The Citadel of Whispers by Kazim Ali (1st)
YOU are Krishi, a Whisperer studying ancient, secret magic at the Citadel. A secret visitor arrives late one night with news of the encroaching attack by the powerful Narbolian empire, who are poised to possess all of the kingdom of Elaria. Will the decisions you make protect the many wondrous people of this rich, fantastic world?
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The City Beautiful by Aden Polydoros (5th)
Chicago, 1893. For Alter Rosen, this is the land of opportunity, and he dreams of the day heāll have enough money to bring his mother and sisters to America, freeing them from the oppression they face in his native Romania.
But when Alterās best friend, Yakov, becomes the latest victim in a long line of murdered Jewish boys, his dream begins to slip away. While the rest of the city is busy celebrating the Worldās Fair, Alter is now living a nightmare: possessed by Yakovās dybbuk, he is plunged into a world of corruption and deceit, and thrown back into the arms of a dangerous boy from his past. A boy who means more to Alter than anyone knows.
Now, with only days to spare until the dybbuk takes over Alterās body completely, the two boys must race to track down the killerābefore the killer claims them next.
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Paybackās a Witch by Lana Harper (5th)
Emmy Harlow is a witch but not a very powerful oneāin part because she hasn’t been home to the magical town of Thistle Grove in years. Her self-imposed exile has a lot to do with a complicated family history and a desire to forge her own way in the world, and only the very tiniest bit to do with Gareth Blackmoore, heir to the most powerful magical family in town and casual breaker of hearts and destroyer of dreams.
But when a spellcasting tournament that her family serves as arbiters for approaches, it turns out the pull of tradition (or the truly impressive parental guilt trip that comes with it) is strong enough to bring Emmy back. She’s determined to do her familial duty; spend some quality time with her best friend, Linden Thorn; and get back to her real life in Chicago.
On her first night home, Emmy runs into Talia Avramovāan all-around badass adept in the darker magical artsāwho is fresh off a bad breakup . . . with Gareth Blackmoore. Talia had let herself be charmed, only to discover that Gareth was also seeing Lindenāunbeknownst to either of them. And now she and Linden want revenge. Only one question stands: Is Emmy in?
But most concerning of all: Why can’t she stop thinking about the terrifyingly competent, devastatingly gorgeous, wickedly charming Talia Avramov?
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The Gold Persimmon by Lindsay Merbaum (5th)
Clytemnestra is a check-in girl at The Gold Persimmon, a temple-like New York City hotel with gilded furnishings and carefully guarded secrets. Cloistered in her own reality, Cly lives by a strict set of rules until a connection with a troubled hotel guest threatens the world sheās so carefully constructed.
In a parallel reality, an inexplicable fog envelops the city, trapping a young, nonbinary writer named Jaime in a sex hotel with six other people. As the survivors begin to turn on one another, Jaime must navigate a deadly game of cat and mouse.
Haunted by specters of grief and familial shame, Jaime and Cly find themselves trapped in dual narratives in this gripping experimental novel that explores sexuality, surveillance, and the very nature of storytelling.
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Being Seen: One Deafblind Woman’s Fight to End Ableism by Elsa Sjunneson (5th)
A Deafblind writer and professor explores how the misrepresentation of disability in books, movies, and TV harms both the disabled community and everyone else.
As a Deafblind woman with partial vision in one eye and bilateral hearing aids, Elsa Sjunneson lives at the crossroads of blindness and sight, hearing and deafnessāmuch to the confusion of the world around her. While she cannot see well enough to operate without a guide dog or cane, she can see enough to know when someone is reacting to the visible signs of her blindness and can hear when theyāre whispering behind her back. And she certainly knows how wrong our one-size-fits-all definitions of disability can be.
As a media studies professor, sheās also seen the full range of blind and deaf portrayals on film, and here she deconstructs their impact, following common tropes through horror, romance, and everything in between. Part memoir, part cultural criticism, part history of the Deafblind experience, Being Seen explores how our cultural concept of disability is more myth than fact, and the damage it does to us all.
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Squad by Maggie Tokuda-Hall and Lisa Sterle (5th)
When Becca transfers to a high school in an elite San Francisco suburb, sheās worried sheās not going to fit in. To her surprise, sheās immediately adopted by the most popular girls in school. At first glance, Marley, Arianna, and Mandy are perfect. But at a party under a full moon, Becca learns that they also have a big secret.
Beccaās new friends are werewolves. Their prey? Slimy boys who take advantage of unsuspecting girls. Eager to be accepted, Becca allows her friends to turn her into a werewolf, and finally, for the first time in her life, she feels like she truly belongs.
But things get complicated when Ariannaās predatory boyfriend is killed, and the cops begin searching for a serial killer. As their pack begins to buckle under the pressureāand their moral high ground gets muddier and muddierāBecca realizes that she might have feelings for one of her new best friends.
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The Swank Hotel by Lucy Corin (5th)
At the outset of the 2008 financial crisis, Em has a dependable, dull marketing job generating reports of vague utility while she anxiously waits to hear news of her sister, Ad, who has gone missingāagain. Emās days pass drifting back and forth between her respectably cute starter house (bought with a āresponsible, salary-backed, fixed-rate mortgageā) and her dreary office. Then something unthinkable, something impossible happens and she begins to see how madness permeates everything around her while the mundane spaces she inhabits are transformed, through Lucy Corinās idiosyncratic magic, into shimmering sites of the uncanny.
The story that swirls around Em moves through several perspectives and voices. There is Frank, the tart-tongued, failing manager at her office; Jack, the man with whom Frank has had a love affair for decades; Em and Adās eccentric parents who live in a house that is perpetually being built; and Tasio, the young man from Chiapas who works for them and falls in love with Ad. Through them Corin portrays porousness and breakdown in individuals and families, in economies and political systems, in architecture, technology, and even in language itself.
