Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Read Harder Challenge, LGBTQ Edition: Part 2

This has been one of those weeks where motivating myself to do the simplest tasks takes an animated pep talk and 45 minutes of bargaining. The dishes are overflowing the sink and the dogs are bouncing off the walls from not being walked enough, but at least we’re through the shortest days of the year and should be seeing more sun soon(ish). I can’t wait! In the meantime, I will be hibernating, thank you very much.

I’ve been reading a lot about the state of schools right now, and it’s heartbreaking. Between dealing with the pandemic, the backlash to masks and other policies, as well as the wave of homophobic and racist vitriol in response to carrying diverse books in school libraries, I can only imagine how difficult it is to teach right now. But many teachers are still going above and beyond in trying to make their schools an inclusive and safe place to be. That’s why today I wanted to highlight Donors Choose, where you can donate to classrooms and to teachers’ projects. If you search by LGBTQ, you can find campaigns to provide a GSA with snacks, stock more LGBTQ books, get pronoun pins for students, and more. This could make a huge difference for teachers and students.


Read Harder, LGBTQ Edition: Tasks 3 and 4

The Read Harder challenge is always a great way to diversify your reading, but what if you want to do it on hard mode? I’m putting together a list of LGBTQ recommendations for each of the Read Harder tasks to do an all-queer run of the challenge! Last week was tasks 1 and 2, so today is 3 and 4.

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

3. Read any book from the Women’s Prize shortlist/longlist/winner list.

Fingersmith cover

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters (2002 Shortlist)

I can’t pass a chance to talk about one of my favourite books of all time. This is an intricately plotted story about a Sue, thief posing as a maid in a scheme to convince her employer, Maude, to marry Sue’s accomplice to get Maude’s fortune. But then she falls for the mark, and everything gets very messy. You could also pick up a few of Sarah Waters’s other books for this task: The Paying Guests (2015 shortlist) and The Night Watch (2006 shortlist).

the cover of girl woman other

Girl, Woman, Other by Bernardine Evaristo (2020 Shortlist)

This title was shortlisted for the Women’s Prize, but won the Booker Prize! It follows 12 Black British point of view characters: 11 are women, 1 is nonbinary. There is also a lesbian main character. It’s an examination of what living as a Black women in Britain is like today, seen through many different lenses. It’s hard to overstate the praise this novel has gotten, having been called “unforgettable” by Roxane Gay and “Godlike in its scope and insight” by the Washington Post.

The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller (2012 winner)

A Little Life by Hanya Yangihara (2016 shortlist)

Detransition, Baby by Torrey Peters (2021 longlist)

3. Read a book in any genre by a POC that’s about joy and not trauma.

the cover of Falling in Love with Hominids, featuring aan illustration of a brown woman with a giant red fro. her eyes are closed and she appears to be sleeping or dreaming

Falling In Love With Hominids by Nalo Hopkinson

Nalo Hopkinson is one of my favourite authors, but this book is in a class of its own. As soon as I finished reading it (from the library), I immediately bought two copies: one for my permanent collection and one to give to a friend. it’s a collection of fantasy short stories that are hopeful and strange and mesmerizing. The novella has sapphic main characters, and one of the short stories is about a M/M couple trying to track down their missing fire-breathing chicken. It’s a delight.

check please book cover

Check, Please! by Ngozi Ukazu

It’s hard to think of a more joyful queer series than Check, Please!, which follows Eric, a freshman on the university hockey team. He’s finding going from his high school team to this one to be a difficult transition (which he copes with by baking). Even more distracting than having to deal with checking is Jack, the swoony and moody team captain.

This is What it Feels Like by Rebecca Barrow

Running with Lions by Julian Winters

Once Ghosted, Twice Shy by Alyssa Cole

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

It seems like I’m writing this every week, which is frustrating: this week’s new releases are disproportionately by white authors — especially if you exclude the manga titles. Publishers: we need more queer books by authors of color!

the cover of Real Easy

Real Easy by Marie Rutkoski (Sapphic Thriller)

This is a thriller that revolves around a murder of one of the dancers at the Lovely Lady strip club. The author draws on her experience as a former dancer to paint a vivid portrait of life at the club, including the community, friendships — and the dangers. This is being called a riveting whodunit as well as a vulnerable character portrait.

cover of Love & Other Disasters

Love & Other Disasters by Anita Kelly (F/NB Romance)

This is one of the most anticipated LGBTQ releases of the year! It follows two contestants on a reality cooking competition show: Dahlia and London. Both are hoping to reinvent themselves. Dahlia, to distance herself from her recent divorce and avoid impending bankruptcy; and London, because they’ve just become the first the out nonbinary contestant on a popular reality TV show. But these two competitors end up finding unexpected support (and chemistry) with each other.

the cover of The Lock-Eater

The Lock-Eater by Zack Loran Clark (Sapphic Middle Grade Fantasy)

This is a book I’ve been eagerly waiting to come out! It’s a middle grade fantasy novel with a sapphic main character named Melanie, who has a magical ability to open any lock. Her gift causes her to be whisked away from the orphanage by a mysterious figure — but they both have secrets to guard. I’m delighted every time a queer middle grade book comes out, because it wasn’t long ago that there were only picture books and then YA with LGBTQ characters! This looks like a rollicking adventure story that I can’t wait to dig into.

The Missing Page by Cat Sebastian (M/M Historical Mystery)

Wisdom Check (Dungeons and Dating #2) by Katherine McIntyre (M/M Romance)

Servant Mage by Kate Elliott (Bisexual Polyamorous Fantasy)

the cover of Coming Back

GAME ON: 15 Stories of Wins, Losses, and Everything in Between edited by Laura Silverman (Mostly Queer Stories, YA Anthology)

Icebreaker by A.L. Graziadei (M/M YA Contemporary)

Get a Clue: A Bookish Boyfriends Novel by Tiffany Schmidt (M/M YA Contemporary/Mystery)

Coming Back by Jessi Zabarsky (F/F YA Fantasy Graphic Novel)

Boys Run the Riot Vol. 4 by Keito Gaku (Trans Manga)

Love Me for Who I Am Vol. 5 by Kata Konayama (Trans Manga)

Bloom Into You Anthology Vol. 2 by Nakatani Nio (F/F Manga)

Return Flight by Jennifer Huang (Queer Nonbinary Poetry)

Manifesto: On Never Giving Up by Bernardine Evaristo (Queer Memoir) [Note: the author writes about having a “lesbian phase,” which may be an upsetting framing for some readers.]

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 Read Harder Challenge: LGBTQ Edition

Well, it’s officially the time of year where I feel like a zombie. I went to bed at about 7 last night, and I might just do it again tonight. I’m ready for the sun to come back, please! In the meantime, I’ll just have to curl up under a blanket with some great queer books.

If you’re like me, 2022 has brought on a new wave of pandemic fatigue. The problems that started in 2020 haven’t gone away, and for people already struggling, it’s been even more difficult. That’s why today I wanted to highlight OutRight Action International’s COVID-19 LGBTIQ Emergency Fund. They distribute grants to grassroots LGBTIQ organizations across the world and have already distributed more than $3 million in grants.


The Read Harder Challenge: LGBTQ Edition

Every year, Book Riot puts out the Read Harder Challenge: a series of prompts to encourage you to try new things with your reading. There are 24 in total, with the idea that you’d complete about 2 a month. The challenges are always new and interesting, and you can subscribe the Read Harder newsletter to get recommendations for each challenge.

I thought it might be fun, though, to see if we can do this challenge on hard mode: all LGBTQ books! For the next few newsletters, I’m going to give queer recommendations for each prompt. I’ll probably do about a couple each newsletter, depending on the prompt!

1) Read a biography of an author you admire.

