On October 29th, 2022, we streamed a Queer Book Haul with guests Nicholas Eames, Chelsea, Sam McClean, and Tricia McGarrah to share our favorite LGBTQ+ book recommendations and raise money for Rainbow Refugee. The full video can be watched below.
Click on each title to be taken to its Goodreads page; if the book has been reviewed by Roar Cat Reads, it is marked and linked as such.
In Modern Mrs. Darcy, Anne Bogel (yes, that’s the woman behind the excellent podcast What Should I Read Next) recently posted a challenge to write a list of the things that are saving our lives right now, especially as we approach February 2nd, the midpoint of winter.
As I thought about the good things that are happening in my life right now, I realized that a lot of them were based in the Roar Cat Reads Discord community. Through interviews and charity events, I have gotten to know many queer nerdy people who are truly awesome. Here are some of the reasons our community is saving my life right now:
The support. Rachel and I recently launched a new D&D podcast, DM’s Pocket Guide, and it made my heart happy to see our new friends reacting with joy and support. This was not a one-off event! My absolute favorite part of the community is seeing someone share something they’re working on and be greeted with praise, questions, and support.
The creativity. This is tied into the first point. There are so many people in our community who working on awesome, creative projects! Whether it’s Halli’s fandom surveys, Jessy’s DMs of Vancouver podcast or Tory’s Boardgame B*tch podcast, Haley’s artwork, or the random crafts that are shown off, I am so often inspired and impressed by the cool stuff being made.
The inclusive cat pictures. When I started the Discord community, I knew I wanted a channel for cat pictures. Since some people (weirdly) choose to have pets other than cats, we quickly allowed dog-cats and bird-cats. There is nothing better than a cute animal picture that is shared in the middle of a long Wednesday afternoon at the office!
The queer nerdiness. This is why people join, but I never stop being delighted by the opportunities to play Wanderhome, try out regency-era eldritch horror TTRPGs, and launch charity events. These are my people, and I’m so glad to have found them.
A year ago, I didn’t know any of these people! Roar Cat Reads wasn’t even an idea in my brain at that point! I’ll be doing some year-in-review posts as we near our anniversary on March 2nd, but I couldn’t pass up this opportunity to revel in the gratitude I feel for our community.
What about you? What are one or two things that are saving your life right now?
As in, I wrote fanfic of it. I took what I saw on the screen and changed it.
Fan writing (and fan art and creating in general) gives fans of a particular piece of entertainment the space in which to operate outside the canon. Maybe that all sounds like gibberish, but as a fifteen year old blossoming queer girl growing up in a terribly homogenous small town in Ohio, it was an outlet. A way to express the strange, forbidden desires I wanted to see on screen. The things that bound me up inside and made me breathless, imagining those possibilities.
This was 1999, so outside of shows like Will & Grace, anything “gay” on TV was damn limited. The first iteration of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy didn’t come around until 2003, for example.
The first fanfic I ever wrote was Buffy/Faith. It is long lost to the vast graveyard of the internet, where cats with cheezeburgers and terribly creepy dancing babies go to die and make room for new memes and fascinations. I saw these two strong young women standing up to evils and horrors, vampires and scheming plots, and yes, men, and I saw lust and attraction between them. Who else could better understand the particular die with which their fate was cast than the other person in that situation?
Of course, this is not a canon ship, sadly, but I remain, to this day, a fan of it. Because they both deserved better. Because they were perfect for the enemies-to-lovers trope. And they were both hot as fuck.
(We will not be visiting Joss Whedon in this essay cause fuck that dude with a rusty rake.)
After my love of Buffy ran its course, I was still trying to figure out me. My mother had a strange kind of fascination with gay people, seeing them as sideshow attractions while constantly telling me all the time I spent with my female friends was going to turn me into a “lezzy”. Those kinds of extremely mixed signals didn’t help my already confused mind, and combined with growing up in an abusive household, I had to put it all aside lest I get ousted from the only home I had. I was headed to college while living at home (not the best for my individual growth in hindsight), I was meeting new people. Surely the door would open to finding out who I was, right?
