classmates to go on a scavenger hunt to learn Spanish culture, she makes new friends and lets go of some old habits. There’s also a nonbinary side character/love interest.

My Volcano by John Elizabeth Stintzi (Queer Fiction)

The Town of Babylon by Alejandro Varela (Queer Guy Fiction)

the cover of The Town of Babylon

Shake Things Up by Skye Kilaen (Polyamorous M/F/F Romance)

A Million Quiet Revolutions by Robin Gow (Trans YA Novel in Verse)

Kiss & Tell by Adib Khorram (Gay YA Contemporary)

Catch These Hands! Vol. 1 by murata (Yuri Manga)

Dekoboko Bittersweet Days, Vol. 2 by Atsuko Yusen (M/M Manga)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

The 2022 Lambda Literary Awards Finalists

It has come to my attention recently that maybe, just maybe I’m a little long-winded in these, so I’m going to try to have a slightly smaller selection of links to click and new releases to peruse from now on: just the ones I’m most excited about!

Today, I wanted to highlight the Forcibly Displaced People Network. They help LGBTIQ+ people around the world who are fleeing danger, including in Ukraine right now. You can find out more at their donation page.


Riot Recommendation

Now that my Read Harder: Queer Edition mini series is over, I’d like to start doing good old fashioned queer book recommendations in this spot! So here’s a recent favorite of mine.

the cover of Delilah Green Doesn't Care

Delilah Green Doesn’t Care by Ashley Herring Blake

Ashley Herring Blake’s sapphic YA books, How to Make a Wish and Girl Made of Stars, were both 5 star reads for me and instant favorites. I’ve heard only great things about her middle grade novels, and I look forward to reading them soon. So when I heard that she had an adult F/F romance coming out this year, I was eager to see if it could live up to my love for her YA titles.

I haven’t read a ton of romance novels, but the Brown Sisters series by Talia Hibbert has taught me that I can adore them — even with straight main characters! While their styles are different, Blake’s and Hibbert’s romances scratched the same itch for me. They both have multifaceted main characters surrounded by three dimensional supporting characters who feel like their lives continue when they walk off the page.

While this is a love story between Claire and Delilah, filled with tension and banter and great chemistry, it’s just as much about Delilah’s fractured and complicated relationship with her stepsister, Astrid. When Delilah’s father died when she was a kid, she felt like an unwelcome intrusion in her perfect stepsister’s and controlling stepmother’s lives. Once Delilah left for New York, they stopped having even their usual adversarial relationship, until Astrid hires Delilah as her wedding photographer, and she reluctantly returns to her hometown.

This was a book that kept me up reading, which is rare for me! It’s compulsively readable and has two main characters I fell in love with. I can’t wait to read the sequel! (The title of which is kind of a spoiler for Delilah Green, so avoid it if you can until you finish this one.)

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

the cover of Vagabonds!

Vagabonds! by Eloghosa Osunde (Queer Fiction)

Buckle in for an experimental and surprising read in Vagabonds! It follows a cast of queer characters in Lagos, each with their own story. It blends together realism and myth, and soon connections begin to emerge between the narratives, taking this from a short story collection to an unconventional novel.

It was reviewed at the New York Times, and Eloghosa Osunde was interviewed about it at Elle and Them.

the cover of Right Where I Left You

Right Where I Left You by Julian Winters (M/M YA Contemporary)

I still haven’t recovered from this cover. It’s such a celebration of queer Black joy, which has only recently been featured in mainstream publishing. This is a “geeky best friends-to lovers romance” that has been one of the most anticipated queer releases of the year.

Secret Identity by Alex Segura (Queer Historical Mystery)

Exclusive by Melissa Brayden (F/F Romance)

Her Duchess to Desire by Jane Walsh (F/F Historical Romance)

the cover of My Wandering Warrior Existence

We Are Little Feminists: Families by Archaa Shrivastav (LGBTQ Board Book)

My Wandering Warrior Existence by Nagata Kabi (Lesbian Manga Memoir)

Cane Fire by Shani Mootoo (Queer Poetry)

Prelude by Brynne Rebele-Henry (Lesbian Poetry)

Queer Fire: Liberation and Abolition edited by Marquis Bey and Jesse A. Goldberg (Queer Nonfiction)

Outrageous!: The Story of Section 28 and Britain’s Battle for LGBT Education by Paul Baker (Queer Nonfiction)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Read Harder: LGBTQ Edition is Ready for You to Tackle!

It’s always interesting to see mini trends when putting together the queer new releases every week, and apparently this Tuesday was queer picture book day! I’m also happy to say that my goal of queering the Read Harder challenge is complete. If you decide to tackle it, please let me know how it goes!

Today, I want to highlight some charities that are helping LGBTQ people in Ukraine, including one I’ve mentioned before: Rainbow Railroad. For more places to help, check out this article from Queerty.


Read Harder: LGBTQ Edition

For the past few weeks, I’ve been giving recommendations to make the Read Harder challenge even queerer, and I’m happy to announce that I’ve reached the final three challenges! You can now do the Read Harder challenge entirely with queer books, if you so choose! You can check out previous editions of Our Queerest Shelves for the earlier challenges, but I’ll also be gathering them all into a post soon.

22) Read a history about a period you know little about.

There are so many different options to choose from here, especially because queer history is so suppressed that the average reader doesn’t know about almost any of it! I left off the books about the Stonewall riots and the AIDS epidemic, since those are the most known periods of queer history, but they’re still well worth reading. I also tried to stick to books about a particular period of history, instead of a general overview.

the cover of Tinderbox

Tinderbox: The Untold Story of the Up Stairs Lounge Fire and the Rise of Gay Liberation by Robert W. Fieseler

One lesser known event in queer American history is the 1973 fire that burned down the Up Stairs Lounge in New Orleans. It was set by an arsonist, killing dozens of people, and it devastated the local gay community. The mourning survivors reeled in the aftermath, when families decided not to claim bodies, and Catholic churches refused burials. This further pain was the driving force behind a wave of activism that demanded gay liberation and basic rights.