Of course, I can’t tell you which authors you admire, but I can give you some examples of great LGBTQ author biographies! This one proved a little tricky: even some of the best queer authors out there don’t have any biographies published about them. Someone get on that. Also, if you search for biographies, you’ll get a thousand memoirs for every actual biography. Sigh.

the cover of Sometimes You Have To Lie

Sometimes You Have to Lie: The Life and Times of Louise Fitzhugh, Renegade Author of Harriet the Spy by Leslie Brody

Many, many queer kids read Harriet the Spy and felt a spark of recognition, and that’s no accident, because the author was a lesbian. This biography shows how Fitzhugh struggled in a society that didn’t accept queer people, and how her work was quietly subversive.

book cover for begin again

Begin Again: James Baldwin’s America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own by Eddie S. Glaude Jr.

This is a new release that just came out in 2021. It blends together a biography of James Baldwin with how his political commentary still applies to the U.S. today. It positions the election of Trump and the rise of white nationalism as not an aberration, but a continuation of patterns that Baldwin had already been speaking out about.

More LBGTQ author biographies:

The Life and Times of Butch Dykes by Eloisa Aquino (a collection of biographies, including of Audre Lorde and other queer authors)

Gentleman Jack: a Biography of Anne Lister by Angela Steidele

Oscar Wilde: A Life by Matthew Sturgis

2) Read a book set in a bookstore.

Cover of Meet Cute Club

Meet Cute Club by Jack Harbon

Do I really need to say anything more than M/M bookstore romance? Just in case I do, this follows Jordan, who runs a romance book club in the bookstore he works at. He’s irritated by new employee Rex calling his favorite genre “grandma books,” and confused when Rex shows up for Meet Cute Club. He needs the numbers, but Rex will have to convince him that he isn’t just trolling — and what better way than by saving the club?

the cover of This Is All Your Fault

This Is All Your Fault by Aminah Mae Safi

This is a YA retelling of Empire Records! Instead of a record store, the three main characters (one of whom is queer) work at an independent bookstore that they discover is closing. They have some meltdowns and hatch some wacky schemes to make money in their attempts to save a community space they all love.

More queer books set in bookstores:

Mooncakes by Suzanne Walker and Wendy Xu

Who We Could Be by Chelsea Cameron

Book of Dreams by Kevin Craig (out May 24, 2022)

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

This continues to be a slower publishing week, though there are some gems. Unfortunately, this list is disproportionately by white authors. Publishing, please do better.

Cover of The Bone Spindle by Leslie Vedder

The Bone Spindle by Leslie Vedder (F/F YA Fantasy)

This promises to be “Sleeping Beauty meets Indiana Jones,” with an axe-wielding sapphic main character inspired by Xena! Fi pricked her finger on the bone spindle and is now stuck with spirit of the Briar Rose until she breaks the kingdom’s curse. Shane is a warrior helping her — and falling for a witch along the way. If you like fairy tale retellings and action-packed fantasy books, you should definitely give this one a try.

the cover of High-Risk Homosexual

High-Risk Homosexual: A Memoir by Edgar Gomez (Gay Memoir)

This memoir explores Edgar Gomez’s coming of as a gay Latino man. It begins at his uncle’s cockfighting ring, where he was sent to learn “how to be a man” and embody machismo. From there, he explores the queer spaces that made it possible for him to accept his identity. He also discusses the Pulse nightclub shooting, and how it affected his identity and feeling of safety as a queer Latine person.

the cover of Lost and Found a Memoir

Lost & Found: A Memoir by Kathryn Schulz (Sapphic Memoir)

A New Yorker Writer and winner of the Pulitzer prize, in Lost & Found, Schulz focuses on the 18 month time in her life when she met her future wife and her father passed away. She examines the relationship between love and loss both in her own life and in the world at large.

To Paradise by Hanya Yanagihara (Queer Literary Fiction)

The Paris Bookseller by Kerri Maher (Lesbian Historical Fiction)

the cover of Love Somebody

The Wedding Setup by Charlotte Greene (F/F Romance)

A Betrayal of Storms by Ben Alderson (M/M Fantasy)

Poised in Either Eye by B. Pigeon and Fell A. Marsh (Queer Fantasy)

Hopepunk by Preston Norton (Queer YA Contemporary)

Love Somebody by Rachel Roasek (Sapphic YA Contemporary)

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

Most Anticipated 2022 LGBTQ Books

It’s 2022! And I don’t know about you, but it’s feeling very 2020 around here. Cases are high, it’s hard to get the right masks, and I have no idea what appropriate risks are or when I’ll see people in person again. We’ve also been snowed in the last few days (and are set to get more tonight), which is hard on a town that panics every time it goes below freezing and owns approximately one rundown snowplow. But there’s one thing that always brings comfort, and that’s books!

Today I’d like to highlight less of a charity and more of an organization. #FReadom Fighters is a group of librarians organizing campaigns to fight censorship, particularly bans of LGBTQ and antiracist books. You can join their January campaign by using their email templates to write your local school board in support of libraries, librarians, and students’ access to a wide range of books!


My Most Anticipated LGBTQ Books of the First Half of 2022

Before I started collecting LGBTQ new releases for this newsletter, I did them for the Lesbrary. This means I now have a long-running Google doc with sapphic releases stretching from now until hazy “maybe Summer 2024” titles as well as a spreadsheet of other LGBTQ releases that includes paperback rerelease dates (and books with no paperback date to revisit later).

Needless to say, I have a lot of anticipated queer releases. I tend to bite off more than I can chew with ARCs, and every time I try to pull it back, I somehow convince myself all over again that this time I will read 4x as much as I have every other year.

In any case, here are 10 of the queer books I’m most excited about coming out between January-June 2022, with the caveat that this is entirely my own personal tastes. There are definitely more buzzy LGBTQ books that I haven’t listed, but these are the ones I am itching to read. I’ll keep it short, because I don’t want to spoil myself for these!

the cover of At The End Of Everything

At The End Of Everything by Marieke Nijkamp (Nonbinary YA Dystopia): January 25

Is it cheating to start my “most anticipated” list with one I’ve already read? In fact, I read it in one sitting and stayed up later than I meant to doing it. This is one that might hit too close to home, because it is a dystopian set during a respiratory illness pandemic. It follows a group of teenagers in juvie who are abandoned there and have to figure out how to survive, and it includes a non-binary point of view character.

the cover of Magical Boy Vol 1

Magical Boy by The Kao (Trans Boy YA Fantasy Comics): February 1

This is a take on the “magical girl” manga genre, but with a trans boy main character! As someone who group up with Sailor Moon cartoons, I can’t wait to see this trans take on the tropes of this subgenre.

the cover of manhunt

Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin (Trans Horror): February 22

While the idea of some sort of calamity or illness befalling one sex has been done before, it’s almost always with trans people as an afterthought (at best). In this post-apocalyptic survival story, two trans women and a trans guy band together to try to survive in a world where people with high levels of testosterone are suffering a horrible fate — and the group’s survival comes at a grisly cost.

the cover of Ready When You Are

Ready When You Are (original title: The Boy From the Mish) by Gary Lonesborough (M/M YA Contemporary)

This is an Australian YA novel about two Aboriginals boys falling in love, one of whom is still in the closet. This and Fire Song by Adam Garnet Jones are the only M/M Indigenous YA books I’ve heard of, but please let me know if you have read any other queer Indigenous YA, because I’d love to add them to my TBR!

the cover of Witchlings

Witchlings by Claribel Ortega (Trans-Inclusive Middle Grade Fantasy): April 5

I cannot contain myself with my excitement for this middle grade fantasy. There is a magical school with houses and it’s trans-inclusive! Check out this adorable video from the author about it. I am definitely Goose House. I haven’t been able to get details about the queer content, but it’s definitely trans-inclusive, and it sounds like there’s a trans main character as well as sapphic main characters, but I should know for sure closer to the pub date!