One person I met, a gay man only a year or two younger than I, was a doorway into a world I didn’t know of. My internet was dial-up, my phone barely could text, and finding any kind of gay or queer literature or entertainment was seemingly impossible. But this new friend opened a door. Suddenly I was allowed into spaces where gay men and women and anyone else who wanted in could show up and hang out. I discovered Rocky Horror and went to campy costume parties. I had beer and martinis spilled on me on crowded dance floors full of anyone and everyone who wanted to simply exist with like-minded people. I was given a gift. It was like queerdar, and with my eyes open, I could start to find myself again.
But I never left fandom and its queerness.
Class and work during the week was the boring, unsure me. I was too scared to ask the pretty girl in my English class on a date (she later became a good friend and never teased me for thinking she was gorgeous). I was too stuck in my own head about how other people would see me in that little town. I didn’t want to be an outcast or a “lezzy”, sneered at because I was gay. I grew up in a time when sayings like, “That’s so gay,” were hurled around school halls and soccer fields, wielded like a weapon to demean and degrade. To cast the insultee as lesser. So finding a home in fandom made a lot of sense to me, and it let me start to question myself, to figure things out.
I came back to fandom in college, diving into a very tiny group of people who shipped two characters who lived to antagonize each other. Good ol’ enemies-to-lovers trope. I had no idea how gay sex worked and I still cringe-laugh at how I thought the word was prostrate. It’s not like there was a gay Merriam-Webster’s I could use, and I was so goddamn sure of myself. Nothing like a questioning queer cis woman writing gay men incorrectly to make you want to jump out a window.
But I loved the little community around this fandom and the creators I met were all so passionate and vibrant and interesting. There was one person, someone who claimed to be a woman in her fifties, I really connected with. She was alone after years in a relationship with a woman; when the relationship fell apart, she turned to fandom on the internet. She’d been a writer in the Star Trek and Star Wars communities for decades, and was thrilled at how the internet age had brought more people together in fandom. She talked to me about queer love and attraction, we swapped our fanfics and beta read for each other. She was there for me at a time when my head still swirled with words like bisexual.
Real life eventually took over. I finished college, got a job, fell in love, got married. I never doubted who I was, not completely, but I had recognized the layers of my identity through exploring queerness online, in fandoms. I truly don’t know if I would have the understanding I do today without it. And at 36 years old, I still write fanfics. I write stories of love and lust and imbue them with lore and humor. I turn some into fairy tales, others modern AUs (alternative universes) focused on the joy of queer love and attraction. I’m not interested in writing yet another tragedy porn story meant to show how tough our lives are on the outside. Sure, you say, but there’s Pride and all these shows with queer characters and queer romance books and…and…!
Yes, there are. But a lot, if not most, of that didn’t exist even 20 years ago. And if you read stories of those from Stonewall, if you learn about people like Marsha P. Johnson and Harvey Milk, if you read Oscar Wilde and Kit Marlowe and James Baldwin and Audre Lorde, you can see the history, the struggle, the triumph, the secret longing, the intense passion. Fandom started me on a path to figuring out my queerness, a path that led me to those very real people and so many others. The world is a full picture, dark and bright and queer and vibrant and very very real.
I might have started with a Buffy/Faith fanfic so bad I refuse to even try to find it, but those young women taught me an awful lot about myself in the process. Now I just write about mages and vampires and monster hunters and bards and some of it is in fandom, some of it is of my own creation. But I understand myself a lot better now and sure as hell am grateful for a much more open, brighter world. Fascination became acceptance, and then morphed into belonging.
There is nothing quite as brilliant or special as that feeling. Knowing where you fit, if you fit, and how to make your way through a rather unforgiving world. Fandom is a bright spot for me. It taught me how to write, how to compose story and plot. It taught me dialogue and characterization, how to turn a phrase and make a reader fall in love or fall out of their seat. Fandom taught me about myself, but it didn’t stand there with the door wide open. It gave me a key and a series of doors to travel through, and like the gayest closet-cum-magical gateway, I got to waltz through once I understood the dance.
Halli Starling (she/they) writes fantasy worlds, vampires, and romance, focusing on stories with deep emotional investment. And the occasional bloody bit of violence.