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The Throwback List by Lily Anderson (5th)
Welcome to Sandy Point, Oregon: a sleepy beach town that’s home to a giant anchor statue, a sometimes-karaoke-bar, and Frosty’s questionably legendary Sunday Sundae Surprise. A town Jo, Autumn, and Bianca thought they’d left far behind when they graduated high school, finally moving on to greener pastures than the midway point for tourists heading to the Goonies house. But life seldom goes according to plan.
Bianca Boria-Birdy, former prom queen and valedictorian, has always been an overachiever. As she juggles managing the family tattoo parlor, caring for her grandmother, and adjusting to a new marriage, Bianca’s schedule becomes stricter than ever, with no room for disruption. What she really needs is a vacation, but not even Bianca Boria-Birdy can achieve the impossible.
Autumn Kelly used to be an actress. Now she teaches drama at Sandy Point High. She may have had to kiss her movie-star dreams goodbye, but molding the next generation of performers has given her life meaning in a whole new way. Until the sudden reappearance of her ex-best friend throws everything off-balance.
Jo Freeman has it all together. With a cool job in Silicon Valley, connections at the trendiest fitness studios, and a down payment on her dream condo, she’s well on her way to reaching every one of her goals before thirty. Or she was, before she got fired and landed right back home with her parents and teenage sister.
When Jo finds an old bucket list in her childhood bedroom, it sets the three women on a path that brings them closer to one another with each task. And it just might lead to a life none of them could have planned.
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The Savage Kind by John Copenhaver (5th)
Philippa Watson, a good-natured yet troubled seventeen-year-old, has just moved to Washington, DC. Sheās lonely until she meets Judy Peabody, a brilliant and tempestuous classmate. The girls become unlikely friends and fashion themselves as intellectuals, drawing the notice of Christine Martins, their dazzling English teacher, who enthralls them with her passion for literature and her love of noirish detective fiction.
When Philippa returns a novel Miss Martins has lent her, she interrupts a man grappling with her in the shadows. Frightened, Philippa flees, unsure who the man is or what sheās seen. Days later, her teacher returns to school altered: a dark shell of herself. On the heels of her teacherās transformation, a classmate is found dead in the Anacostia Riverāmurderedāthe body stripped and defiled with a mysterious inscription.
As the girls follow the clues and wrestle with newfound feelings toward each other, they suspect that the killer is closer to their circle than they imaginedāand that the greatest threat they face may not be lurking in the halls at school, or in the city streets, but creeping out from a murderous impulse of their own.
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Between Certain Death and a Possible Future: Queer Writing on Growing Up with the AIDS Crisis by Matilda Bernstein Sycamore (5th)
Every queer person lives with the trauma of AIDS, and this plays out intergenerationally. Usually we hear about two generationsāthe first, coming of age in the era of gay liberation, and then watching entire circles of friends die of a mysterious illness as the government did nothing to intervene. And now we hear about younger people growing up with effective treatment and prevention available, unable to comprehend the magnitude of the loss. But there is another generation between these two, one that came of age in the midst of the epidemic with the belief that desire intrinsically led to death, and internalized this trauma as part of becoming queer.
Between Certain Death and a Possible Future: Queer Writing on Growing up with the AIDS Crisis offers crucial stories from this missing generation in AIDS literature and cultural politics. This wide-ranging collection includes 36 personal essays on the ongoing and persistent impact of the HIV/AIDS crisis in queer lives. Here you will find an expansive range of perspectives on a specific generational storyāessays that explore and explode conventional wisdom, while also providing a necessary bridge between experiences. These essays respond, with eloquence and incisiveness, to the question: How do we reckon with the trauma that continues to this day, and imagine a way out?
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A Carnival of Snackery by David Sedaris (5th)
If itās navel-gazing youāre after, youāve come to the wrong place; ditto treacly self-examination. Rather, his observations turn outward: a fight between two men on a bus, a fight between two men on the street, pedestrians being whacked over the head or gathering to watch as a man considers leapĀing to his death. Thereās a dirty joke shared at a book signing, then a dirtier one told at a dinner partyālots of jokes here. Plenty of laughs.
These diaries remind you that you once really hated George W. Bush, and that not too long ago, Donald Trump was just a harmĀless laughingstock, at least on French TV. Time marches on, and Sedaris, at his desk or on planes, in hotel dining rooms and odd Japanese inns, records it. The entries here reflect an ever-changing backgroundānew administrations, new restrictions on speech and conduct. What you can say at the start of the book, you canāt by the end. At its best, A Carnival of Snackery is a sort of sampler: the bitter and the sweet. Some entries are just what you wanted. Others you might want to spit discreetly into a napkin.
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Greedy: Notes from a Bisexual Who Wants Too Much by Jen Winston (5th)
If Jen Winston knows one thing for sure, itās that sheās bisexual. Or waitāmaybe she isnāt? Actually, she definitely is. Unlessā¦sheās not?
Jenās provocative, laugh-out-loud debut takes us inside her journey of self-discovery, leading us through stories of a childhood āgirl crush,ā an onerous quest to have a threesome, and an enduring fear of being bad at sex. Greedy follows Jenās attempts to make sense of herself as she explores the role of the male gaze, what it means to be āqueer enough,ā and how to overcome bi stereotypes when youāre the posterchild for all of them: greedy, slutty, and constantly confused.
With her clever voice and clear-eyed insight, Jen draws on personal experiences with sexism and biphobia to understand how we all can and must do better. She sheds light on the reasons women, queer people, and other marginalized groups tend to make ourselves smaller, provoking the question: What would happen if we suddenly stopped?āā
Greedy shows us that being bisexual is about so much more than who youāre sleeping withāitās about finding stability in a state of flux and defining yourself on your own terms. This book inspires us to rethink the world as we know it, reminding us that Greedy was a superpower all along.
