Current:Home > FinanceTrendPulse|Queer and compelling: 11 LGBTQ+ books for Pride you should be reading right now -Trailblazer Capital Learning
TrendPulse|Queer and compelling: 11 LGBTQ+ books for Pride you should be reading right now
Fastexy View
Date:2025-04-09 15:40:37
There’s no one-size-fits-all way to celebrate Pride Month. While many don rainbow gear and TrendPulsewave pride flags at parades or events, there are plenty of ways to educate yourself and celebrate Pride on a more individual level.
For many LGBTQ+ folks, reading provides comfort and representation that may be missing otherwise. It may even serve as an important catalyst for coming out to loved ones. Still, these titles continue to end up on banned books lists – seven of the top 10 most challenged books in 2023 contained LGBTQ+ themes or characters, the American Library Association found.
Here are 11 books featuring LGBTQ+ storylines to check out this June and beyond.
LGBTQ books to read during Pride Month
This list includes a little something for everyone, from contemporary reads to sci-fi to cozy mystery. There are thousands of LGBTQ+ books to choose from – this list is just a starting point.
Check out: USA TODAY's weekly Best-selling Booklist
'Last Night at the Telegraph Club' by Malinda Lo
“Last Night at the Telegraph Club” is a young adult historical fiction novel set in San Francisco’s Chinatown during the Red Scare. This queer romance follows 17-year-old Lily Hu who befriends – and quickly falls for – classmate Kathleen “Kath” Miller after she stumbles upon the underground Telegraph Club.
In “Last Night at the Telegraph Club,” you’ll find a coming-of-age story about underground lesbian bars, drag, found families, Chinese American identities, racism, duty, love and so much more.
'Bellies' by Nicola Dinan
“Bellies” follows a young couple, Tom and Ming, as they move in and out of each other’s lives in early adulthood. Tom has recently come out as gay and is quickly drawn to Ming, a magnetic playwright. But shortly after they move in together, Ming announces her intention to transition. It changes the dynamics of both their relationship and their broader friendship circle. Together and apart, Ming and Tom must navigate new questions around identity, gender, relationships, intimacy and heartbreak.
“Bellies” is a raw, vulnerable read of love and loss – it’s like Sally Rooney’s “Normal People” if the protagonists were queer and also went to therapy.
'Chain-Gang All-Stars' by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
An incredibly dynamic read, “Chain-Gang All-Stars” is “The Hunger Games” meets the private prison industrial complex. In this chilling, satirical, dystopian work, two incarcerated women gladiators and their peers must fight to the death for their freedom through the profit-raising Criminal Action Penal Entertainment program.
Thurwar and Staxx, the program’s top fighters, are both lovers and teammates in a system that commodifies the killing of Black prisoners as “hard-action sports.” The action is striking and precise, unfolding cinematically as you read. With interwoven points of view, near-future technology and moving prose, “Chain-Gang All-Stars” is a haunting look at a broken justice system.
'Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl' by Andrea Lawlor
With elements of historical fiction and magical realism, this read bends both genre and gender. “Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl” follows Paul Polydoris, a gay college student in 1993 with a secret – he’s a shapeshifter. Paul can transform his body and gender at will.
“Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl” is a coming-of-age story that chronicles Paul's individual story through queer history, across the country in the '90s. Read it for a dizzying and complicated love letter to friendship, gender, fluidity and queer community.
'Body Grammar' by Jules Ohman
“Body Grammar” is a gut punch of a queer love story. It follows Lou, an 18-year-old thrust into the world of international modeling after a tragic accident. Deep in the throes of trauma and guilt, Lou plunges further into fame, leaving behind her small-town Pacific Northwest life, her friends and the girl she loves. But with each viral photoshoot and editorial campaign, she finds herself slipping further and further from her identity.
In “Body Grammar,” growing up means looking in a mirror – at gender, at passion, at anxiety, at how we heal and how we love.
'Old Enough' by Haley Jakobson
“Old Enough” is a contemporary campus novel about sophomore Sav, recently out as bisexual, as she straddles who she’s been and who she wants to become. When a childhood friend announces she’s getting married, Sav is forced to confront trauma from her past and a friendship that she may be outgrowing. Jakobson’s book grapples with trauma from sexual assault in an impactful, survivor-centered way.
“Old Enough” is a love letter to bisexuality that will tug on your heartstrings and make you want to hug your younger self.