the cover of I Kissed Shara Wheeler

I Kissed Shara Wheeler by Casey McQuiston (F/F YA Romance): May 3

Okay, this is definitely the most hyped up book on this list, but I couldn’t resist. I, too, was swept up in One Last Stop, so I can’t wait to see their take on a sapphic YA romance.

siren queen book cover

Siren Queen by Nghi Vo (Sapphic Fantasy): May 10

Speaking of new releases by authors I loved last year, you might remember that The Chosen and the Beautiful was one of my favourite reads of 2021, so it was a no brainer to put her 2022 sapphic release on this list! I am shielding my eyes from learning any more, because she’s already an auto-read author for me now.

the lesbiana's guide to catholic school book cover

The Lesbiana’s Guide to Catholic School by Sonora Reyes (Lesbian YA Contemporary): May 17

Then I have a couple of books that have been on my most-anticipated list since the titles were announced, long before they even had release dates! Who can resist that cover and title, I ask you? Besides, this summary of the book as a Reddit post made me cackle: “I (16F) got sent to a Catholic school with my brother (15M) after getting outed at my old school. I’m not out at the new school, but there’s this openly queer girl (16F) there who makes my gay heart do happy little flips. How do I date her without letting her know I’m gay?”

the cover of Just Your Local Bisexual Disaster

Just Your Local Bisexual Disaster by Andrea Mosqueda (Bi YA Contemporary): May 24

I am obligated to read this book from the title alone. I truly would read this based on just that. But the cover is also adorable — 2022 is really the year of amazing illustrated queer covers. Do I know nothing else about this? Yes. And I want to keep it that way.

the cover of Bad Things Happen Here

Bad Things Happen Here by Rebecca Barrow (Sapphic YA Mystery): June 28

Rebecca Barrow wrote one of my favourite YA books of all time, This Is What It Feels Like, so course I have to pick up her newest sapphic YA novel. This one is about Luca, who lives on an island that’s an idyllic tourist destination — that also is plagued with unexplained deaths of young women, including her best friend. And Luca thinks she might be next.

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

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

It’s still a slow new releases week, as publishing shakes off its holiday slumber, but there are some great books you don’t want to miss!

the cover of The Ivory Key

The Ivory Key by Akshaya Raman (Gay YA Fantasy)

This is an India-inspired fantasy about four estranged royal siblings searching for a source of magic to prevent the country from being engulfed in war. Each sibling has their own agenda and complicated relationships with the others, but they’ll have to work together to complete this quest. This one has a gay main character.

the cover of Love, Violet

Love, Violet by Charlotte Sullivan Wild & Charlene Chua (Sapphic Picture Book)

While picture books with LGBTQ parents have existed since Heather Has Two Mommies, it’s still pretty rare to have picture books that star queer kids, and the ones that do tend to be about boys. That’s why it warms my heart to see Love, Violet, which is about Violet’s crush on Mira and wanting to give her a Valentine! Adorable.

Fiona and Jane by Jean Chen Ho (Queer Woman Fiction)

All of You Every Single One by Beatrice Hitchman (Queer Historical Fiction)

Where the Drowned Girls Go (Wayward Children #7) by Seanan McGuire (Queer Fantasy)

In a Heartbeat by Markus Harwood-Jones (M/M YA Contemporary)

I’ll Be the One by Lyla Lee (Bisexual YA Contemporary) (Paperback Rerelease)

Heartstopper: Volume 4 by Alice Oseman (M/M YA Graphic Novel)

The Gender Identity Guide for Parents: Compassionate Advice to Help Your Child Be Their Most Authentic Self by Tavi Hawn (Two Spirit and Trans Author)


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

Top 10 Queer Reads of 2021

It’s the last newsletter send of the year! And what a year it’s been. Personally, I’ve seen a lot of change this year in my personal life, even more so than 2020. It’s left me in a good spot, and although I’m loathe to go into the new year with any sort of expectations at all, at least I know there are plenty of great queer books to look forward to then.

This week, I’m promoting a nonprofit close to Book Riot’s heart: EveryLibrary. It’s an organization that fights censorship in U.S. libraries, which if you’ve been paying attention this year, you know is at new heights, especially targeting LGBTQ and BIPOC books. We just ran a matching campaign that finished yesterday, but they could still use your support. Even if you can’t donate, Americans can sign a petition to support the freedom to read for all.


My Favorite Queer Reads of 2021

For this last newsletter of 2021, I can’t resist sharing with your some of my favourite queer reads of the year. While I set out to make this just my favourites that I picked up this year, because I was reading so much front list for All the Books, I believe they all ended up 2021 releases. It’s mostly sapphic books, because that’s most of what I read.

These aren’t in any particular order. It was hard to narrow it down to 10; there were plenty of other great queer books I read this year, including Cool for the Summer by Dahlia Adler and One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston, but here is just a selection of the reads that stuck with me this year.

the cover of Milk Fed

Milk Fed by Melissa Broder

This was a reading experience like no other. I don’t recommend it lightly, because it really puts you in the head of someone who has an eating disorder and obsesses over her weight. I found myself reading this compulsively, unable to tear my eyes away from the page. Rachel falls in love with a fat woman, and the experience changes how she thinks about food and her body. It’s also about Judaism, her relationship with her mother, and discovering her bisexuality. It’s uncomfortable and engrossing, and I found it so cathartic to read. It’s a book that asks, What is your worst fear of your body? Isn’t that person worthy of love?

The Heartbreak Bakery book cover

The Heartbreak Bakery by A.R. Capetta

I had to suppress a shriek of delight after finishing this book. It’s such a celebration of queerness. It feels like a hug. It’s about Syd, a nonbinary baker who processes a recent breakup by making brownies — and then everyone who eats them breaks up, including the owners of the Proud Muffin. Syd and the genderfluid bakery delivery person, Harley, have to try to track down everyone who ate them and repair the damage. It’s fun, lightly magical, and has so much queer representation — including a polyam brunch.

A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson: This is a queer polyamorous take on the brides of Dracula! It’s bloody, sexy, and feminist. It’s also a story about an abusive relationship, so be prepared for that going in.

The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo: I hope you’ve already heard of this incredibly queer Vietnamese American retelling of The Great Gatsby. Not only is Gatsby/Nick made textual, but it’s told from Jordan’s perspective, who is bisexual. This is beautifully written with an undercurrent of magic.

Unbroken by C.L. Clark: I finished this in April and feel like I’m still processing it. It’s a military fantasy about a colonial occupation, and it makes for a thought-provoking and sometimes brutal read. The F/F relationship is hardly a fairytale romance, but it completely pulled me in.

Follow Your Arrow by Jessica Verdi: I haven’t heard anyone else talking about this book, which is frustrating, because I think it’s such a great examination of biphobia. If you liked Perfect On Paper, give this one a try.

The Meet Cute Diary by Emery Lee: This is such an intriguing take on the fake dating trope. I love that the main character is flawed, and we see his growth throughout the book. The nonbinary side character Devin steals the show, in my opinion.

Indestructible Object by Mary McCoy: I loved this book’s take on having to “represent” bisexuality well, and this is another one with a messy, flawed main character. It also explores polyamory, with a focus I haven’t seen in YA before.

Rise to the Sun by Leah Johnson: This was an amazing summer read, especially because it’s set at a music festival. At the same time that it has a cute F/F romance, though, it also discusses gun violence and sexual harassment, giving this story a lot of depth.