More LGBTQ history books:

23) Read a book by a disabled author.

the cover of Bodymap

Bodymap by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

There are lots of great nonfiction books and memoirs that focus on disability that are by disabled authors, but that isn’t the only option for this prompt. You can also read any book by disabled author, including fiction and poetry. Bodymap is my favorite poetry collection, with cutting and insightful poems that address sexuality, gender, race, and disability in a readable and memorable style.

More queer books by disabled authors:

24) Pick a challenge from any of the previous years’ challenges to repeat!

There are so many options for previous challenges that are already queer or can easily be adapted to be queer. I’ve selected one queer challenge from each year of the Read Harder challenge, but there are lots more to choose from.

  • 2021: Read a historical fiction with a POC or LGBTQ+ protagonist [Or why not both!]
  • 2020: Read a debut novel by a queer author
  • 2019: Read a comic by an LGBTQIA creator
  • 2018: Read a mystery by a person of color or LGBTQ+ author
  • 2017: Read an LGBTQ+ romance novel
  • 2016: Read a book by a trans author
  • 2015: Read a book by or about someone LGBTQ [a gimme!]

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

the cover of The One True Me and You

The One True Me and You by Remi K. England (Gender/Pronoun Questioning Romance)

Kaylee is at GreatCon not just to celebrate all things nerdy, but also to try using they/them pronouns and cosplaying masculine characters. Also… maybe to kiss a girl? Teagan is at the same hotel, but she’s there to win a pageant competition and get a scholarship — even if she’d rather be at GreatCon. When they run into each other, sparks fly, and Kay might get to kiss a girl after all.

the cover of Every Variable of Us

Every Variable of Us by Charles A. Bush (Bisexual YA Contemporary)

When Alexis is injured in a gang shooting, her dreams of pro basketball go out with the window, and with them, her ticket out of her impoverished neighborhood. When she meets new girl Aamani, though, she begins to find a way to see her worth outside of being an athlete. But then she realizes that she might be falling for Aamani, and that starts a whole different reconsideration of her identity.

the cover of Drew Leclair Gets a Clue

Drew Leclair Gets a Clue by Katryn Bury (Queer Middle Grade)

It’s only fitting that a modern take on Harriet the Spy would be queer! Drew is trying to track down a cyberbully who is revealing her classmates’ secrets before they expose her own: that her mother ran away to Hawaii with the guidance counsellor. She’ll stop at nothing to find the perpetrator, even if it means putting her friendships at risk.

Cakewalk by Douglas Bell (Queer, Trans Side Characters Fiction)

At Certain Points We Touch by Lauren John Joseph (Trans/Queer Fiction)

Wherever Is Your Heart by Anita Kelly (F/F Romance)

the cover of Wherever Is Your Heart

Xenocultivars: Stories of Queer Growth edited by Isabela Oliveira & Jed Sabin (Speculative Fiction Anthology)

These Feathered Flames by Alexandra Overy (Sapphic Fantasy) (Paperback Rerelease)

Ready When You Are by Gary Lonesborough (M/M YA Contemporary)

Loveless by Alice Oseman (Asexual and Aromantic Girl YA Contemporary)

This is All Your Fault by Aminah Mae Safi (Sapphic YA Contemporary) (Paperback Rerelease)

Travelers Along the Way: A Robin Hood Remix by Aminah Mae Safi (Sapphic Historical YA)

The Last Firefox by Lee Newbery (Two Dads Middle Grade) (UK Release)

All Moms by Sarah Kate Ellis, Kristen Ellis-Henderson, and Max Rambaldi (LGBTQ-inclusive Picture Book)

the cover of My Moms Love Me

My Moms Love Me by Anna Membrino and Joy Hwang Ruiz (Two Moms Picture Book)

Just. Like. You. by Meredith Steiner and Avneet Sandhu (Gender Nonconforming-Inclusive Picture Book)

Firsts and Lasts: The Changing Seasons by Leda Schubert and Clover Robin (Two Moms Picture Book)

My Own Way: Celebrating Gender Freedom for Kids by Joana Estrela and translated by Jay Hulme (Trans Author Nonfiction Picture Book)

Yuri is My Job! Vol. 8 by Miman (Yuri Manga)

the cover of Another Appalachia

A White Rose in Bloom, Vol. 2 by by Asumiko Nakamura (Yuri Manga)

Chasing After Aoi Koshiba, Vol. 3 by Hazuki Takeoka (Yuri Manga)

Another Appalachia: Coming Up Queer and Indian in a Mountain Place by Neema Avashia (Queer Memoir)

This Time for Me: A Memoir by Alexandra Billings (Trans Woman Memoir)

I Was Better Last Night: A Memoir by Harvey Fierstein (Gay Memoir)

The Sex Lives of African Women: Self-Discovery, Freedom, and Healing by Nana Darkoa Sekyiamah (LBTQ-inclusive Nonfiction)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

People Want To Ban My Book for Only Gay Reasons. Nobody Ever Mentions the Cannibalism.

I never intend this newsletter to be pushing 2k words, but here we are. There’s just so much happening in the world of queer books. And while we’re currently seeing a backlash in the form of censorship, it’s worth acknowledging the progress we’ve made, too. I hope that censorship corner shrinks soon, but either way, there’s no reversing how much more read and celebrated queer books have become in just the last handful of years.

Let’s make the world better. Here’s somewhere to start: LGBT Books to Prisoners is a “trans-affirming, racial justice-focused, prison abolitionist project” that gets LGBTQ books into the hands of incarcerated LGBTQ people in the U.S. You can donate money or books, or you can buy books off their wishlists at Amazon or Room of One’s Own.