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A Tale of Two Omars by Omar Sharif Jr. (5th)
The grandson of Hollywood royalty on his fatherās side and Holocaust survivors on his motherās, Omar Sharif Jr. learned early on how to move between worlds, from the Montreal suburbs to the glamorous orbit of his grandparentsā Cairo. His famous name always protected him wherever he went. When, in the wake of the Arab Spring, he made the difficult decision to come out in the pages of The Advocate, he knew his life would forever change. What he didnāt expect was the backlash that followed.
From bullying, to illness, attempted suicide, becoming a victim of sex trafficking, death threats by the thousands, revolution and never being able to return to a country he once called home, Omar Sharif Jr. has overcome more challenges than one might imagine. Drawing on the lessons he learned from both sides of his family, A Tale of Two Omars charts the course of an iconoclastic life, revealing in the process the struggles and successes that attend a public journey of self-acceptance and a life dedicated in service to others.
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The Heartbreak Bakery by A.R. Capetta (12th)
Syd (no pronouns, please) has always dealt with big, hard-to-talk-about things by baking. Being dumped is no different, except now Syd is baking at the Proud Muffin, a queer bakery and community space in Austin. And everyone who eats Sydās breakup brownies . . . breaks up. Even Vin and Alec, who own the Proud Muffin. And their breakup might take the bakery down with it. Being dumped is one thing; causing ripples of queer heartbreak through the community is another. But the cute bike delivery person, Harley (he or they, check the pronoun pin, itās probably on the messenger bag), believes Syd about the magic baking. And Harley believes Sydās magical baking can fix things, tooāone recipe at a time.Buy it: Bookshop | Amazon | IndieBound
The Other Man by Farhad J. Dadyburjor (12th)
Heir to his fatherās Mumbai business empire, Ved Mehra has money, looks, and status. He is also living as a closeted gay man. Thirty-eight, lonely, still reeling from a breakup, and under pressure from his exasperated mother, Ved agrees to an arranged marriage. He regrettably now faces a doomed future with the perfectly lovely Disha Kapoor.
Then Vedās world is turned upside down when he meets Carlos Silva, an American on a business trip in India.
As preparations for his wedding get into full swing, Ved finds himself drawn into a relationship he could never have imaginedāand ready to take a bold step. Ved is ready to embrace who he is and declare his true feelings regardless of family expectations and staunch traditions. But with his engagement party just days away, and with so much at risk, Ved will have to fight for what he wantsāif itās not too late to get it.
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Tonight We Rule the World by Zack Smedley (12th)
Owen Turner is a boy of too many words. For years, they all stayed inside his head and he barely spokeāuntil he met Lily. Lily, the girl who gave him his voice, helped him come out as bi, and settle into his ASD diagnosis. But everything unravels when someone reports Owenās biggest secret to the school: that he was sexually assaulted at a class event.
As officials begin interviewing students to get to the bottom of things, rumors about an assault flood the school hallways. No one knows it happened to Owen, and heās afraid of what will happen if his name gets out. Heās afraid that his classmates will call him a word he canāt standāāvictim.ā Heās afraid his father, a tough-as-nails military vet, will resort to extreme methods to hunt down the name of who did it. And heās afraid that when Lily finds out, sheāll take their relationship to a dark, dangerous place to keep Owen quiet. Then, one day, Owenās fears all come true. And it will take everything heās got to escape the explosion intact.
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Special Topics in Being a Human: A Queer and Tender Guide to Things I’ve Learned the Hard Way about Caring for People, Including Myself by S. Bear Bergman, ill. by (12th)
As an author, educator, and public speaker, S. Bear Bergman has documented his experience as, among other things, a trans parent, with wit and aplomb. He also writes the advice column āAsk Bear,ā in which he answers crucial questions about how best to make our collective way through the world.
Featuring disarming illustrations by Saul Freedman-Lawson, Special Topics in Being a Human elaborates on āAsking Bearāās premise: a gentle, witty, and insightful book of practical advice for the modern age. It offers Dad advice and Jewish bubbe wisdom, all filtered through a queer lens, to help you navigate some of the complexities of lifeāfrom how to make big decisions or make a good apology, to how to get someoneās new name and pronouns right as quickly as possible, to how to gracefully navigate a breakup. With warmth and candor, Special Topics in Being a Human calls out social inequities and injustices in traditional advice-giving, validates your feelings, asks a lot of questions, and tries to help you be your best possible self with kindness, compassion, and humor.
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Aristotle and Dante Dive into the Waters of the World by Benjamin Alire Saenz (12th)
This is a sequel to Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe
In Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, two boys in a border town fell in love. Now, they must discover what it means to stay in love and build a relationship in a world that seems to challenge their very existence.
Ari has spent all of high school burying who he really is, staying silent and invisible. He expected his senior year to be the same. But something in him cracked open when he fell in love with Dante, and he canāt go back. Suddenly he finds himself reaching out to new friends, standing up to bullies of all kinds, and making his voice heard. And, always, there is Dante, dreamy, witty Dante, who can get on Ariās nerves and fill him with desire all at once.
The boys are determined to forge a path for themselves in a world that doesnāt understand them. But when Ari is faced with a shocking loss, heāll have to fight like never before to create a life that is truthfully, joyfully his own.
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The Light Streamed Beneath It by Shawn Hitchins (12th)
A modern gay memoir exploring love, death, pain, and community that will resonate long after the last page A lifetime of finding punchlines in his heartache comes to a shuddering stop when comedian and writer Shawn Hitchins loses two great loves, five months apart, to sudden death. In this deeply poignant memoir that combines sober self-portrait with tender elegy, Hitchins explores the messiness of being alive: the longing and desire, scorching-earth anger, raw grief — and the pathway of healing he discovers when he lets his heart remain open. Never without an edge of self-awareness, The Light Streamed Beneath It invites the reader into Hitchins’s world as he reckons with his past and stays painfully in the present. As he builds an embodied future, he confronts the stories that have shaped him, sets aside his ambition, and seeks connection in what he used to deflect with laughter — therapy, community and chosen family, movement, spirituality, and an awareness of death’s ever-presence. A heartrending and hope-filled story of resilience in the wake of death, The Light Streamed Beneath It joyfully affirms that life is essentially good, as Hitchins weaves his tale full of tenacious spirit, humor, kindness, and grit through life’s most unforgiving challenges.