The Reckless Kind by Carly Heath: Please pick this historical YA book over the holidays! It’s queer teens who need to win a winter horse race to save the family farm! But it’s also about disability (including internalized ableism), queerness, and belonging. There is an M/M relationship as well as an asexual (and possible aromantic?) main character, with the three of them forming a queerplatonic found family.

Censorship Corner

As promised, I’m not collecting all the stories of anti-queer book censorship, but here are a few overviews that are worth checking out.

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 (& Next)

This is a pretty slow time for publishing, but there are still some titles worth checking out! Since there isn’t any newsletter going out next week, I’ve lumped in the few December 28th releases here, too.

the cover of If You Love Something

If You Love Something by Jayce Ellis (M/M Romance)

DeShawn just got a phone call that will change everything. His grandmother is terminally ill and is leaving half of her estate to DeShawn’s husband, Malik. To make things more complicated, he didn’t think he had a husband anymore: turns out, the divorce wasn’t completely finalized. Now his shady uncle is contesting the will, and to get the lawsuit thrown out, DeShawn and Malik have to convince everyone they’re back together. It’s fake dating, but it’s also a second chance romance!

cover of The Midnight Girls by Alicia Jasinska, two young women in flowing robes standing against a dark sky under a sliver of a moon

The Midnight Girls by Alicia Jasinska (F/F YA Fantasy)

Would you believe there are two sapphic monster girl love stories on this list?? What a gift. This follows Marynka and Zosia, rival witches’ apprentices who are competing for the prince’s heart — literally. But as they keep escalating their murder attempts and risking being caught by the villagers, they reluctantly begin to fall for each other. This is inspired by Polish folklore, and it’s set during a winter festival, so it’s seasonal! And also murder-y. If you like the cat-and-mouse aspect of Killing Eve, or if you always fall for the villains of the story, you’ll love this one.

One in Me I Never Loved by Carla Guelfenbein (Sapphic Short Stories)

The Price on Her Head by Suzanne Clay (Trans F/F Monster Romance)

A Broken Blade (The Halfling Saga #1) by Melissa Blair (Queer Fantasy): This was a TikTok mystery, complete with codes to decipher, but the author has now been revealed!

the cover of Here's to Us

Here’s To Us (What If It’s Us #2) by Becky Albertalli & Adam Silvera (M/M YA Contemporary)

Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo (Sapphic YA Historical) (Paperback Rerelease)

Eros/Psyche by Maria Llovet (F/F Graphic Novel)

My Mom Had an Abortion by Beezus B. Murphy and Tatiana Gill (Asexual Lesbian Graphic Memoir)

Gender Identity Journal: Prompts and Practices for Exploration and Self-Discovery by Katie Leikam (Nonfiction)


That’s it for me this week! I hope that you have a safe and cozy next few weeks and that 2022 treats you well.

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 Great Sapphic Book Debate

We’ve almost made it through 2021! I would celebrate, but I’m too busy being horrified at the idea of having to face 2022: that doesn’t even look like a real year. In any case, this is the point where publishing really starts winding down. I can’t wait to cozy up with some seasonal queer reads under a blanket, and I hope that you are picking up some comforting books during the darkest months! (Unless that isn’t your hemisphere, in which case, I hope you’re getting some fun beach reads in!)

Today I wanted to highlight Casa Ruby, an LGBT community center in Washington, DC that offers social services as well as housing programs. They recently had a massive funding cut that forced them to close their low barrier shelter, which left a lot of trans women vulnerable. They’re currently looking to find funding that’s not through the government. You can help out by donating.


The Great Sapphic Book Debate

Lately, my favorite social media to scroll through is TikTok. Never have I encountered an algorithm that so quickly understood me. Sometimes, I think it knows my tastes better than I do, which is disconcerting. While I watch a ton of different kinds of content, my home base (as is true on the rest of the internet) is the queer bookish corner of the platform. Queer booktok, if you will.

I love seeing people so excited about books, and queer books in particular, especially since the platform skews towards teenagers and young people. I, however, am in my 30s now, and I’ve been on the queer bookternet for a long time. The consequences of that are seeing the same conversations play out over and over on each platform. I was there for the book blog collapse, the Tumblr flame wars, and the Twitter takedowns. But most of the people on booktok weren’t, and they’re walking into the same traps.

The latest conversation that came across my For You page is about the definition of a sapphic book. Sapphic, as we understand it today, is a pretty recent term. I saw it get popularized on Tumblr just a handful of years ago as a deliberate way to group everyone who identifies as a woman and is attracted to women together. But most people on TikTok have just heard the word sapphic in context, which means that apparently a lot of people thought sapphic books all had an F/F (or possibly F/NB) relationship. Which lead to comments complaining that a sapphic book rec wasn’t “sapphic enough” because it had an F/M relationship.

If I could offer one piece of advice to young queer people, it’s that policing identity terms is usually the wrong way to go. It leads to in fighting, insults, and has generally never improved anyone’s life. This particular conversation is, again, one I’ve seen on other platforms first — and versions of it have been going on for much longer. Earlier this year, I was discussing on Twitter with other queer readers the particulars of asking for sapphic book recommendations vs queer women book recs vs F/F book recs, and I even ended up writing a post about it: WLW Books, Lesbian Fiction, Sapphic Books, F/F Romance: What’s the Difference?

In my own writing at the Lesbrary, I discuss sapphic books with F/M relationships, but I always make sure to mention that early in the review (or specify it in a list), because I know a good portion of my audience is not looking for that, which is totally fine as a personal preference, of course.

I go back and forth about joining TikTok, because my reasoning (“I can fill you in on all these conversations you missed!”) is also perhaps a good reasons to avoid it, because I don’t want to get too “old man yells at cloud” on a platform for young adults. I do wish, though, that we had some sense of organization so that we could move conversations forward instead of having every generation rehash the same old queer arguments over and over.

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

We’ve hit the part of the year where very little is being published, so this is not a diverse list by any means. Not only are there very few authors of color, but it’s also almost all romance. It’s still worth checking out the titles that are here, though, especially if you’re wanting a seasonal romance read!

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

The Christmas Proposal cover

The Christmas Proposal by Lisa Moreau (F/F Romance)

This December, I’m diving into seasonal reads, and I can’t wait to pick up this F/F Christmas romance. Bridget is angling for a promotion, and she knows planning her boss’s perfect proposal will seal the deal, even if she doesn’t personally believe in the happily ever after. So she reaches out to Tie the Knot, a company that specializes in over-the-top proposals. Except the owner of Tie the Knot is Grace, aka Bridget’s boss’s ex. Things get even more complicated when Grace and Bridget get stranded together at Mistletoe Mountain.

Dark Tourist cover

Dark Tourist by Hasanthika Sirisena (Bisexual Essays)

Dark tourism involves tourists who seek out the sites of wars, violence, and other traumatic events. In this collection of essays, Sirisena mixes journalistic investigation of these sites and the nature of dark tourism with her own personal reflections, including on her cultural identity, bisexuality, and disability. This is part cultural criticism, part memoir.

The Master is Here: Stories Christian and Gay by John Addison Dally (Gay Short Stories)

Fresh Grave in Grand Canyon by Lee Patton (M/M Thriller)

On the Rocks by Georgia Beers (F/F Romance)

Who I Was with Her cover

Holiday Hearts by Diana Day-Admire and Lyn Cole (F/F Holiday Romance)

The Infinite Summer by Morgan Lee Miller (F/F Romance)

Humbug by Amanda Radley (F/F Holiday Romance)

Changing Majors by Ana Hartnett Reichardt (F/F New Adult Romance)

Wisdom by Jesse J. Thoma (F/F Romance)

A Fairer Tomorrow by Kathleen Knowles (F/F Historical Romance)

Song of Serenity by Brey Willows (Sapphic Fantasy)

Who I Was with Her by Nita Tyndall (Bisexual YA Contemporary) (Paperback Release)


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

My Top 12 Queer Books of 2021

I’ve got to admit defeat: I’m no longer going to be collecting individual stories of LGBTQ book censorship for this newsletter, because a) it hurts my soul and b) other people are doing it far better than I can. If there’s something particularly egregious or an article comes my way that’s discussing LGBTQ book censorship in general, I’ll add it to the links, but if you want to keep up with every story, check out Book Riot’s weekly censorship news round up (on Fridays) and subscribe to the American Library Association’s Intellectual Freedom News. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to spend my December reading cute snowy F/F romances with a cup of hot chocolate instead of seeking out news stories about homophobia and transphobia!