Read Harder Challenge: LGBTQ Edition

We’re nearing the end! This is my mini series where I endeavor to make the Read Harder Challenge even queerer. Next week will finish off all the challenges! Some were a little harder than others to come up with queer options (looking at you, political thrillers), but most had lots to choose from. Let’s get into this week’s challenges!

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

18) Read a “Best _ Writing of the year” book for a topic and year of your choice.

I have to admit, I thought this challenge might get me, but I was able to find 6 year-specific all-queer anthologies! Let me know if you’re aware of any more, especially ones that are ongoing.

While these almost all include stories by authors of color, most of the editors are white (though the 1997 Best Lesbian Erotica of the Year is edited by Jewelle Gómez, and that sounds amazing).

the cover of the Heiresses of Russ 2014 anthology, showing a woman in a spacesuit holding a phaser floating above a planet and being shot at

Heiresses of Russ: The Year’s Best Lesbian Speculative Fiction (2011-2016)

Did I pick this partly because of the cover? Of course. But this series is also edited by a legend in lesbian sci fi, Melissa Scott, known best for Trouble and Her Friends. There are also stories from well-known authors like Zen Cho (2011), Ellen Kushner (2011), Amal El-Mohtar (2012), Nalo Hopkinson (2012), Jewelle Gomez (2013), Malinda Lo (2013), Ken Liu (2015), Darcie Little Badger (2015), Seanan McGuire (2015), and more. PLUS: they’re all only $1 each as ebooks!

More LGBTQ best ___ of the year anthologies:

19) Read a horror novel by a BIPOC author.

The Gilda Stories cover

The Gilda Stories by Jewelle L. Gómez

I went back and forth a little bit about whether to include this title, because I don’t really think of it as horror — but vampires get a free pass into the horror genre, I think. This is a classic not just of lesbian literature, but of literature in general. It follows Gilda as an enslaved woman in 1850s Louisiana through her becoming a vampire and centuries of her undead life — ending in 2050! It’s a set of interrelated short stories, all in different time periods and settings. It explores racism and homophobia throughout time, and it’s a gorgeous, thought-provoking read.

More queer horror by BIPOC authors:

20) Read an award-winning book from the year you were born.

I can’t give a rec for each year you were all born, but I can give you some awards to check out!

Of course, the easy answer is Lambda Literary. It’s been going since 1988, and they have an previous winners page that allows you to search by year and category! So as a 1990s baby, I might read New, Improved Dykes To Watch Out For by Alison Bechdel (Humor) or Her by Cherry Muhanji (Lesbian Debut Fiction).

Another option is the Stonewall Book Awards, which have been given out by the American Library Association since 1971. The very first award was given to Patience and Sarah by Isabel Miller, which is a favorite of mine! A recent award-winner was Cantoras by Carolina De Robertis — which, if you read out loud to your 2020 baby, totally counts.

The Triangle Awards also began in 1988. Unfortunately, you have to click through each individual award to see previous winners: there isn’t a list of all of them in one place.

The Golden Crown Literary Awards would only be an option for young teens: it started in 2005.

If you were born before 1971, this will be a tricky challenge, unfortunately. Queer books have only started getting public recognition in the last few decades. One option may be picking another significant date (your graduation year, wedding anniversary, etc) instead.

21) Read a queer retelling of a classic of the canon, fairytale, folklore, or myth.

An already queer challenge! There are so many fantastic queer retellings out there — especially of fairy tales — that I had trouble narrowing it down, but here are just a handful.

the cover of The Magic Fish

The Magic Fish by Trung Le Nguyen (“The Little Mermaid”)

This is a Book Riot favorite, and it won the 2021 Harvey Award for Book of the Year. It also appeared on the best books of the year lists in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, the New York Public Library, and more. It’s a YA graphic novel about a Vietnamese American teen trying to come out to his mom. There’s also a legendary tweet from the author: “People wanna ban my book for only gay reasons, nobody ever ever mentions the cannibalism 😔”

More queer retellings:

For even more, check out 10 Great Queer Retellings of Classics and 30 Must-Read Queer Fairy Tale Retellings.

Censorship Corner

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

Some of the most anticipated and exciting 2022 releases are all out this week! It’s so exciting!

Cover of Dead Collections by Isaac Fellman

Dead Collections by Isaac Fellman (Queer and Trans Fiction)

Elsie’s wife was a semi-famous television writers, so Elsie decides to donate her papers after her death. There, she meets the archivist, Sol, and they soon begin falling for each other. On top of the usual complications of falling in love while living with grief, there are also the added hurdle of Sol living with vampirism. This is a surreal, multi-layered story that’s part office love story, part vampire novel, part exploration of transphobia. It comes highly recommended by the authors of Confessions of the Fox and Several People are Typing, so that gives you some sense of the tone!

cover of I'm So (Not) Over You by Kosoko Jackson

I’m So (Not) Over You by Kosoko Jackson (M/M Romance)

One of the most anticipated queer releases of 2022, this is an M/M fake dating second chance romance! When Hudson’s ex Kian asks him to pretend to be his boyfriend while his parents are in town, he reluctantly agrees — he even goes along as a plus one to a family wedding, since it will also give him an opportunity to network with some big names in media. Unsurprisingly, though, this fake relationship is beginning to feel like less and less of an act…

the cover of manhunt

Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin (Trans Horror)

This is another one that has had me counting down the days until the release date! While there have been plenty of post-apocalyptic stories that are gender-based, they usually either ignore trans people or only include a passing mention. Manhunt is about a sickness that affects people with high testosterone and follows a group of trans men and women who will do anything it takes to survive — which unfortunately means harvesting organs.

