Amazon Affiliate Link | Bookshop.org Affiliate Link A dark, haunting, gothic novel, Emily M. Danforth’s Plain Bad Heroines (2020) is a delightfully dark queer book with a complex and fun premise that was right up my alley. Set across two separate timelines, the first begins in 1902 Rhode Island at the Brookhants School for Girls. Two students,Read More
Danika reviews Cool for the Summer by Dahlia Adler
Amazon Affiliate Link | Bookshop.org Affiliate Link Lara has come back from the summer with a new look and newfound confidence. It’s paying off, because the guy she’s been obsessed with for all of high school is flirting with her! There’s just one problem: Jasmine just walked through the door. Jasmine, the girl she spentRead More
Danika reviews Stone Fruit by Lee Lai
Amazon Affiliate Link | Bookshop.org Affiliate Link This is a graphic novel that follows Bron and Ray and their complicated relationship to each other and their families. Ray’s sister is an overstretched single mother, and Ray offered to step in and take care of her niece twice a week. 6-year-old Nessie adores spending time withRead More
Shannon reviews She’s Too Pretty To Burn by Wendy Heard
Amazon Affiliate Link | Bookshop.org Affiliate Link As the weather begins to warm up here in the midwest, I find myself in serious need of books set during the warm summer months. There’s something so magical about long days spent in the sunshine, even if the characters’ daily activities aren’t ones I’d recommend. Books setRead More
Danika reviews One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston
Amazon Affiliate Link | Bookshop.org Affiliate Link “August believes in nothing except caution and a pocketknife.” I first have to establish that I never read Red, White, and Royal Blue. I know that everyone and their sister was raving about that book, but as you probably can guess, I tend to centre women in myRead More
Shira Glassman reviews Worthy of Love by Quinn Ivins
The plot: Closeted political lawyer newly released from prison on a corruption charge and therefore utterly friendless and disgraced, ends up working random retail where she meets an adorable, hospitable Southern femme. I’ve been in a huge reading slump since the lockdown started, sticking with familiar stories I already knew–to the point where there’s atRead More
Mo Springer reviews Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo
Amazon Affiliate Link | Bookshop.org Affiliate Link Lily Hu has always been at least somewhat aware of her attraction to women. But after seeing a lesbian novel in a store, a poster for a male impersonator, and her classmate Kath in the Telegraph Club, she knows she has to be honest with herself. However, thisRead More
Lesbrary Links: 2021 LGBTQ Books, Sappho Accessories, and Lesbian Gunslingers
If you’ve been following the Lesbrary for a while, you probably are familiar with the bi-weekly link round ups. They’re when I share all the queer sapphic stuff happening on the rest of the internet worth checking out. If you’re new here, though, you probably have no idea what I’m talking about, because I fellRead More
Danika reviews The Key to You and Me by Jaye Robin Brown
You know when you see a book and think, “I’m already on board: stop selling,” and you try to avoid any other details about the book, because only the most vague premise is enough to get you to read it and you want to go in as uninformed as possible? I fully admit that IRead More
Shira Glassman reviews Who We Could Be by Chelsea Cameron
I think this book is going to be chocolate cream pie for readers who are suckers for friends-to-lovers f/f. Who We Could Be by Chelsea Cameron is pitched as (grown) Anne/Diana from the beloved Anne of Green Gables series. Cameron has definitely captured the magic of the conventional girl (Diana, or “Monty” in this book — Montgomery, possiblyRead More
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