This week, I want to highlight OutRight Action International, an organization that fights for LGBTQ rights around the world. You can find out more about them at their website, and you can help at their donation page.


My Top 12 Queer Books of 2021

This year, I’ve been reading way more new releases than ever before. Because I’m a cohost on All the Books, I read 4 books a month that come out the first Tuesday, so I can discuss them on the podcast. Because I’m me, I pick a lot of queer titles, whenever possible. And then I tend to request even more ARCs for the Lesbrary or just because my requesting eyes are too much for… my reading eyes.

So here are my top 12 favourite books I read in 2021 that were published this year: one for every month. Except that’s a complete coincidence. I just tried to narrow down my list as much as possible and ended up with 12. To keep this newsletter from being 10,000 words, I’m just going to discuss my top three, but I’ve reviewed all of these if you want my in-depth thoughts!

This isn’t the best LGBTQ books that came out this year, because there are so many I haven’t gotten to yet, like Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo or She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chain or The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri! And, of course, I read a lot more sapphic books than anything else.

These aren’t in any order, because it was hard enough to narrow it down to 12. (I was aiming for 5…)

The Unbroken cover

The Unbroken by C.L. Clark

One part of the sapphic fantasy holy trinity of this year, The Unbroken is a military fantasy about a colonial occupation, inspired by the French occupation of North Africa. It’s dark and violent, political and complex, and incredibly thought-provoking. It also has a fraught F/F relationship that has me eagerly awaiting the next book to see how it plays out. This is one that left me with a lot to think about, and I feel like I’m still processing it. If you want a meaty, dark fantasy that deals with racism and colonialism, definitely pick this one up. (But let’s be honest, queer women readers were already picking it up based on those arms.)

Indestructible Object cover

Indestructible Object by Mary McCoy

I started my review of this title with, “Messy bisexuals, this one’s for you. ❤️” and that’s exactly what I love about it. Lee is a flawed main character who’s feeling lost. She’s made mistakes and hurt people, but she’s trying to improve. When she’s told she’s acting out a negative bisexual stereotype because she cheated on a partner, she thinks, “When straight people cheated, they weren’t failing the whole straight population. They were just failing one person.” This also has polyamorous representation, which is pretty rare in YA!

Cover for The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo

The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo

This is an absolutely beautiful reimagining of The Great Gatsby from the perspective of Jordan, a queer Vietnamese American adoptee. It’s a fantasy, but the magic acts as a backdrop and metaphor, rarely taking centre stage. Not only is Jordan bisexual, but Gatsby and Nick are queer, too. The characters combine into complex love pentagons, each relationship with its own nuances. It’s an absorbing, atmospheric read that adds new dimensions to a familiar story.

My other favourite 2021 reads are:

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LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

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

New Releases This Week

the cover of Tell Me How To Be

Tell Me How to Be by Neel Patel (Gay Fiction)

At the one year anniversary of her husband’s death, Renu is overcome with resentments and doubts about whether she chose the right husband. When she decides to sell the family home, her son, Akash, visits to say goodbye and try to get closure himself, including about the boy who first broke his heart. As they pack up the house together, they both unearth parts of their pasts they meant to keep buried.

the cover of If This Gets Out

If This Gets Out by Sophie Gonzales & Cale Dietrich (M/M YA Contemporary)

Ruben and Zach are part of Saturday, a boy band with a huge following. It’s not all parties and wealth, though: every part of their public-facing lives is controlled by the record label, including that Ruben has to stay closeted. When a night hanging out in their hotel room turns into something more, Zach and Ruben have to figure out what their relationship is–especially because Zach thought he was straight–and how to be themselves when it goes against what their manager wants from them.

I discussed this on All the Books, if you want to hear more about it!

the cover of Crip Kinship

Crip Kinship: The Disability Justice & Art Activism of Sins Invalid by Shayda Kafai (Queer Nonfiction)

This is a history of the queer disability justice performance collective Sins Invalid. More than that, it discusses the principles of disability justice, offering a lens to view politics and the world. This was an eye-opening and thought-provoking read, and I highly recommend it! I discussed it on All the Books, if you want to hear more about it.

The Book of Casey Adair by Ken Harvey (Queer Guy Fiction)

Eleven-Inch by Michał Witkowski, translated by W. Martin (Queer Guys Fiction)

Dear Miss Cushman by Paula Martinac (Sapphic Historical Fiction)

The Great Charade by Gerri Hill (F/F Holiday Romance)

the cover of Fools in Love

Where the Rain Cannot Reach by Adesina Brown (Queernorm Fantasy)

Internet Famous by M.B. Guel (Sapphic YA Contemporary)

The Love Curse of Melody McIntyre by Robin Talley (Sapphic YA Contemporary) (Paperback Rerelease)

Fools in Love edited by Rebecca Podos & Ashley Herring Blake (Mostly F/F YA Anthology)

The Coldest Touch by Isabel Sterling (YA Paranormal Romance)

Beyond the Ruby Veil by by Mara Fitzgerald (Sapphic YA Fantasy) (Paperback Rerelease)

The Excalibur Curse (Camelot Rising Trilogy Book 3) by Kiersten White (Bisexual YA Fantasy)

the paperback cover of The Sound of Stars

The Sound of Stars by Alechia Dow (Sapphic YA Sci Fi) (Paperback Rerelease)

Spin Me Right Round by David Valdes (Gay YA Time Travel)

The Pronoun Book: She, He, They, and Me! by Cassandra Jules Corrigan and Jem Milton (Picture Book)

Righting Canada’s Wrongs: The LGBT Purge and the Fight for Equal Rights in Canada by Ken Setterington (Children’s Nonfiction)

A Lily Blooms in Another World by Ameko Kaeruda, illustrated by Shio Sakura, and translated by Tom Harris (F/F Light Novel)

Punks: New & Selected Poems by John Keene (Queer Poetry)

And the Category Is…: Inside New York’s Vogue, House, and Ballroom Community by Randy Tucker (LGBTQ 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

Gifts for Queer Book Lovers

There was no Our Queerest Shelves send last week because of U.S. Thanksgiving, but did I let that stop me? No. I packed this newsletter full of everything from the last two weeks, so settle in for a long one. All the censorship news is sectioned off, so feel free to skip it if you aren’t in the headspace to read about homophobia and transphobia right now. (There are a few good news stories in there, though.)

The holiday season especially can be difficult for incarcerated people. That’s why this week, I want to highlight the charity Books Beyond Bars UK, which connects LGBTQIA incarcerated people with books they request. You can find out more on their website and you can help by donating.

If you know of an LGBTQIA+ charity you’d like to see highlighted in Our Queerest Shelves, please let me know!


