Tag: LGBTQ Books

  • 9 LGBTQ+ Books I Couldn’t Put Down

    9 LGBTQ+ Books I Couldn’t Put Down

    My favorite kind of reading experience is a book that catches my attention and refuses to let it go, one that keeps me up late at night because I just have to know what’s going to happen next. These are 9 of the most captivating LGBTQ+ books I’ve read that I couldn’t put down!

    Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Saenz

    Every time I read this book, I find myself staying up late to read just one more page! It’s the perfect coming-of-age story, centering around two teenage boys who are figuring out who they are individually and together. Thoughtful, sweet, and dramatic, this is one of the first books I recommend to friends.

    (YA contemporary fiction)

    Read my full review here.


    The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid

    An absolutely engrossing story about an opinionated, passionate, aged Hollywood superstar telling her story while slowly revealing multiple mysteries – some of them queer! Give me more stories of feminist bisexual older women!

    (historical/contemporary fiction)

    Read my full review here.


    Naamah by Sarah Blake

    This one is a little niche, but this queer retelling of the story of Noah’s ark focused on his wife (here named Naamah) hit my exact intersection of interests. If you’ve got a religious past (or present, I suppose) and want to interrogate some God feelings with a queer-positive protagonist, I highly recommend!

    (biblical historical fantasy)

    Read my full review here.


    The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller

    There is perhaps no better medium for gay stories than Greek myths, and this retelling of Achilles and Patroclus is perfection. I swooned, I cried, I left convinced that this was the correct version of the tale.

    (mythology)

    Read my full review here.


    Like Crazy: Life With My Mother and Her Invisible Friends by Dan Mathews

    Surprisingly uplifting for such a heavy subject, this memoir of a gay man bringing his aging mother to his home to be diagnosed with schizophrenia and then die peacefully is lovely, true, and often pretty hilarious. A perfect book is one that makes me both laugh out loud and cry, and I closed this book with such emotional catharsis.

    (memoir)

    Read my full review here.


    The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune

    The cutest of books, I didn’t want this one to end even though I couldn’t slow myself down while reading it! When a magical social worker investigates an orphanage for adorably dangerous magical children, he falls in love with the man who runs the place, and my heart exploded at least twenty times.

    (fantasy)

    Read my full review here.


    Tomorrow Will Be Different: Love, Loss, and the Fight for Trans Equality by Sarah McBride

    I would never have guessed that a memoir about US state politics would have had me desperately turning the pages to see what would happen next, but McBride tells her story of coming out, falling in love, fighting for trans rights, and losing her love with perfection.

    (memoir)

    Read my full review here.


    The Deep & Dark Blue by Niki Smith

    A complex story told beautifully, this graphic novel tells the story of royal twins who escape a coup to hide in a magical nunnery. One wants to leave and be a hero, and the other feels surprisingly at home as a girl. It makes world building and trans-positive stories look easy!

    (middle grade fantasy graphic novel)

    Read my full review here.


    Roadqueen: Eternal Roadtrip to Love by Mira Ong Chua

    I called this “the best thing I’ve ever read” when I reviewed it, and I stand by this hyperbole. It’s a ridiculous story about fake dating and manipulating someone into being a “decent lesbian,” and I tore through every page while shrieking with laughter.

    (graphic novel)

    Read my full review here.

    What queer books have you read that you loved so much you couldn’t put them down?

  • 10 Underrated LGBTQ+ Books

    10 Underrated LGBTQ+ Books

    In general, queer literature tends to get less press than other genres, although increasingly, LGBTQ+ stories are getting the attention they deserve. Still, many excellent books are underrated on Goodreads (aka have less than 5,000 ratings). I wanted to give them a little extra love, and I hope you will too!

    Idea taken from Kat Impossible.


    10 Underrated LGBTQ+ Books

    Alice Payne Arrives by Kate Heartfield

    The Alice Payne novellas are time traveling adventures centered around women of color (one is queer) from different time periods. They are fun, feminist, and philosophical.

    Butter Honey Pig Bread by Francesca Ekwuyasi

    A literary novel about a Nigerian mother and her twin daughters breaking apart and coming back together. It’s a book about love, travel, trauma, and the liminal space between mental health and spiritualism.

    Camp by L.C. Rosen

    An adorable YA novel about a diverse cast of queer kids attending a supportive summer camp. The premise is ridiculous (an effeminate gay teen goes masc to win over his crush) but handled with surprising care.

    The Deep & Dark Blue by Niki Smith

    A beautiful fantasy graphic novel about two young twins who escape a royal slaughter into a magical convent for girls. One wants to get back to his life as a prince and reclaim his throne, while the other realizes she feels more herself as a girl and hesitates to leave this refuge.

    FINNA by Nino Cipri

    What if IKEA was a(n actual) dangerous labyrinth that passes through wormholes into different worlds? This delightful novella places two underpaid employees going through a breakup in life-or-death situations and, in the most queer story imaginable, centers on successfully rebuilding a relationship after romance.

    Flamer by Mike Curato

    A black and white YA graphic novel that uses color for emotional effect about a young Boy Scout coming to terms with his attraction to his bunkmate in honest, heartbreaking, and joyful scenes. His dreams of the two of them acting out fantasy romances are priceless!

    Miranda in Milan by Katharine Duckett

    Queer Shakespeare geeks rejoice! This short novel follows a post-The Tempest Miranda back to Milan where she must confront the ghosts of her past while navigating falling in love with a woman.

    Naamah by Sarah Blake

    If you’ve ever wished the Bible were gayer and more feminist, this is the book for you! Noah’s wife Naamah is given a voice as she struggles with living through a disaster that killed her female lover and wrestles with what it means to relate to the god who caused such tragedy.

    Trans-Galactic Bike Ride edited by Lydia Rogue

    A novella anthology of short stories centered on trans narratives and biking through space…weirdly specific and utterly delightful! I guarantee that some of the stories will be your flavour, though who knows which ones that will be.

    The Unspoken Name by A.K. Larkwood

    An excellent fantasy novel about a lesbian orc who works as a wizard’s assassin and struggles with her life’s meaning after fleeing a cult who wanted to sacrifice her to appease an ancient god. That should be all you need to know to be assured that this is so much fun!


    What underrated LGBTQIA+ books do you want to boost?
    Leave a comment and let everyone know about them!