Don't break the bank:Here's where to buy cheap books near you
'On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous' by Ocean Vuong
"On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous" is structured as a son's confessional to his mother who cannot read. With a nonlinear style, narrator Little Dog chronicles his family's history, from his grandmother in Vietnam, who escaped an arranged marriage and turned to sex work during the Vietnam War, to his mother's life as a single parent in Hartford, Connecticut to his relationship with a young man he meets while working on a tobacco farm.
"On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous" is raw and honest in its exploration of race, class, masculinity, addiction and trauma. This stunning novel reads like poetry with heartbreaking prose you can't help but lap up.
'One Last Stop' by Casey McQuiston
If time travel is your preferred trope in a romance novel, you’ll love “One Last Stop” by Casey McQuiston. This story picks up just after 23-year-old August moves to New York City. She’s a witty cynic and fiercely independent because she believes that’s the only way to be. But, when she meets Jane, a charming, leather-jacket-wearing girl on the train, that notion starts to crumble.
However, things aren’t what they seem. Jane isn’t what she seems. She’s been stuck on the subway beyond rational explanation since the 1970s, caught in a rip in space and time. August is a realist. She doesn’t believe in magic. But she just might have to in order to save the girl of her dreams. “One Last Stop” is a sweet story of a once-in-a-lifetime love.
'The House in the Cerulean Sea' by TJ Klune
“The House in the Cerulean Sea” is one of the coziest queer fantasy books out there. Linus Baker, a caseworker at the Department in Charge Of Magical Youth, is assigned to oversee the status of children in government-sanctioned orphanages. He’s a certified grump – he lives alone and likes it that way. But his life turns upside down when he gets sent on a highly classified mission to an island to determine whether six magical children are going to end the world as we know it.
When he arrives, he realizes the six children aren’t what their files indicate. Neither is Arthur Parnassus, their charming caretaker. This sweet and magical story is chock-full of love, found family and unlikely heroes.
'Sirens & Muses' by Antonia Angress
Set against the backdrop of the recession and Occupy Wall Street movement, “Sirens & Muses” follows four artists from an elite college campus to the streets of New York City.
At Wrynn College of Art, we meet Louisa Arceneaux, a talented scholarship student who feels out of place among elite, upper-class students. She’s both wary of and drawn to her roommate Karina Piontek, an equally gifted daughter of wealthy art collectors. There’s also Preston Utley, a privileged anti-capitalist provocateur who is feuding with his professor, political painter Robert Berger.
“Sirens & Muses” is a gripping four-part perspective with a love triangle that forces the protagonists to confront their desires, fears, expectations and privileges.
'Magic, Lies, and Deadly Pies' by Misha Popp
A cozy mystery served with a side of magical realism, “Magic, Lies, and Deadly Pies” is about a pie-maker with a deadly business – she bakes murder into her crust. Daisy Ellery comes from a long line of magical women and she’s using her calling to avenge wronged women by killing off the men who hurt them.
But she’s got rules for her magic, lines she won’t cross. Not until she starts getting blackmailed, that is. Can she keep her abilities a secret and continue saving women with someone praying on her downfall? Come for the magic and stay for the bisexual romance subplot and mouth-watering pie imagery.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Harvard Study Finds Exxon Misled Public about Climate Change
- Underwater noises detected in area of search for sub that was heading to Titanic wreckage, Coast Guard says
- The End of New Jersey’s Solar Gold Rush?
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Minnesota to join at least 4 other states in protecting transgender care this year
- See Robert De Niro and Girlfriend Tiffany Chen Double Date With Sting and Wife Trudie Styler
- Rep. Jamie Raskin says his cancer is in remission
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Netflix switches up pricing plans for 2023: Cheapest plan without ads now $15.49
Ranking
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- If you're 40, it's time to start mammograms, according to new guidelines
- Selling Sunset’s Nicole Young Details Online Hate She's Received Over Feud With Chrishell Stause
- Would Joseph Baena Want to Act With Dad Arnold Schwarzenegger? He Says…
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Do you freeze up in front of your doctor? Here's how to talk to your physician
- What could we do with a third thumb?
- Selling Sunset’s Nicole Young Details Online Hate She's Received Over Feud With Chrishell Stause
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Q&A With SolarCity’s Chief: There Is No Cost to Solar Energy, Only Savings
Inside the Coal War Games
Gov. Newsom sends National Guard and CHP to tackle San Francisco's fentanyl crisis
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Diversity in medicine can save lives. Here's why there aren't more doctors of color
Father's Day 2023 Gift Guide: The 11 Must-Haves for Every Kind of Dad
Key takeaways from Hunter Biden's guilty plea deal on federal tax, gun charges