Gifts for Queer Book Lovers

If you’re reading this, you will likely want to buy something on this list for yourself. And why shouldn’t you? If you know others who also love LGBTQ books, these will make great gifts, but also: treat yourself. Celebrate queer books, whether you’re proclaiming your rainbow reading tendencies in public or decorating your reading nook. Let’s dive right into these great gifts for queer book readers.

read more queer books tote bag with floral design

You can’t much more apt than this Read More Queer Books tote. Will it make someone fall in love with you at the bookstore/library? I mean, it can’t hurt! $13

read more queer books enamel pins shaped like books

If you already have a favourite tote, you can get this Read More Queer Books enamel pin instead! $5

a photo of fan art dustjackets of Red White and Royal Blue and The Seven Husband of Evelyn Hugo

If you’ve stumbled on queer BookTok at all, you know that Red, White, and Royal Blue and The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo have passionate fanbases. You can get these fan art dust jackets for $18 each, or the same artist does prints inspired other books, including They Both Die at the End, for $16

a photo of a necklace in the shape of a stack of books in the trans flag colours

These stack of books necklaces are available in the colors of tons of pride flags, and there are also keychain ($18) and earring ($25) versions! This one is the trans flag. $22

a photo of a bookmark of a stack of macarons in the colours of the aromantic flag

I can’t handle how adorable these Pride macaron bookmarks are. There’s gay (rainbow), lesbian, bisexual, pansexual, asexual, demisexual, aromantic, trans, non-binary, genderqueer, and genderfluid versions! $3 each

a Felix Ever After quote bookmark and a rainbow crystal bookmark

A few more bookmark options! On the left is a bookmark with a quote from Felix Ever After ($3). On the right is a magnetic rainbow crystal bookmark ($5), because if you aren’t a crystal queer, you definitely know one.

a set of floral sappho bookmarks

And finally, these gorgeous bookmarks with quotes from Sappho’s poetry. $3 each or $11 for the set. Might I suggest also checking out my previous round up of Sappho decor and accessories?

And if none of that strikes your fancy, maybe you want to go with one of these lesbian pulp decorations or accessories.

LGBTQ Book Bans and Challenges

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 (and Last Week)

the cover of The Ballad of Dinah Caldwell

The Ballad of Dinah Caldwell by Kate Brauning (Bisexual YA Thriller, F/F/M Relationship)

Dinah had it hard enough already, barely squeaking by with her mother on a subsistence farm. But then her mother was murdered to take their land, and she’s vowed revenge on the wealthy rancher who did. He’s put a $10,000 bounty on her head, which makes things more difficult. But she has two people on her side: her best friend, Kara, and Johnny, a young bootlegger with his own axe to grind against the rancher. Together, they’ll either tear down the whole rotten system–or die trying.

the cover of The Golden Hour

The Golden Hour by Niki Smith (Queer Boy Middle Grade Graphic Novel)

Manuel is struggling with PTSD and anxiety after witnessing a school shooting. He anchors himself with his cellphone camera, but it’s being paired with Sebastian in a school project that helps the most. He finds Sebastian’s home on on cattle farming fields to be calming, and he decides to help his new friend prepare for the county fair. Along the way, he also finds his first love. This is from the author of The Deep & Dark Blue, another great LGBTQ middle grade graphic novel!

The Last One by Fatima Daas (Sapphic Fiction)

Just River by Sara B. Fraser (Queer Fiction)

The Bone Shard Emperor (The Drowning Empire #2) by Andrea Stewart (F/F Fantasy)

the cover of Queer as All Get Out

Graveneye by Sloane Leong and Anna Bowles (F/F Horror Graphic Novel)

Passport by Sophia Glock (Sapphic YA Graphic Memoir)

The Emphatically Queer Career of Artist Perkins Harnly and His Bohemian Friends by Sarah Burns (Queer Biography)

Queer as All Get Out: 10 People Who’ve Inspired Me by Shelby Criswell (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

Queer Books are Under Attack in School Book Bans

I’m back! I had a very relaxing week off, and I’m glad to see Our Queerest Shelves was in good hands with Jess. I had a hot stone massage for the first time! It was great, though that might be because I have a high heat tolerance and like my showers just on this side of scalding, so it was soothing. I can’t promise this newsletter will be soothing, though, because book bans of LGBTQ books are on the rise in the U.S.

Which is the perfect segue into today’s charity, Pride and Less Prejudice, which provides LGBTQ-inclusive books to K-3 classrooms. This is a great, productive way of opposing censorship in schools. Here’s their donation page to help out!


LGBTQ BookTok Accounts To Follow

I’m going to be honest with you, there’s a lot of bad queer book news this week. A lot of censorship, a lot of homophobia and transphobia. I could write a dozen ranting think pieces about them (and I just might), but right now, I want to do what I always do when I feel overwhelmed: scroll through TikTok.

Of course, I started following queer BookTok accounts when I downloaded the app, because of who I am. Now I’m bombarded with all kinds of stuff (birates, feminist pottery, hoola hoopers — even some people dancing, occasionally), but my home on TikTok is queer BookTok. I have only dipped my toe in and am not an expert, but here are some of the creators I really enjoy, and I think you will, too!

Laynie Rose bio

Of course, I had to start with Laynie Rose of TheLaynieRose. Her sound is where I got the title of my post about queer BookTok: “It’s Gay and It Slaps:” TikTok’s Favorite LGBTQ Books. They are a lesbian bookseller who talks about queer books she’s read and loved (especially YA), the bookselling life, and some of their personal life.

a screenshot of A Very Queer Book Club bio on TikTok

One of the most popular queer BookTok creators is Jacob of A Very Queer Book Club. He does lots of short, upbeat videos about queer books, usually under 30 seconds.

DreaReads TikTok profile

I appreciate Drea of DreaReads introducing some negative criticism to queer BookTok as well. Although she talks about the book she loves, she also calls out bigotry on TikTok and harmful representation, including in queer books.

JohneePixels7 TikTok profile

Johnee of JohneePixels7 bring such enthusiasm to his videos that you can’t help but smile when you watch them. His videos include a lot of humor as well as great LGBTQ book recommendations.

EzeeKat TikTok Profile

And of course I couldn’t leave out Jaysen of Ezeekat. His videos are fun, funny, and frequent! In additional to queer books, he also talks about anime, Disney, games, his other nerdy interests.

Those are just a few of the great BookTok accounts that champion queer books, but hopefully that helps you discover some awesome creators! Now I just need to try to talk myself down from starting to make my own videos… this is BookTube all over again…

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

LGBTQ Book Ban News

All the Links Fit to Click

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

Cover of You Sexy Thing by Cat Rambo

You Sexy Thing by Cat Rambo (Sapphic Space Opera)

This queer space opera is being pitched as Farscape meets The Great British Bake Off. I was already intrigued by the title, but now? Sold. Niko and her former unit just want to retire from combat and run their kitchen, The Last Chance, in peace. Instead, they get pulled on board a sentient spaceship that thinks it’s being stolen and have to do battle with a sadistic pirate king.

Briar Girls cover

Briar Girls by Rebecca Kim Wells (Bisexual YA Fantasy)

Lena hasn’t had a great life. Anyone she touches dies, which has meant that her family has been on the run to keep her in hiding. Then, she meets a girl who emerges from The Silence, a magical and deadly forest. Miranda is from Gather, a city of magic, and she promises that a cure for Lena’s curse can be found there. All she has to do is help Miranda to find and awaken the sleeping princess, who is destined to overthrow the corrupt power that controls Gather. But Miranda is hiding things from her, and everyone she meets in The Silence has their own secrets and motives.