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Trailer Park Trickster by David R. Slayton (12th)
This is the sequel to White Trash Warlock
They are my harvest, and I will reap them all.
Returning to Guthrie, Oklahoma, Adam Binder once again finds himself in the path of deadly magic when a dark druid begins to prey on members of Adamās family. It all seems linked to the death of Adamās father many years agoāa man who may have somehow survived as a warlock.
Watched by the police, separated from the man who may be the love of his life, compelled to seek the truth about his connection to the druid, Adam learns more about his family and its troubled history than he ever bargained for, and finally comes face to face with the warlock he has vowed to stop.
Meanwhile, beyond the Veil of the mortal world, Argent the Queen of Swords and Vic Martinez undertake a dangerous journey to a secret meeting of the Council of Races . . . where the sea elves are calling for the destruction of humanity.
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Madder: a Memoir in Weeds by Marco Wilkinson (12th)
āMy life, these weeds.ā Marco Wilkinson uses his deep knowledge of undervalued plants, mainly weedsāinvisible yet ubiquitous, unwanted yet abundant, out-of-place yet flourishingāas both structure and metaphor in these intimate vignettes. Madder combines poetic meditations on nature, immigration, queer sensuality, and willful forgetting with recollections of Wilkinsonās Rhode Island childhood and glimpses of his maternal familyās life in Uruguay. The son of a fierce, hard-working mother who tried to erase even the memory of his absent father from their lives, Wilkinson investigates his heritage with a mixture of anger and empathy as he wrestles with the ambiguity of his own history. Using a verdant iconography rich with wordplay and symbolism, Wilkinson offers a mesmerizing portrait of cultivating belonging in an uprooted world.
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Unwritten Rules by KD Casey (12th)
Zach Glasser has put up with a lot for the sport he loves. Endless days on the road, playing half-decent baseball in front of half-full stadiums and endless nights alone, pretending this is the life he’s always wanted.
The thing is, it could have been everything he ever wantedāif only he’d had the guts to tell his family, tell the club, that he was in love with his teammate Eugenio Morales. Well, ex-teammate now. When Zach wouldn’tācouldn’tācome out, Eugenio made the devastating choice to move on, demanding a trade away from Oakland. Away from Zach.
Three years and countless regrets later, Zach still can’t get Eugenio out of his head. Or his heart. And when they both get selected to play in the leagueās All-Star Classic, those feelings and that chemistry come roaring back.
Zach wants a second chance. Eugenio wants a relationship he doesn’t have to hide. Maybe it’s finally time they both get what they want.
Thronebreakers by Rebecca Coffindaffer (12th)
This is the sequel to Crownchasers
Alyssa Farshot never wanted to rule the empire. But to honor her uncleās dying wish, she participated in the crownchase, a race across the empireās 1,001 planets to find the royal seal and win the throne. Alyssa tried to help her friend, Coy, win the crownchase, but just as victory was within their grasp, Edgar Voles killed Coyāand claimed the seal for himself.
Broken-hearted over her friendās death, Alyssa is hell-bent on revenge. But Edgar is well protected in the kingship. Alyssa will have to rally rivals, friends, and foes from across the empire to take him down and change the course of the galaxy.
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Just One Wedding by Chelsea M. Cameron (14th)
Charli Sweet is happy to be living in Castleton, Maine with her roommate Natalie and working at her auntās bakery doing their social media management. She is, promise. So what if she canāt stop thinking about her ex who dumped her in dramatic fashion a year ago by changing the locks on their apartment? It takes a long time to get over a breakup.
Charli is more than happy to have her cousin Linleyās wedding to focus on. That is until she meets Linleyās wedding coordinator, Alivia Ackerman. Or meets her AGAIN. Itās not Charliās fault that she went to a bar and hooked up with a stranger right after her breakup. Itās also not her fault that the stranger turns out to be planning her cousinās wedding and now things are⦠awkward. And tense (in the sexual sense).
Can Charli ignore her previous history with Alivia (and her growing feelings) and focus on her cousinās wedding? Or will the distraction of Alivia prove too great for her to resist having another taste and losing her heart in the process?
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Of Trust and Heart by Charlotte Anne Hamilton (18th)
The Great War changed everything for Lady Harriet Cunningham. Instead of being presented at eighteen, she trained to be a nurse and shared forbidden kisses with her colleagues.
But now in 1923, at the age of 24, Harriet is facing spinsterhood.
It’s not such a ghastly prospect to her, but as the daughter of the Earl of Creoch, there’s a certain expectation that she must meet. So, in a last attempt to find a match for their daughter to see her safe and secure, they send her to her aunt and uncle in New York.
Only when she gets there, she and her cousin, a man who, like her, suffers from the weight of expectation from his father, decide on one last hoorah as a memory to hold close to their heart in their later life.
But when they arrive at the speakeasy hidden beneath a small bookstore, Harriet finds herself entranced by the singer. No matter how hard she wants to please her family and do her duty, she finds that there’s something about the woman that she can’t stay away from ā that she can’t ignore her heart. Which is loudly calling for Miss Rosalie Smith.
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This is Our Rainbow ed. by Katherine Locke and Nicole Melleby (19th)
The first LGBTQ+ anthology for middle-graders featuring stories for every letter of the acronym, including realistic, fantasy, and sci-fi stories by authors like Justina Ireland, Marieke Nijkamp, Alex Gino, and more!
A boyband fandom becomes a conduit to coming out. A former bully becomes a first-kiss prospect. One nonbinary kid searches for an inclusive athletic community after quitting gymnastics. Another nonbinary kid, who happens to be a pirate, makes a wish that comes trueābut not how they thought it would. A tween girl navigates a crush on her friendās mom. A young witch turns herself into a puppy to win over a new neighbor. A trans girl empowers her online bestie to come out.