In 2021, readers were most interested in our big ticket posts, like the reason behind our October charity event and our summer book bingo. There was also a lot of clicks for the more personal posts on the site, like my essays on biphobia and coming out (to myself!) later in life. I’m thrilled that Black Sails got some significant love, both in my post about the awesome dragon speech, and for some reason, episode 108 specifically. We wouldn’t be a queer nerdy site if D&D didn’t get some attention, so it’s fitting that two of our TTRPG posts blew up, one reviewing published material and the other ranking a fictional monster fight. Two interviews finish out the list with the women behind an adorable dog food store and, well, me!
Why not buy a gift for your queer nerdy friend that was made by a queer nerdy person? Our community has made crafts, created D&D supplemental material, offered dice subscriptions, and written holiday romances!
The Roar Cat Reads community is full of creative, talented people. Check out our 2021 Holiday Gift Guide below!
Isn’t that how most small town romance stories begin?
But this isn’t any love story – it’s several stories of love, romance, and sex. The stories cross paths and connections, age, gender, sexuality, and different kinds of relationships. Stories like that of Harriet, the owner of Twelfth Moon perfumery and adopted mother to her nephew, Nu. Harriet always figured she’d be single for the rest of her life, but Dela Atwater appearing in her shop one blustery autumn day sparks something within her. A bit of romance and longing she’d long thought buried.
With stories like this and many more, Twelfth Moon is about hope and joy and queer love in so many shapes and forms, from the author of the dark fantasy/romance novel Wilderwood(“…will shatter readers’ expectations with its bewitching complexities…” – The BookLife Prize).
If you’re a fan of adorable monsters, consider adding a Mini Monstrosity to your holiday wish list. These tentacled cuties are the perfect addition to your potted plant or birthday cake!
Made from polymer clay, Mini Monstrosities are available in any colour and can be purchased in small ($10) or large ($15) sizes.
Faerie Fire is a supplemental anthology compatible with Fifth Edition tabletop games, adding new depth and mechanics to the fairy realm. This book features over 50 new original creatures (from CR 1/4 to 19), new player options, and a module (appropriate for a party of level 5 characters). Each page is boldly illustrated with a colorful retro aesthetic, reminiscent of 80s synthwave and 90s school supplies; the book itself is bound in a high-quality hardcover with a vibrant design.
Featuring over 70 artists with a cover design by Yuko Ota, Faerie Fire is certain to be a glamorous addition to your tabletop collection.
Adventure Dice Subscription: A new or unreleased set every month. This subscription ships the same set of new/unreleased dice to each subscription in that month
Blue Box Subscription: One random set of polyhedral dice from our current collection to you each month. Dice are randomly pulled from our current inventory, which means each Blue Box subscription set is usually different!
Premium Subscription: Ships one new/unreleased set of premium polyhedral dice to you each month. Metal, wood, glass–oh my! Due to the premium nature of these dice sets, they will ship in their retail packaging to keep them safe. This is a metal tin with foam insert.
Welcome to Mina’s is all about exploring Vancouver and the people who live in it through the lens of a fictional diner: Mina’s. The book was created and edited by Cloudscape board member, Emily Lampson and features heartwarming stories of life, love, and food, all of which connects the stories characters when they enter Mina’s. Some contributors have brought their own experiences to the book and others were inspired about moments throughout the history of Vancouver. This book features ethnic diversity and represents all walks of life including individuals old and young, LGBTQ and people with disabilities throughout the history of the city we all love.
‘Tis the season to celebrate friendship and community through the exchange of gifts, and we want you to participate in this year’s Roar Cat Reads Secret Santa gift exchange!
The Setup
RSVP by November 20th to roarcatreads@gmail.com to let us know you are interested in participating. Please include:
(3) gift ideas that you would like to receive. Remember, the more specific you are, the easier it is for someone to buy you a gift!
Consent to share your email address (for online gift cards) or mailing address (for physical items).
On November 21st, you will be given the name of another Secret Santa participant and their wish list.
The Budget
Gifts should be no more than $25.
The Reveal
Join our Discord community to share pictures of your gift and find out who your Secret Santa was!
We hope you’ll join us for a holiday of nerdy gifts and the opportunity to get to know each other a little better!