Marry Me by Melissa Brayden (F/F Romance)

Sweet Surprise by Jenny Frame (F/F Romance)

Holiday Wishes & Mistletoe Kisses by M. Ullrich (F/F Romance)

Each of Us a Desert paperback cover

Sasha Masha by Agnes Borinsky (Queer, Gender Questioning YA Contemporary) (Paperback Release)

The Year I Stopped Trying by Katie Heaney (Sapphic YA Contemporary)

Our Violent Ends (These Violent Delights #2) by Chloe Gong (M/M, Trans YA Fantasy)

Each of Us a Desert by Mark Oshiro (F/F YA Fantasy) (Paperback Release)

Adachi and Shimamura Vol. 7 by Hitoma Iruma, illustrated by Non (F/F Light Novel)

There Are Trans People Here by H. Melt (Trans 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

MELISSA by Alex Gino Gets a New Cover! 🎉

I’m sad to see Halloween month go, but I feel like I used it well, picking up lots of queer and creepy reads. We watched a horror movie on Halloween night, but unfortunately it turned out to be… disappointing. The visuals of exploring an underwater house were A+, though.

I’ve been highlighting a new queer charity every week, but I want to return to a few that I’ve mentioned before. If you have an LGBTQ charity that you think deserves a shout-out, please let me know!

Today I wanted to remind you of The Okra Project, “a collective that seeks to address the global crisis faced by Black Trans people by bringing home cooked, healthy, and culturally specific meals and resources to Black Trans People wherever we can reach them.” You can find out more on their website and can support them on their donation page.


Queering the Abbey: Books About Sapphic Nuns

The first time I saw that a book about lesbian nuns existed, I was extremely surprised. Now, I’ve read a few books about the subject, though, it’s not shocking at all. For many women in primarily Christian countries throughout history, becoming a nun was one of the few options available for them that didn’t involve marrying a man. Many nuns have also led social movements, fighting for social justice. And, of course, sex-segregated spaces often become associated with same sex relationships. If you’re curious, here are a few books about sapphic nuns worth reading.

Kicking the Habit cover

Kicking the Habit by Jeanne Cordova

Pick this one up for a look at what being a queer nun was like — or, at least training to a nun. Cordova had been dreaming of being a nun since she was a kid, and is an eager postulant. Soon, though, she begins to discover more about herself and the convent (why are they so strict about “particular friendships?”), and why this isn’t the best place for her. For more autobiographical stories from sapphic nuns, also check out Lesbian Nuns: Breaking Silence. You can see where Cordova ended up by reading her next memoir, When We Were Outlaws.

Verge cover

Verge by Z. Egloff

Claire is a disaster. She’s ruined just about everything in her life by drinking too much and sleeping with the wrong people. She’s trying to piece things together and stay sober, but it’s not going very well. Then she meets Sister Hilary and somehow agrees to start volunteering at the community center she runs. Unsurprisingly, she immediately falls for this woman. What is surprising, though, is that these feelings are reciprocated.

cover of Matrix by Lauren groff, featuring wavy gold lines radiating out of the center

Matrix by Lauren Groff

Yes, I was outraged when I found out that Lauren Groff’s new book was about a 12th century sapphic nun and nobody told me. Matrix is about Marie, a 17 year old who is in love with Eleanor of Aquitaine. Then, she’s suddenly shipped off to be in charge of a falling apart abbey. Marie rises to the occasion, finding ways to take care of her community inside and outside the abbey walls. Sexual relationships between the nuns are commonplace, and besides reassuring herself that “female sodomy” isn’t forbidden by any religious texts, Marie is unconcerned about them.

Censorship News

Unfortunately, LGBTQ books getting challenged warrants its own section this week.

Buckle up for some rage reading: Iowa School Board Candidate Wants to Share The Name of Every Kid Who Checks out Pro-LGBTQ Books.

Teen LGBTQ, sex education book (This Book Is Gay by Juno Dawson) in Lafayette Parish library challenged as pornography.

Gender Queer cover

Kenai teachers speak out against censorship of LGBTQ books in the district.

Maia Kobabe, author of Gender Queer: A Memoir, responds to the wave of challenges against eir book: Schools are banning my book. But queer kids need queer stories. (This article is a mix of comics and essay from Kobabe!)

You might remember an earlier news story about a couple in Gillette, Wyoming trying to sue library workers for carrying LGBTQ and sex ed books. The prosecutor has decided there aren’t grounds for charges.

All the Links Fit to Click

Melissa cover

And some good news: Alex Gino’s groundbreaking middle grade trans novel is getting a new title and cover! Say hello to Melissa!

Billy Porter will be directing the adaptation of Camp by L.C. Rosen!

The appeal of lesbian vampires is immortal.

Here are the 25 most fan fic-ed F/F TV couples of all time.

LGBTQ Reads has all the latest LGBTQ book deals.

Darcie Little Badger was featured in Time magazine, discussing her asexual YA book A Snake Falls To Earth.

Gabby Rivera was interviewed about centering queer Latinx joy in her storytelling.

Check out the cover reveal for The Oleander Sword, sequel to The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri.

Kal Penn (of Harold and Kumar) has come out as gay, is engaged to his fiancé, and has a new memoir out this week!

Diana Souhami wins 2021 Polari prize for No Modernism Without Lesbians and Mohsin Zaidi won the Polari first book prize for his book about growing up gay in a devout Muslim community, titled A Dutiful Boy: A Memoir.

Greedy: Notes From a Bisexual Who Wants Too Much by Jen Winston was reviewed and discussed at Autostraddle, and Winston was interviewed at Advocate.

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

Publishing is starting to slow down a bit, as it usually does in November and December. We still have some great books out this week, but I am once again asking publishing to put out more queer books by authors of color!

A Marvellous Light cover

A Marvellous Light (The Last Binding #1) by Freya Marske (M/M Historical Fantasy)

This is being pitched as Red White & Royal Blue meets Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell! Due to a clerical error, Robin named liaison to a magical society — which is the first he’s hearing of the existence of magic. Edwin is unimpressed with his new coworker, especially because he clearly doesn’t have the right qualifications. But there’s a reason the spot is vacant: the position is cursed, and now Robin and Edwin have to work together to unravel a mystery that will change both their perceptions of the magical world. And along the way, they might become more than just reluctant coworkers.

Briar Girls cover

Briar Girls by Rebecca Kim Wells (Bisexual YA Fantasy)

Lena lives a sheltered life. Her family has been secretive and constantly moving her whole life, trying to hide that her touch kills. When a beautiful woman tells her that there’s a hidden magical world that holds the cure for her curse, she doesn’t hesitate. She runs away with her into the Silence — a magical and dangerous woods. But there, she realizes she can’t trust anyone, and that she may be interested in power more than normalcy.

Brickmakers by Selva Almada (Queer Fiction)

Blue-Skinned Gods by SJ Sindu (Queer Fiction)

Blue-Skinned Gods cover

Unexpected Goals by Kelly Farmer (F/F Romance)

The God of Lost Words (Hell’s Library #3) by A.J. Hackwith (Pansexual Fantasy)

Moth by Michael Takeda (Bisexual Genderfluid Fantasy)

Parting the Veil by Paulette Kennedy (Queer Horror)

Fat Angie: Homecoming by e.E. Charlton-Trujillo (Sapphic Contemporary YA)

Going Viral by Katie Cicatelli-Kuc (F/F Contemporary YA)

Into the Bloodred Woods by Martha Brockenbrough (YA Fantasy)

You Can’t Be Serious cover

Girls of Fate and Fury (Girls of Paper and Fire#3) by Natasha Ngan (F/F YA Fantasy)

Faith: Greater Heights by Julie Murphy (Bisexual YA Superheroes)

This Is My Real Name by Cid V Brunet (Non-binary Memoir)

Solid Ivory by James Ivory (Gay Memoir)

You Can’t Be Serious by Kal Penn (Gay Memoir)


That’s it for me this week! Until next time, you can find me at the Lesbrary as well as on Twitter @danikaellis. You can also hear me on All the Books on the first Tuesday of the month, read my Book Riot posts, and watch my weekly New Releases videos on the Book Riot Youtube channel. You can bet I sneak in as many queer titles as I can.