From wind-breathing dragons to first crushes, This Is Our Rainbow features story after story of joyful, proud LGBTQIA+ representation. You will fall in love with this insightful, poignant anthology of queer fantasy, historical, and contemporary stories from authors including: Eric Bell, Lisa Jenn Bigelow, Ashley Herring Blake, Lisa Bunker, Alex Gino, Justina Ireland, Shing Yin Khor, Katherine Locke, Mariama J. Lockington, Nicole Melleby, Marieke Nijkamp, Claribel A. Ortega, Mark Oshiro, Molly Knox Ostertag, Aida Salazar, and AJ Sass.
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The Days of Afrekete by Asali Solomon (19th)
Liselle Belmont is having a dinner party. It seems a strange occasionāher husband, Winn, has lost his bid for the state legislature and they’re having the key supporters over to thank them for their work. Liselle was never sure about Winn becoming a politician, never sure about the limelight, about the life of fundraising and stump speeches. Now that it’s over she is facing new questions: Who are they to each other, after all this? How much of herself has she lost on the wayāand was it worth it? Just before the night begins, she hears from an FBI agent, who claims that Winn is corrupt. Is it possible? How will she make it through this dinner party?
Across town, Selena is making her way through the same day, the same way she always doesāone foot in front of the other, keeping quiet and focused, trying not to see the terrors all around her. Homelessness, starving children, the very living horrors of history that made America possible: these and other thoughts have made it difficult for her to live a normal life. The only time she was ever really happy was with Liselle back in college. But they’ve lost touch, so much so that when they run into each other at a drugstore just after Obama is elected president, they barely speak. But as the day wears on, Selena’s memories of Liselle begin to shift her path.
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Little Thieves by Margaret Owen (19th)
(Vanja is demisexual.)
Vanja Schmidt knows that no gift is freely given, not even a mother’s love–and she’s on the hook for one hell of a debt. Vanja, the adopted goddaughter of Death and Fortune, was Princess Gisele’s dutiful servant up until a year ago. That was when Vanja’s otherworldly mothers demanded a terrible price for their care, and Vanja decided to steal her future back… by stealing Gisele’s life for herself.
The real Gisele is left a penniless nobody while Vanja uses an enchanted string of pearls to take her place. Now, Vanja leads a lonely but lucrative double life as princess and jewel thief, charming nobility while emptying their coffers to fund her great escape. Then, one heist away from freedom, Vanja crosses the wrong god and is cursed to an untimely end: turning into jewels, stone by stone, for her greed.
Vanja has just two weeks to figure out how to break her curse and make her getaway. And with a feral guardian half-god, Gisele’s sinister fiancĆ©, and an overeager junior detective on Vanja’s tail, she’ll have to pull the biggest grift yet to save her own life.
On Top of Glass by Karina Manta (19th)
An insightful memoir from a figure skating champion about her life as a bisexual professional athlete, perfect for readers of Fierce by Aly Raisman and Forward by Abby Wambach.
Karina Manta has had a busy few years: Not only did she capture the hearts of many with her fan-favoriteĀ performanceĀ at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, she also became the first female figure skater on Team USA to come out as queer. Her Modern LoveĀ essayĀ āI Canāt Hate My Body if I Love Hersā was published in the New York Times, and then she joined the circusāCirque du Soleilās on-ice show, AXEL.
Karinaās memoir covers these experiences and much more. Attending a high school with 4,000 students, youād expect to know more than two openly gay students, but Karina didnāt meet an out-lesbian until she was nearly seventeenālet alone any other kind of queer woman. But this isnāt just a story about her queerness. Itās also a story about her struggle with body image in a sport that prizes delicate femininity. Itās a story about panic attacks, and first crushes, and all the crushes that followed, and itās a story about growing up, feeling different than everybody around her and then realizing that everyone else felt different too.
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City of Shattered Light by Claire Winn (October 19th)
As darkness closes in on the city of shattered light, an heiress and an outlaw must decide whether to fend for themselves or fight for each other.
As heiress to a powerful tech empire, seventeen-year-old Asa Almeida strives to prove sheās more than her manipulative fatherās shadow. But when he uploads her rebellious sisterās mind to an experimental brain, Asa will do anything to save her sister from reprogrammingāincluding fleeing her predetermined future with her sisterās digitized mind in tow. With a bounty on her head and a rogue A.I. hunting her, Asaās getaway ship crash-lands in the worst possible place: the neon-drenched outlaw paradise, Requiem.
Gun-slinging smuggler Riven Hawthorne is determined to claw her way up Requiemās underworld hierarchy. A runaway rich girl is exactly the bounty Riven needsāuntil a nasty computer virus spreads in Asaās wake, causing a citywide blackout and tech quarantine. To get the payout for Asa and save Requiem from the monster in its circuits, Riven must team up with her captive.
Riven breaks skulls the way Asa breaks circuits, but their opponent is unlike anything theyāve ever seen. The A.I. exploits the girlsā darkest memories and deepest secrets, threatening to shatter the fragile alliance theyāre both depending on. As one of Requiemās 154-hour nights grows darker, the girls must decide whether to fend for themselves or fight for each other before Rivenās city and Asaās sister are snuffed out forever.
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That Dark Infinity by Kate Pentecost (19th)
(Flora is bi.)
By night, the Ankou is a legendary, permanently young mercenary ā the most fearsome sword for hire in all of the Five Lands, and its most abiding mystery. But when the sun rises, a dark magic leaves him no more than bones. Cursed with this cycle of death and resurrection, the Ankou wants only to find the final rest that has been prophesied for him, no matter the cost.