Son of Sin by Omar Sakr (Bisexual Literary Fiction)

The Verifiers by Jane Pek (Sapphic Mystery)

cover of The Verifiers by Jane Pek

Delilah Green Doesn’t Care by Ashley Herring Blake (Bisexual and Lesbian Romance)

The Last Laugh by Eva Muñoz (F/F Romance)

Scorpica (The Five Queendoms #1) by G.R. Macallister (Sapphic Fantasy)

Inheritors of Power (The Broken Trust #3) by Juliette Wade (Asexual Sci Fi)

Sisters of the Forsaken Stars (Our Lady of Endless Worlds #2) by Lina Rather (Sapphic Sci Fi)

Little Mushroom: Judgment Day by Shisi, translated by Xiao (M/M Sci Fi)

the cover of Delilah Green Doesn’t Care

Tripping Arcadia by Kit Mayquist (Bisexual F/F Gothic)

Extasia by Claire Legrand (Sapphic YA Horror)

Big Wig written by Jonathan Hillman and Illustrated by Levi Hastings (Gender Nonconforming Picture Book)

Destiny, NY, Vol 1: Who I Used To Be by Pat Shand, Manuel Preitano, Elisa Romboli (Sapphic Graphic Novel)

Alice In Leatherland by Iolanda Zanfardino and Elisa Romboli (Sapphic Erotic Graphic Novel)

semelparous, Vol. 2 by Jun Ogino (Yuri Manga)

cover image for Tripping Arcadia

Monologue Woven For You, Vol. 1 by Syu Yasaka (Yuri Manga)

I’m in Love with the Villainess (Light Novel) Vol. 4 by Inori and Hanagata (Yuri Light Novel)

Next Time There’s a Pandemic (CLC Kreisel Lecture Series) by Vivek Shraya (Trans Memoir)

In Sensorium: Notes for My People by Tanaïs (Queer Memoir)

Queer Data by Kevin Guyan (Queer Nonfiction)

Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity by C. Riley Snorton (Trans Nonfiction) (Audiobook Rerelease)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Under the Gaydar Reads

I regret to inform you that this is another newsletter with a Censorship Corner links section, and that’s excluding the vast majority of the LGBTQ book censorship stories I come across. (Follow Kelly’s weekly Censorship News Roundup if you want to see more.) It’s not all bad news, though: you’ll see that an unexpected group came to the rescue in one case…

But that leads in perfectly to the charity I want to highlight this week, which is PFLAG’s Read With Love program, which is attempting to get more diverse books into libraries. You can find out more at their website, including ways to donate.


Read Harder Challenge: LGBTQ Edition

This is the mini series where I make the Read Harder Challenge even queerer. You can check out previous editions of the newsletter for the earlier challenges. We’re getting near the end now!

14) Read a book whose movie or TV adaptation you’ve seen (but haven’t read the book).

There’s lots of options for this one! It was difficult to narrow it down, so I left off Carol aka The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith for being too obvious.

The Handmaiden movie poster

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters / The Handmaiden by Park Chan-Wook (movie)

Fingersmith is the best book I’ve ever read, and it’s actually been adapted twice: one by the BBC, and one reimagining by Park Chan-Wook. This adaptation moves the setting from Victorian England to Japan-occupied Korea. It’s gotten some criticism for supposedly having a “male gaze,” especially in the sex scenes, but I personally disagree. What I love about this adaptation is that it sparks a really interesting conversation with the book. They not only have different settings, but also different endings. I think it really adds something to an already amazing story.

More queer books that have been adapted:

15) Read a new-to-you literary magazine (print or digital).

I have to admit that any literary magazine would be new to me, because I haven’t read any before! Poking around online, though, it looks like there are quite a few interesting queer-centric lit mags to choose from. Here are some that looked the most intriguing!

the December 2021 cover of Anathema

Anathema: Spec From the Margins

Anathema is an online speculative fiction (including SFF, horror, fabulism, and more) literary magazine that publishes three times a year. The stories are all by queer POC/Indigenous/Aboriginal creators. The covers alone are gorgeous, and I can’t wait to dive into some of these stories.

More queer literary magazines:

16) Read a book recommended by a friend with different reading tastes.

This is a task that I can’t really give recommendations for, because it’s unique to you! Hopefully you have a friend who is well-read in queer lit and can give you some recommendations. I’ve found that having a focus on sapphic stories has introduced me to all kinds of genres and formats, because I’m much more likely to try it out if I know there’s a queer main character.

Use this task to try out a genre that’s unfamiliar to you. Maybe you can read a mystery novel with a queer main character for the first time — did you know this was one of the first genres to include queer characters? Or dip a toe into the world of manga with a yuri, BL, or queer manga title.

If you don’t have well-read queer friends away from the keyboard, online friends definitely count. (We’re friends now if you’ve read this far. No take backs.) Ask on social media for queer book recs and pick one that you wouldn’t have read otherwise. I’d love to hear how it goes!

17) Read a memoir written by someone who is trans or nonbinary.

An already queer task! That makes this one a breeze. There are so many great trans or nonbinary memoirs to choose from, but here are just a few highlights.

book cover all boys aren't blue by george m. johnson

All Boys Aren’t Blue by George M. Johnson

Two of the books I’m recommending for this category, this one and Gender Queer, have been among the most challenged in the last year of increased censorship. Read them yourself to see the beautiful, important stories that young people are being denied. These essays explore Johnson’s childhood, along with advice to young people (especially Black queer and trans people) about surviving and growing in a world that can be hostile to them. Reading All Boys Aren’t Blue will make it obvious that this book is being willfully misinterpreted, because Johnson is so generous in their explanations of the ideas they’re exploring here.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Censorship Corner

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

the cover of The Boy with a Bird in His Chest

The Boy With a Bird in His Chest by Emme Lund (Queer Fiction)

This is a queer coming of age allegory about a boy who is hidden away from the world because (as you might have guessed) he has a bird in his chest. When a disaster endangers his life, he is sent to live with relatives, and a whole new world opens up to him. It’s a story about hiding the tender, beautiful parts of ourselves, and what happens when we let people in.

the cover of The Chandler Legacies

The Chandler Legacies by Abdi Nazemian (Gay YA Contemporary)

This is a boarding school story following five main characters, including Ramin, a transfer student who came here because it’s not safe to be gay in Iran — only to be harassed by his classmates in what was supposed to be a refuge. The five of them all get into The Circle, an elite writing group, and they begin to open up to each other, including by discussing the abuses that go unaddressed in this prestigious school.