Happy reading!

Danika

Categories
Our Queerest Shelves

Read These Books for Asexual Awareness Week!

Last weekend, I participated in Dewey’s 24 Hour Readathon and had a great time! I stuck to mostly queer horror and otherwise Halloween-ish reads, and I had a lot of success. The Luminous Dead is an excellent creepy sapphic sci fi read (especially to absorb all 400 pages in basically one sitting), When I Arrived at the Castle is a disturbing sapphic vampire graphic novel that is equal parts horror and erotic, and Mooncakes was just as delightful as everyone always says it is.

Today, I wanted to highlight The National Center for Transgender Equality, which “advocates to change policies and society to increase understanding and acceptance of transgender people.” You can find out more at their website and support them at the donation page.


An Asexual, Queer Found Family Historical YA Novel

I usually write a general post or a list in this space, but I just read a fascinating queer book I had to talk to you about. It also has an asexual main character, and this is Asexual Awareness Week, so it’s all coming together!

The cover of The Reckless Kind

I picked up The Reckless Kind by Carly Heath for the November 2nd episode of All the Books. I couldn’t resist the premise: an asexual, queer found family, M/M romance YA novel set in 1904 Norway? Now that’s something I haven’t read before.

Luckily, it completely lived up to my hopes. It has three point of view characters: Aster, Gunnar, and Erland. Aster is an asexual (and probably aromantic?) girl who’s deaf in one ear and has Waardenburg Syndrome. She doesn’t really fit in to their small town, but she finds community and meaning in theater. There, she befriends Gunnar and Erland.

Gunnar is a Fuglestad, a “heathen” family. They’re vegetarians, they don’t go to church, and they’re generally considered outsiders — except that they’re also the only place to get your horses shoed, and they’re also the town’s de facto veterinarians. Gunnar also loves the theater — and Erland. It’s not long before the two start a secret love affair.

Erland comes from a wealthy French family who shower him in wealth (they built the playhouse for him), but also expect him to uphold their family’s values and behave in a particular way. Erland has no interest in those expectations, though, or his wealth. He is devoted to Gunnar, and nothing else matters to him.

In short succession, though, the three find themselves in a very difficult situation. (This all happens in the first few chapters.) Gunnar’s mother dies, and Gunnar loses his arm in the same accident. Their family’s farm is in debt, and they’ll soon lose it. Aster breaks off her engagement to a man she has no feelings for, and he attacks Gunnar in his rage, seriously injuring and possibly paralyzing him. Erland walks away from his family (and their money) to stay with Gunnar. Now it’s just the three of them, trying to figure out how to survive — and to save the Fuglestad farm.

I was fascinated by how this book is simultaneously completely unique and yet feels familiar — what could be more wholesome than a plan to save the family farm? Especially when the only answer is for them to win the annual horse race to take home the cash prize. I loved the family they built together, taking care of each other even when it’s difficult.

I do want to give some content warnings for violence, injury, and suicide ideation. More specifically, Gunnar has a very difficult time adjusting to his disability, and he makes frequent morbid “jokes” and considers himself a burden to the people around him. The author mentions in the author’s note that she drew on her own experiences with lumbar spine trauma and wanted to represent the whole complex experience of disability and chronic pain.

This is a fascinating and heartwarming read that I think would be perfect for the holidays — it builds up to the Christmas horse race, and the themes of found family are perfect for the colder months when you want something cozy. Even though this deals with prejudice, violence, and grief, it’s a hopeful book that also celebrates queerplatonic relationships and queer love in general.

All the Links Fit to Click

Your rage read (or disappointment read) of the day: Margaret Atwood wades into TERF territory on Twitter and demonstrated the danger of “passive transphobia.”

Cover of Firebreak by Nicole Kornher-Stace
An asexual sci fi novel

It’s Asexual Awareness Week! Here are some book recommendations with asexual main characters.

Bookstagram helps LGBTQ+ readers find community.

October is LGBTQ history month. These are 17 must-read books about queer history. And here are more, including picks for kids and teens.

This county had their first Drag Queen Story Hour! This article includes lots of great photos and absolutely zero backlash, which is refreshing.

On the other hand… Drag Queen Story Time opponent is elected president of Lafayette library board, and immediately tries to shrink the scope and mission of the library.

Aristotle and Dante cover
CW: transphobic and
homophobic violence

A Colorado middle school banned Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe.

Speaking of, here are some casting updates for the upcoming Aristotle and Dante adaptation.

How are LGBTQ historical romance book covers made?

Here’s how literary gatekeepers can advocate for Black trans women.

Read these sapphic YA witch books.

Listen to these queer audiobook retellings.

In today’s headlines I wasn’t expecting, Miller Lite sponsored a queer history book. It’s called Beers and Queer History and it’s by Dr. Eric Cervini.

cover of gideon the ninth
Sword lesbians.

“Yes, there are trans Amazons.” The new Nubia comic introduces the first trans Amazon character, Bia.

Here a preview of Harley Quinn Season 3, with lots of Poison Ivy/Harley Quinn.

On sword lesbians and The Locked Tomb series.

This butch/butch yuri manga Kickstarter has already met its goal, but you can still back it.

Billy Porter’s new memoir, Unprotected, was covered at NPR, the Washington Post, USA Today, and Good Morning America.

The Subversive, Sapphic Spiritual Lives of Nuns in Matrix.”

Light from Uncommon Stars book cover
Trans & sapphic sci fi.

A New York Times review from 1954 of The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook by Gertrude Stein.

Ryka Aoki was interviewed at Locus Online about Light From Uncommon Stars.

Karina Manta was interviewed about coming out as bisexual as a figure skater as well as her new book, On Top of Glass.

Andrea Abi-Karam was interviewed about their book Villainy and queer liberation.

LGBTQ Book Riot Posts

New Releases This Week

cover of Dreaming of You by Melissa Lozada-Oliva

Dreaming Of You by Melissa Lozada-Oliva (Queer Novel in Verse)

This is a novel in verse about Melissa, a young Latinx poet who, at a low point in her life, is given the ability to bring a celebrity back from the dead. She picks Selena, of course. It discusses Latinidad, obsession, and queer identity — plus she performs karaoke in hell.

cover of Tink and Wendy

Tink and Wendy by Kelly Ann Jacobson (Bisexual YA Fantasy Retelling)

“What happens when Tinker Bell is in love with both Peter Pan and Wendy?” This is the story of Tinker Bell mourning Peter Pan and Wendy’s deaths, and recounting to Wendy’s granddaughter the whole sorry story that landed her here. It rotates between past and present of their love triangle, along with excerpts from Neverland: A History.

cover of Another Kind

Another Kind by Cait May and Trevor Bream (Non-Binary Middle Grade Fantasy Graphic Novel)

The six kids in Another Kind are not exactly human, but they have made a family for themselves, tucked away in a hidden place. But then their safe world is broken open, and they’ll have to find a way avoid The Collector, a monster searching for them. This has two non-binary characters.

Until We Fall by Nicole Zelniker (Trans Woman Fiction)

Sisters of the Great War by Suzanne Feldman (Sapphic Historical Fiction)

Tell Me I’m Worthless by Alison Rumfitt (Trans Woman Horror)

We Light Up the Sky by Lilliam Rivera (Queer YA Science Fiction)

Baggage: Tales from a Fully Packed Life by Alan Cumming (Bisexual Memoir)


That’s it for me this week! Until next time, you can find me at the Lesbrary as well as on Twitter @danikaellis. You can also hear me on All the Books on the first Tuesday of the month, read my Book Riot posts, and watch my weekly New Releases videos on the Book Riot Youtube channel. You can bet I sneak in as many queer titles as I can.

Happy reading!

Danika