When the kingdom of Kaer-Ise is sacked, Flora, handmaiden to the royal family, is assaulted and left for dead. Wounded, heartbroken, and the sole survivor of the massacre, Flora wants desperately to be reunited with the princess she served and loved. She and the Ankou make a deal: He will help Flora find her princess, and train Flora in combat, in exchange for her aid in breaking his curse. But it isn’t easy to kill an immortal, especially when their bond begins to deepen into something moreā¦.
Together, they will solve mysteries, battle monsters, and race against time in this fantasy novel about sacrifice, love, and healing by Elysium Girls author Kate Pentecost.
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What’s the Matter with Mary Jane? by Candas Jane Dorsey (19th)
This is the second book in the Epitome Apartments series
A wise-cracking, grammar-obsessed, pansexual amateur sleuth is thrust into the world of the uber-rich when her enigmatic, now-famous childhood friend breezes back into her life begging for help with a dangerous stalker Our nameless postmodern amateur sleuth is still recovering from her first dangerous foray into detective work when her old friend Priscilla Jane Gill breezes back into her life and begs for help. Pris, now a famous travel writer, fears sheās being stalked again after a nearly fatal attack by a deranged fan a year earlier. In Prisās dizzying world of wealth and privilege, nameless meets dreamy but sinister tech billionaire Nathan and his equally unnerving sidekick Chiles. Prisās stalker is murdered outside her book launch, and the shadow of obsession continues to stalk Pris. With no one she can totally trust, nameless knows sheās not going to like the answer ā but she delves into her old friendās past, seeking the mastermind behind Prisās troubles before itās too late. Bunnywit does his level best to warn them, but no one else speaks Cat, so background peril transforms into foreground betrayal and murder. In the second installation of the Epitome Apartments Mystery Series, our heroine walks a dangerous path in a world where money is no object and the stakes are higher, and more personal, than ever.
Meet Me in Madrid by Verity Lowell (26th)
Charlotte Hilaire has a love-hate relationship with her work as a museum courier. On the one hand, it takes her around the world. On the other, her plan to become a professor is veering dangerously off track.
Yet once in a while, maybe every third trip or so, the job goes delightfully sidewaysā¦
When a blizzard strands Charlotte in Spain for a few extra days and sheās left with glorious free time on her hands, the only question is:Ā Dare she invite her grad school crush for an after-dinner drink on a snowy night?
Accomplished, take-no-prisoners art historian Adrianna Coates has built an enviable career since Charlotte saw her last. Sheās brilliant. Sophisticated. Impressive as hell and strikingly beautiful.
Hospitable, too, as she absolutely insists Charlotte spend the night on her pullout sofa as the storm rages on.
One night becomes three and three nights become a hot and adventurous long-distance relationship when Charlotte returns to the States. But when Adrianna plots her next career move just as Charlotte finally opens a door in academia, distance may not be the only thing that keeps them apart.
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Tink and Wendy by Kelly Ann Jacobson (26th)
What happens when Tinker Bell is in love with both Peter Pan and Wendy?
In this sparkling re-imagining of Peter Pan, Peter and Wendyās granddaughter Hope Darling finds the reclusive Tinker Bell squatting at the Darling mansion in order to care for the graves of her two lost friends after a love triangle gone awry. As Hope wins the fairyās trust, Tink tells her the truth about Wendy and Peterāand her own role in their ultimate fate. Told in three alternating perspectivesāpast, present, and excerpts from a book called Neverland: A History written by Tinkās own fairy godmotherāthis queer adaptation is for anyone who has ever wondered if there might have been more to the story of Tinker Bell and the rest of the Peter Pan legend.
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The Golden Hour by Niki Smith (26th)
Struggling with anxiety after witnessing a harrowing instance of gun violence, Manuel Soto copes through photography, using his cell-phone camera to find anchors that keep him grounded. His days are a lonely, latchkey monotony until he’s teamed with his classmates, Sebastian and Caysha, for a group project.
Sebastian lives on a grass-fed cattle farm outside of town, and Manuel finds solace in the open fields and in the antics of the newborn calf Sebastian is hand-raising. As Manuel aides his new friends in their preparations for the local county fair, he learns to open up, confronts his deepest fears, and even finds first love.
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The Perks of Loving a Wallflower by Erica Ridley (26th)
As a master of disguise, Thomasina Wynchester can be a polite young lady–or a bawdy old man. She’ll do whatever it takes to solve the cases her family takes on. But when Tommy’s beautiful new client turns out to be the highborn lady she’s secretly smitten with, more than her mission is at stake . . .
Bluestocking Miss Philippa York doesn’t believe in love. Her heart didn’t pitter-patter when she was betrothed to a duke, nor did it break when he married someone else. All Philippa desires is to decode a centuries-old manuscript to keep a modern-day villain from claiming credit for work that wasn’t his. She hates that she needs a man’s help to do it–so she’s delighted to discover the clever, charming baron at her side is in fact a woman. But as she and Tommy grow closer and the stakes of their discovery higher, more than just their hearts are at risk.
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The Grimrose Girls by Laura Pohl (26th)
The Descendants meets Pretty Little Liars in this story of four reimagined fairytale heroines who must uncover connections to their ancient curses and forge their own paths… before it’s too late.
After the mysterious death of their best friend, Ella, Yuki, and Rory are the talk of their elite school, Grimrose AcadĆ©mie. The police ruled Ariane’s death as a suicide, but the trio are determined to find out what really happened.
When Nani Eszes arrives as their newest roommate, it sets into motion a series of events that no one could have predicted. As the girls retrace their friend’s final days, they discover a dark secret about GrimroseāAriane wasn’t the first dead girl.
They soon learn that all the past murders are connected to ancient fairytale curses…and that their own fates are tied to the stories, dooming the girls to brutal and gruesome endings unless they can break the cycle for good.
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Another Kind by Cait May and Trevor Bream (26th)
Six kids search for a new place to call home in this middle grade graphic novel debut by comic creators Cait May and Trevor Bream, for fans of Marvelās Runaways and The Witch Boy by Molly Knox Ostertag. Another Kind is not your average monster story.