Parallel Hells by Leon Craig (Queer Short Stories) (UK Release)

Let’s Get Back to the Party by Zak Salih (Gay Fiction)

Let's Get Back to the Party cover

Don’t Say We Didn’t Warn You by Ariel Delgado Dixon (Lesbian Thriller)

My Secret Valentine by Julie Cannon, Erin Dutton and Anne Shade (F/F Romance Anthology)

The Magic Between by Stephanie Hoyt (Bisexual M/M Romance)

Her Heart’s Desire by Anne Shade (F/F Romance)

Escorted by Renee Roman (F/F Erotica)

Enchanted Autumn by Ursula Klein (F/F Fantasy Romance)

Watching Over Her by Ronica Black (F/F Romantic Thriller)

the cover of bitter by akwaeki emezi

Errant by L. K. Fleet (F/F Bisexual/Lesbian Fantasy)

The Thousand Eyes (The Serpent Gates #2) by A. K. Larkwood (Sapphic Fantasy)

Bruised by Tanya Boteju (Sapphic YA Contemporary) (Paperback Rerelease)

Silver-Lined Secrets by Aleksander Petit (Asexual Gay YA Adventure)

Bitter by Akwaeke Emezi (Queer YA Speculative Fiction)

The Alpha’s Son by Penny Jessup (M/M YA Werewolf Fantasy)

A Complicated Love Story Set in Space by Shaun David Hutchinson (M/M YA Sci Fi) (Paperback Rerelease)

Woodsqueer cover

Spin With Me by Ami Polonsky (Non-binary Middle Grade Contemporary) (Paperback Rerelease)

I’m Looking for Serious Love! by Shoko Rakuta (M/M Manga)

Kase-san and Yamada Vol. 2 by Hiromi Takashima (Yuri Manga)

Adachi and Shimamura (Light Novel) Vol. 8 by Hitoma Iruma and Non (Yuri Light Novel)

Heaven Official’s Blessing: Tian Guan Ci Fu Vol. 2 by by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu, translated by ZeldaCW (M/M Light Novel)

Woodsqueer: Crafting a Sustainable Rural Life by Gretchen Legler (Nonfiction)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Lesbian Gunslingers In Space

Hello, friends! I’ve decided after years of blank walls, I want to put some art up around my bedroom/office (where I spent approximately 80% of my time). But what sort of art? After much deliberating, I ended up buying a Tea Dragon Society print, because I am leaning into the Elementary School Librarian aesthetic I was always meant to have.

As for the charity I want to highlight today, the banning of queer and antiracist books continues (as you’ll see in some of the links below) and seems to just be increasing, so I wanted to talk about Out Maine’s program Read the Rainbow, which provides Maine schools with LGBTQ-inclusive books. That link will take you to the donation page as well as a form where you can be added to the wait list to receive queer books, if you’re a school librarian in Maine!


Read Harder: LGBTQ Edition

I’m changing the format a little bit on these, because as much as I’m enjoying making the Read Harder challenge even queerer, I do want to be writing other things in the near future! So here are some mini recs for the next few categories.

10) Read a political thriller by a marginalized author (BIPOC, or LGBTQIA+).

This has been the hardest category for me to crack so far. So I’m including Ace of Spades because for one thing, school politics is still politics, and also because it deals with bigger political/imbalance of power messages. Also, Goldie Vance takes a turn for the 1960s political — but I’ll admit those are both stretches.

the cover of The Fourth Courier

The Fourth Courier by Timothy Jay Smith

This is set in 1992 Warsaw, Poland. A Russian physicist who designed a portable atomic bomb has just disappeared, and others have been murdered who seem to have connections to the nuclear science. A straight white FBI agent and a gay Black CIA agent team up to try to find the scientist — and the bomb — before it’s too late.

More queer political thrillers:

77 by Guillermo Saccomanno, translated by Andrea Labinger

The Red Files by Lee Winter

Ace of Spades by Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé

Goldie Vance Vol. 1 by Hope Larson and Brittney Williams

11) Read a book with an asexual and/or aromantic main character.

Well this one requires no interpretation!

The Reckless Kind Book Cover

The Reckless Kind by Carly Heath

I will yell about this book any time I have an opportunity. It’s set in 1904 just outside of Norway, and follows three main characters, all of whom are queer and disabled and/or have mental health issues. (Asta is asexual, and possibly aromantic. Gunnar and Erland are dating.) They become friends through theater, then they become a found family after tragedy. There’s a horse race to save the family farm! I love this story to bits. Do look up trigger warnings before diving in, though, especially for ableism and violence/injury.

More asexual and/or aromantic books:

Loveless by Alice Oseman

Not Your Backup by C. B. Lee

Let’s Talk About Love by Claire Kann

The Cybernetic Tea Shop by Meredith Katz

12) Read an entire poetry collection.

the cover of Bodymap

Bodymap by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

This is the sort of poetry that punches you in the gut. It’s accessible even for a poetry novice (like me), but it’s moving, thought-provoking, and passionate. Like all of their books, it discusses race and racism, disability and ableism, politics and everyday life. (I recently also read Care Work and loved that, too.) I highly recommend this one, even if I don’t feel qualified to talk about it.