Tucked away in a government facility nicknamed the Playroom, six not-quite-human kids learn to control their strange and unpredictable abilities. Life is goodāor safe, at leastāhidden from the prying eyes of a judgmental world.
That is, until a security breach forces them out of their home and into the path of the Collector, a mysterious being with leech-like powers.
Can the group band together to thwart the Collectorās devious plan, or will they wind up the newest addition to his collection?
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We Light Up the Sky by Lilliam Rivera (26th)
Pedro, Luna, and Rafa may attend Fairfax High School together in Los Angeles, but they run in separate spheres. Pedro is often told that he’s “too much” and seeks refuge from his home life in a local drag bar. Luna is pretending to go along with the popular crowd but is still grieving the unexpected passing of her beloved cousin Tasha. Then there’s Rafa, the quiet new kid who is hiding the fact that his family is homeless.
But Pedro, Luna, and Rafa find themselves thrown together when an extraterrestrial visitor lands in their city and takes the form of Luna’s cousin Tasha. As the Visitor causes destruction wherever it goes, the three teens struggle to survive and warn others of what’s coming–because this Visitor is only the first of many. But who is their true enemy–this alien, or their fellow humans? Can Pedro, Luna, and Rafa find a way to save a world that has repeatedly proven it doesn’t want to save them?
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Baggage by Alan Cumming (26th)
There is absolutely no logical reason why I am here. The life trajectory my nationality and class and circumstances portended for me was not even remotely close to the one I now navigate. But logic is a science and living is an art.
The release I felt in writing my first memoir, Not My Fatherās Son, was matched only by how my speaking out empowered so many to engage with their own trauma. I was reminded of the power of my words and the absolute duty of authenticity.
Butā¦
No one ever fully recovers from their past. There is no cure for it. You just learn to manage and prioritize it.Ā I believe the second you feel you have triumphed or overcome something ā an abuse, an injury to the body or the mind, an addiction, a character flaw, a habit, a person ā you have merely decided to stop being vigilant and embraced denial as your modus operandi. And that is what this book is about, and for: to remind you not to buy in to the Hollywood ending.
Ironically maybe, much of Baggage chronicles my life in Hollywood and how, since I recovered from a nervous breakdown at 28, work has repeatedly whisked me away from personal calamities to sets and stages around the world. It is also about marriage(s): starting with the break-up of my first (to a woman) and ending with the ascension to my second (to a man) with many kissed toads in between! But in everything, each failed relationship or encounter with a legend (Liza! X Men! Gore Vidal! Kubrick! Spice Girls!), in every bad decision or moment of sensual joy I have endeavored to show what I have learned and how Iāve become who I am today: a happy, flawed, vulnerable, fearless middle-aged man, with a lot of baggage.
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Tell Me I’m Worthless by Alison Rumfitt (28th)
Three years ago, Alice spent one night in an abandoned house with her friends Ila and Hannah. Since then, things have not been going well. Alice is living a haunted existence, selling videos of herself cleaning for money, going to parties she hates, drinking herself to sleep. She hasnāt spoken to Ila since they went into the House. She hasnāt seen Hannah either.
Memories of that night torment her mind and her flesh, but when Ila asks her to return to the House, past the KEEP OUT sign, over the sick earth where teenagers dare each other to venture, she knows she must go.
Together Alice and Ila must face the horrifying occurrences that happened there, must pull themselves apart from the inside out, put their differences aside, and try to rescue Hannah, who the House has chosen to make its own.
Buy it: Waterstones
A Deafblind writer and professor explores how the misrepresentation of disability in books, movies, and TV harms both the disabled community and everyone else.
Laraās had eyes for exactly one person throughout her three years of high school: Chase Harding. Heās tall, strong, sweet, a football star, and frankly, stupid hot. Oh, and heās talking to her now. On purpose and everything. Maybeā¦flirting, even? No, wait, heās definitely flirting, which is pretty much the sum of everything Laraās wanted out of life.
Eva, Celeste, Gina, and Steph used to think their friendship was unbreakable. After all, theyāve been though a lot together, including the astronomical rise of Moonlight Overthrow, the world-famous queer pop band they formed in middle school, never expecting to headline anything bigger than the county fair.
Ever since seventeen-year-old Josie Wright can remember, writing has been her identity, the thing that grounds her when everything else is a garbage fire. So when she wins a contest to write a celebrity profile for Deep Focus magazine, sheās equal parts excited and scared, but also ready. Sheās got this.
Morgan, an elite track athlete, is forced to transfer high schools late in her senior year after it turns out being queer is against her private Catholic schoolās code of conduct. There, she meets Ruby, who has two hobbies: tinkering with her baby blue 1970 Ford Torino and competing in local beauty pageants, the latter to live out the dreams of her overbearing mother. The two are drawn to each other and canāt deny their growing feelings. But while Morganāout and proud, and determined to have a fresh startādoesnāt want to have to keep their budding relationship a secret, Ruby isnāt ready to come out yet. With each girl on a different path toward living her truth, can they go the distance together?
Seventeen-year-old bisexual boy Asher remembers nothing from the night in 1968 that the police found him covered in his girlfriendās blood. He knows heād never hurt anyone, least of all her. But the only person who believes him is his twin sister. Heās sentenced to five years at the Dozier Reform School. And like Asherās memory, Dozier hides violent secrets of its own.
A hilarious and vulnerable coming-of-age story about the thrilling new experiencesāāand misstepsāāof a girlās freshman year of college
The winter of 1997 is a tragedy waiting to happen. Small-town life isnāt easy for seventeen-year-old, bisexual and closeted Paulina, especially when her best friend Mia becomes pregnant and doesnāt want to tell the babyās father, Paulinaās other best friend, Tesla. Meanwhile, Paulinaās secret relationship with volleyball star Ani is about to go public. One fateful night, everything changes forever.