More queer poetry:

The Collected Poems of Audre Lorde

NDN Coping Mechanisms: Notes from the Field by Billy-Ray Belcourt

Even This Page is White by Vivek Shraya

Bestiary by Donika Kelly

13) Read an adventure story by a BIPOC author.

I wasn’t sure exactly how to define this one, because there are plenty of sci fi or fantasy adventures, but does that “count” for this category? I decided to go with a few realistic adventures, a couple superhero stories, and a fantasy pirates book.

the cover of 24/7

24/7 by Yolanda Wallace

This is part mystery/thriller, part romance, part procedural. Finn is a travel writer who has decided to stay at a lesbian resort. On a layover, she bumps into Luisa, and they spend a memorable hotel room night together. Then they part ways, as Luisa begins her job working for the Mexican Federal Police, trying to break apart a drug cartel. Soon, they find themselves unexpectedly thrown back together as the cartel overruns the resort.

More queer adventure stories by authors of color:

The Athena Protocol by Shamim Sarif

We Could Be Heroes by Mike Chen

Not Your Sidekick by C. B. Lee

The Mermaid, the Witch, and the Sea by Maggie Tokuda-Hall

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

Don’t forget to check out our new line of bookish, Wordle-inspired merch! There are mugs, t-shirts, hoodies, and more. The campaign is temporary, so order yours now!

New Releases This Week

the cover of Bluebird by Ciel Pierlot

Bluebird by Ciel Pierlot (Lesbian Sci Fi)

Look, there are only two things you need to know about this book. One, the tagline is “Lesbian gunslinger fights spies in space!” Two, the first line is “Arson is easier to commit than people make it out to be.”

Okay, you might also want to know that it’s a space-opera thriller with found family and a theme of “be gay, do crime!”

Book cover of Cold by Mariko Tamaki

Cold by Mariko Tamaki (Sapphic and Gay YA Mystery)

Todd Mayer is dead to begin with. His body has been found frozen to death in a park, naked except for his gloves. But Todd is still there, his ghost observing the investigation of his demise from a distance. Georgia didn’t know Todd, but she can’t stop thinking about his death, and she soon finds they’re more entwined than she could have imagined. Partly because they were both queer outcasts, but also, as Georgia will discover, because of the circumstances of his untimely death. This is was a quick but absorbing and atmospheric read that left me with an ache in my chest.

the cover of Pixels of You

Pixels of You by Ananth Hirsh, Yuko Ota, and J.R. Doyle (Sapphic Sci Fi Comic)

Indira and Fawn are both interns at an art gallery, but their disdain for each other’s photography results in a public confrontation that leaves both their spots at risk. Their mentor insists that they work together on a project, or they will both have to leave. This is an enemies to friends to romance story about art and what it means to be human. Oh, and did I mention that Fawn is one of the first human-presenting AIs and Indira is cybernetically augmented?

Devil’s Chew Toy by Rob Osler (Gay Mystery)

Stud Like Her by Fiona Zedde (F/F Romance)

cover of No Filter and Other Lies by Crystal Maldonado; illustration of fat Latine girl holding a camera

No Filter and Other Lies by Crystal Maldonado (F/F YA Contemporary)

Golden Boys by Phil Stamper (Queer Guys YA Contemporary)

Across a Field of Starlight by Blue Delliquanti (Non-binary YA Sci Fi Graphic Novel)

The Greatest Thing by Sarah Winifred Searle (Sapphic YA Graphic Novel)

Seaside Stranger Vol. 2: Harukaze no Etranger by Kii Kanna (M/M Manga)

How Do We Relationship? Vol. 5 by Tamifull (F/F Manga)

the cover of The Greatest Thing by Sarah Winifred Searle

Girl, Transcending: Becoming the Woman I Was Born To Be by AJ Clementine (Trans Woman Memoir)

Overshare: Love, Laughs, Sexuality and Secrets by Rose Ellen Dix and Rosie Spaughton (Memoir) (Paperback Rerelease)

Please Miss: A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Penis by Grace Lavery (Trans Woman Memoir)

This Monk Wears Heels: Be Who You Are by Kodo Nishimura (Memoir)

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way by Nancy Spain (Lesbian Memoir)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Mayor Withholds Library Funds Because of Queer Materials; You Can Help Raise It

Buckle in, we’ve got lots of links to cover today! I’ve got some fun news and some infuriating news for you, so it’s a real mix. I hope all you readers facing a blizzard right now are weathering it okay. I’m currently tucked under a heated blanket right now, and there’s not even snow on the ground here, so I’m clearly too delicate for that kind of climate.

As for a charity to highlight today, let’s go straight to the story I referenced in the subject line: Mayor Withholds Library Funds Because of Queer Materials; You Can Help Raise It. They’re already above their goal, but still short of the total being withheld.


Read Harder: LGBTQ Edition

I love the Read Harder challenge, but you know what would make it better? If it was (even) gayer. That’s why I’m trying to see if I can give queer recommendations for every task. So far, I’m 6/6! Let’s get into the next tasks!

7) Read a romance where at least one of the protagonists is over 40.

cover of Mrs. Martin's Incomparable Adventure by Courtney Milan

Mrs. Martin’s Incomparable Adventure by Courtney Milan

Sure, there are some great queer romances with main characters in their 40s, but why not pick up a book with an age demographic that doesn’t often get a starring role in these series? This is a historical romance with a 73 year old main character and a 69 year old love interest, and they plot their revenge against Bertrice’s Terrible Nephew.

the cover of Mistakes Were Made

Mistakes Were Made by Meryl Wilsner (October 11, 2022)

I know this doesn’t come out for a while, but it was impossible to answer this prompt without mentioning “the MILF book,” as TikTok and Twitter have dubbed it. When college senior Cassie goes to meet her best friend’s mom, Erin, during Family Weekend, she isn’t expecting to run into her steamy one night stand from last night. What’s worse is that none of that chemistry has abated, despite how much of a bad idea this is, which leads to the two of them sneaking around.

More recommendations:

Second Wind by Ceillie Simkiss

Bingo Love by Tee Franklin (Graphic Novel)

Permanent Ink (Art & Soul #1) by Avon Gale and Piper Vaughn

8) Read a classic written by a POC.

the cover of Giovanni's Room

Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin

This likely goes without saying, but Giovanni’s Room is a must-read for any queer book aficionado. Published in 1956, it follows David, a young American living in Paris. When his girlfriend leaves for Spain, he begins an affair with Giovanni, a man he met in a gay bar. James Baldwin is an incredibly influential author, and this is a great place to start with his work.

the cover of the Japanese version of Two Virgins in the Attic

Two Virgins in the Attic by Nobuko Yoshiya

Nobuko Yoshiya, on the other hand, may be a name you’re not familiar with, but she is a fascinating historical figure. She wrote novels that would go on to inspire the Class S and shojo genres. In 1919, she wrote Two Virgins in the Attic, which was exceptional because the two girls not only were in a relationship in school (something that could be dismissed as childish/play-acting a relationship), but also stayed together after graduating. She wrote many stories about relationships between girls, and she was one of the most successful and widely read writers of her time. She lived with her partner for 50 years, legally adopted her so they could have the same rights as a couple. While sadly Two Virgins in the Attic isn’t available in English, one of her short stories, “Yellow Rose” is available as an ebook.

More recommendations:

The Color Purple by Alice Walker

The Gilda Stories by Jewelle Gomez (a modern classic!)

Blackbird by Larry Duplechan

9) Read the book that’s been on your TBR the longest.

This one I don’t have to give any recommendations for. Just read the queer book that’s been on your TBR the longest! For my physical TBR, that’s embarrassingly quite a few books I’ve had for over ten years, including some Rita Mae Brown and Ann-Marie Macdonald titles that I’ve packed and unpacked through many moves… I’ll get to them any day now.

I’d love to hear which LGBTQ titles have been on your TBR the longest!

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

the cover of Count Your Lucky Stars

Count Your Lucky Stars by Alexandria Bellefleur (F/F Romance)

One of the most anticipated LGBTQ romances of the year, this is the newest book from the author of Written In the Stars. Olivia and Margot were childhood friends that fell in love, but Margot was the one who got away. That is, until divorced wedding planner Olivia runs into her during the planning of a wedding (she’s the Best Woman). And when Olivia is left without somewhere to stay, Margot offers up her place. There’s just one problem: Margot is anti-romance, a hookups-only girl. But that stance is becoming difficult to maintain…

the cover of Real Hero Shit

Real Hero Shit by Kendra Wells (Bisexual Fantasy Graphic Novel)

I’ve recently become obsessed with Critical Role, a Dungeons & Dragons actual play YouTube show. So when I saw this graphic novel, I had to pick it up. This is exactly the kind of silly adventure story that I love in D&D-inspired narratives, and this one has a queer cast as a bonus (as all D&D campaigns should, really). The main character is a spoiled rake of a prince (who’s bisexual) that decides to randomly join an adventuring party. There are also nonbinary and gay side characters.

Don’t Cry for Me by Daniel Black (Gay Fiction)

Getting Clean with Stevie Green by Swan Huntley (Questioning/Lesbian Fiction)

the cover of Getting Clean with Stevie Green

The Lighthouse by Fran Dorricott (Lesbian Thriller)

​​Her Royal Happiness by Lola Keeley (F/F Romance)

The Raven and the Banshee by Carolyn Elizabeth (F/F Historical Adventure Romance)

Luck Lines by Quinn Tollens (F/F Fantasy Romance)

Tracking Trouble by Aldrea Alien (Pansexual Dark Fantasy)

The Wall by Sarah Jane Singer (Bisexual Fantasy)

the cover of Crema

Malice by Heather Walter (Sapphic Fantasy) (Paperback Rerelease)

Azura Ghost (The Graven #2) by Essa Hansen (Asexual and Bi, Queernorm World Sci Fi)

Crema by Johnnie Christmas and Dante Luiz (F/F Fantasy Graphic Novel)

I’m in Love with the Villainess, Vol. 2 by Inori and Aonoshimo (Yuri Manga)

Hello, Melancholic! Vol. 1 by Yayoi Ohsawa (Yuri Manga)

5 Seconds Before a Witch Falls in Love by Zeniko Sumiya (F/F Fantasy Light Novel)

the cover of Magical Boy Vol 1

Murder of Crows by K. Ancrum (Queer YA Mystery)

Forget This Ever Happened by Cassandra Rose Clarke (Sapphic YA Horror) (Paperback Rerelease)

Fire Becomes Her by Rosiee Thor (Demiromantic Bisexual YA Fantasy)

Magical Boy, Vol. 1 by The Kao (Trans Guy YA Fantasy Graphic Novel)

Cameron Battle and the Hidden Kingdoms by Jamar J. Perry (Gay Middle Grade Fantasy)

The Visitors by Greg Howard (Gay Middle Grade Ghost Story)

the cover of Cameron Battle and the Hidden Kingdoms by Jamar J. Perry

Stepmotherland by Darrel Alejandro Holnes (Queer Poetry)

The Great Good Time by Roz Kaveney (Trans Poetry)

Broken Halves of a Milky Sun by Aaiún Nin (Queer Poetry)

Black Love Matters: Real Talk on Romance, Being Seen, and Happily Ever Afters by Book Rioter Jessica P. Pryde (Anthology Including Queer Essays)

Release the Beast: A Drag Queen’s Guide to Life by Bimini Bon Boulash and Jules Scheele (Nonfiction)

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


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

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

An F/F fake wedding romance, a nonbinary time travel picture book, and more LGBTQ new releases

I come to you today freshly boosted! Triple vaxxed! Hooray! I’ve been eagerly anticipating the opportunity. I only got the shot a few hours ago, so I’m still waiting with bated breath to see if I get knocked on my ass by it or not. Fingers crossed I still feel as bright eyed and bushy tailed tomorrow!