Thereās always been a hole in Gioās life. Not because heās into both guys and girls. Not because his father has some drinking issues. Not because his friends are always bringing him their drama. No, the hole in Gioās life takes the shape of his birth mom, who left Gio, his brother, and his father when Gio was nine years old. For eight years, he never heard a word from her ⦠and now, just as heās started to get his life together, sheās back.
For as long as she could remember, all Emry wanted was to be a great magician like her father, the magnificent Merlin. As a kid, she fought to be included in his magic lessons for her twin brother, Emmet, and easily outshone him with each spell she cast. But after her fatherās disappearance several years ago, Emry has been feeling a little lost. Fate soon appears in the form of a royal messenger, summoning Emmet to court to serve as Prince Arthurās right-hand wizard. With Emmett indisposed thanks to a bad spell, Emry has to disguise herself as a teen boy and pretend to be her brother at the castle until theyāre able to switch.
William Anson is done with relationships, thanks. Heās starting the second year of his medicine degree single, focused, and ready to mingle with purely platonic intentions.
Owen Turner is a boy of too many words. For years, they all stayed inside his head and he barely spokeāuntil he met Lily. Lily, the girl who gave him his voice, helped him come out as bi, and settle into his ASD diagnosis. But everything unravels when someone reports Owenās biggest secret to the school: that he was sexually assaulted at a class event.
Hi, my nameās Annie Clark, and Iāve managed to flip my quiet, nerdy, single life completely upside down.
As darkness closes in on the city of shattered light, an heiress and an outlaw must decide whether to fend for themselves or fight for each other.
Eighteen-year-olds Ruben Montez and Zach Knight are two members of the boy-band Saturday, one of the biggest acts in America. Along with their bandmates, Angel Phan and Jon Braxton, the four are teen heartbreakers in front of the cameras and best friends backstage. But privately, cracks are starting to form: their once-easy rapport is straining under the pressures of fame, and Ruben confides in Zach that heās feeling smothered by managementās pressure to stay in the closet.
Sam Dickson is a charismatic actress, ambitious and popular with big plans for her future. Ros Shew is one of the smartest people in school–but she’s a loner, and prefers to keep it that way. Then there’s Christian Powell, the darling of the high school soccer team. He’s not the best with communication, which is why he and Sam broke up after dating for six months; but he makes up for it by being genuine, effusive, and kind, which is why they’re still best friends.
Enrique āQuiqueā Luna has one goal this summerāget over his crush on Saleem Kanazi by pursuing his other romantic prospects. Never mind that heās only out to his best friend, Fabiola. Never mind that he has absolutely zero game. And definitely forget the fact that good and kind and, not to mention, beautiful Saleem is leaving LA for the summer to meet a girl his parents are trying to set him up with.
Naomi Grant has built her life around going against the grain. After the sex-positive start-up she cofounded becomes an international sensation, she wants to extend her educational platform to live lecturing. Unfortunately, despite her long list of qualifications, higher ed wonāt hire her.
Cynical twenty-three-year old August doesnāt believe in much. She doesnāt believe in psychics, or easily forged friendships, or finding the kind of love they make movies about. And she certainly doesnāt believe her ragtag band of new roommates, her night shifts at a 24-hour pancake diner, or her daily subway commute full of electrical outages are going to change that.
Danica Waterhouse is a fully modern witchādaughter, granddaughter, cousin, and co-owner of the Fix-It Witches, a magical tech repair shop. After a messy breakup that included way too much family āfeedback,ā Danica made a pact with her cousin: theyāll keep their hearts protected and have fun, without involving any of the overly opinionated Waterhouse matriarchs. Danica is more than a little exhausted navigating a long-standing family feud where Gram thinks the only good mundane is a dead one and Danicaās mother weaves floral crowns for anyone who crosses her path.
Graphic designer Michelle Amato, after burning out in her corporate marketing career, has now built a thriving freelance business.Ā So what if her love life is nonexistent? Sheās perfectly fine being the black sheep of her marriage-obsessed Puerto Rican-Italian family. Besides, the only guy who ever made her want happily-ever-after disappeared thirteen years ago.
Margot Cooper doesnāt do relationships. She tried and it blew up in her face, so sheāll stick with casual hookups, thank you very much. But now her entire crew has foundĀ “the one” and sheās beginning to feel like a fifth wheel. And then fate (the heartless bitch) intervenes. While touring a wedding venue with her engaged friends, Margot comes face-to-face with Olivia Grantāher childhood friend, her first love, her first⦠well, everything. Itās been ten years, but the moment they lock eyes, Margotās cold, dead heart thumps in her chest.
Delilah Green swore she would never go back to Bright Fallsānothing is there for her but memories of a lonely childhood where she was little more than a burden to her cold and distant stepfamily. Her life is in New York, with her photography career finally gaining steam and her bed never empty. Sure, itās a different woman every night, but thatās just fine with her.
The first time Daisy Ellery killed a man with a pie, it was an accident. Now, itās her calling. Daisy bakes sweet vengeance into her pastries, which she and her dog Zoe deliver to the men whoāve done dirty deeds to the townās women. But if she canāt solve the one crime thatās not of her own baking, sheāll be out of the pie pan and into the oven.
Dark tourismāvisiting sites of war, violence, and other traumas experienced by othersātakes different forms in Hasanthika Sirisenaās stunning excavation of the unexpected places (and ways) in which personal identity and the riptides of history meet. The 1961 plane crash that left a nuclear warhead buried near her North Carolina hometown, juxtaposed with reflections on her fatherās stroke. A visit to Jaffna in Sri Lankaāthe country of her birth, yet where she is unmistakably a foreignerāto view sites from the recent civil war, already layered over with the narratives of the victors. A fraught memory of her time as a young art student in Chicago that is uneasily foundational to her bisexual, queer identity today. The ways that life-changing impairments following a severe eye injury have shaped her thinking about disability and self-worth.