Speaking of essential healthcare, today I’d like to highlight the Tegan and Sara Foundation, which funds a number of programs for LGBTQ+ women and girls, including ones that focus on queer healthcare. You can help out at their donation page.


Read Harder: LGBTQ Edition

Today, I am continuing to go through each of the Read Harder 2022 tasks to give queer recommendations for each one. So far, I am 4/4 of having at least 5 valid options for each one! So let’s tackle tasks 5 and 6 now.

5) Read an anthology featuring diverse voices.

the cover of Love After the End

Love after the End: An Anthology of Two-Spirit and Indigiqueer Speculative Fiction edited by Joshua Whitehead

This book blew me away from the introduction alone. It made me think about how much of both sci fi and fantasy is rooted in colonialism, and how different those same stories are (colonizing another planet, fleeing a dying Earth) from an Indigenous perspective. Plus, there’s a gay love story with a cybernetic rat, so…

the cover of All Out

All Out: The No-Longer-Secret Stories of Queer Teens Throughout The Ages edited by Saundra Mitchell

If I could recommend just one book every high school library or teen GSA should have, I think it would be this one. They’re historical fiction short stories with a range of queer identities represented, and they all have happy endings. I found myself thinking about how queer people have to reclaim the past, because so much of our history has been erased. There’s also Out Now: Queer We Go Again!

More recommendations:

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

6) Read a nonfiction YA comic.

There are more queer graphic YA memoirs I could list, but unfortunately, I wasn’t able to find any examples by authors of color in this category. It’s a shame, because YA graphic memoirs are a great way to reach new teen audiences, and I’d love to see something like George M. Johnson’s All Boys Aren’t Blue available in a graphic format as well.

Gender Queer cover

Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe

If you want to read banned and censored books, this is the book to read this year. I’ve found it puzzling that the book that has drawn the most vitriol from right wing book banners for “sexualizing” children is in fact a memoir partly about Kobabe’s journey to realizing e is asexual. This is a sensitive, thoughtful portrayal of what it’s like to grow up nonbinary, and it’s an important story for teens to have access to, considering how little representation there is for nonbinary (and asexual) people in media. If you have a moment, consider clicking through to the Amazon reviews and marking some of the many positive reviews as helpful, to make that front page a little more accurate.

the cover of Spinning

Spinning by Tillie Walden

This is the story of Walden’s decade of having her life dominated by figure skating. After she switched schools, found a new hobby, and began to fall for a girl, she began questioning what she wanted for her future and whether figure skating fit into it. This is a story about letting go of something once central to your identity, and the simultaneous terror and freedom of that.

More recommendations:

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

the cover of D’Vaughn and Kris Plan a Wedding

D’Vaughn and Kris Plan a Wedding by Chencia C. Higgins (F/F Romance)

Kris Zavala is an aspiring influencer who’s gone on the reality TV show Instant I Do to promote her brand. D’Vaughn is a more unexpected addition to the show, who has decided to come out to her mom with a big (fake) gay wedding. All they have to do is convince their friends and family their relationship is real, and they’ll win the prize money. It should be easy enough, considering they already seem to have convinced themselves…

Cover of Light Years From Home by Mike Chen

Light Years From Home by Mike Chen (F/F Sci Fi)

15 years ago, Evie and Kass’s father and brother disappeared. When their father reappeared days later, he claimed they had been abducted by aliens. Since then, Evie has been immersed in alien conspiracy theories, determined to find their brother Jakob, while Kass is convinced he just skipped town. Then, Jakob comes back into their life, talking about an interstellar war.

(Evie is a lesbian)

the cover of The Magic Shell

The Magic Shell by Jillian Christmas, illustrated by Diana G. A. Mungaray (Nonbinary Picture Book)

Today is the release day of Flamingo Rampant‘s newest batch of books! They are my favorite children’s publisher because all of their books are diverse — not just in terms of LGBTQ content, but also main characters and creators of color as well as diversity of religion and disability represented. The Magic Shell is written by the poet Jillian Christmas and follows a nonbinary kid who is gifted a magic cowrie shell that transports them back in time to learn from their ancestors.

Perpetual West by Mesha Maren (Gay and Bisexual Fiction)

Manywhere: Stories by Morgan Thomas (Queer and Trans Short Stories)

cover of Goliath

A Previous Life by Edmund White (Bisexual Man Fiction)

Something Fabulous by Alexis Hall (M/M Historical Romance)

Goliath by Tochi Onyebuchi (M/M Dystopia)

At The End Of Everything by Marieke Nijkamp (Nonbinary YA Dystopia)

The Temperature of Me and You by Brian Zepka (M/M YA Science Fiction)

Metatron’s Children by Chy Ryan Spain, illustrated by Sydney Kuhne (Non-binary Middle Grade Fantasy)

It’s a Hit! by Arin Cole Barth and Marika Barth (Trans Boy Picture Book)

the cover of open

The Light of You by Trystan Reese and Biff Chaplow, illustrated by Van Binfa (Pregnant Trans Guy Picture Book)

Noodin’s Perfect Day by Ansley Simpson, illustrated by Rhael McGregor (Nonbinary Picture Book)

The Girl I Want is So Handsome! – The Complete Manga Collection by Yuama (Yuri Manga)

Open: An Uncensored Memoir of Love, Liberation, and Non-Monogamy by Rachel Krantz (Bisexual Polyamorous Memoir)

And the Category Is…: Inside New York’s Vogue, House, and Ballroom Community by Ricky Tucker (Queer Nonfiction)


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