Not everyone likes Valentine ’s Day: some feel lonely, some have too much work, some don’t like the crowds, some just don’t like the capitalistic commercialisation of romance while others just don’t like the mushy stuff in such quantities. It’s okay! We can all unite by reading something kickass while letting the romantics have theirRead More
Link Round Up January 18 – 31
AfterEllen posted Life’s Little Lesbian Mysteries: The good ol’ days. Autostraddle posted Katchoo and Francine are Back in “Strangers in Paradise XXV”. Book Riot posted 3 Standalone Comics Featuring Queer Women (and Happy Endings!) Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian posted The Best (Mostly Queer) Books I Read in 2017. LGBTQ Reads posted Guest Recs from Erin Ptah: Webcomics About Soft PastelRead More
Rebecca reviews Dreams Unspoken by R.J. Layer
R.J. Layer’s Dreams Unspoken is an okay read with a dull and dragging plot and the slowest burning romance ever. The book features two very different protagonists. We have rugged lesbian cowgirl Jo Marchal who has moved back home to be near to her dying father. Her parents do not accept her sexuality and after years ofRead More
Anna Marie reviews Women Lovers, Or the Third Woman by Natalie Clifford Barney
Women Lovers or the Third Woman by Natalie Clifford Barney is an intense and poetic modernist novel about three women (N, L and M) deeply devoted and in love with each other, and chronicles the transformation of their relationship. The idea of the “Third Woman” is not only a reference to one of the women inRead More
Tierney reviews Can You Hear Me? by Geonn Cannon
Colonel Noa Laurie, sole survivor of the catastrophic failure of her space station, heads back into space once more on a mission to help eradicate space debris, on her own. She has volunteered to pilot the one-person Orbital Debris Independent Eradication (ODIE) engine, circling the Earth over the course of her two-year solo mission. SheRead More
Whitney D-R reviews Motor Crush Volume 1
Domino Swift lives Nova Honda, a city where almost everyone lives and breathes racing. You’re either a sponsored racer in the World Grand Prix or racing at night against biker gangs. If you’re Domino Swift, you do both. From the very first page, you’re rooting for Domino. You want her to “crush” the competition, evenRead More
Shira Glassman reviews That Could Be Enough by Alyssa Cole
That Could Be Enough, the lesbian offering in the early American romance collection Hamilton’s Battalion, is everything a gentle historical f/f romance should be. Both characters, Mercy the servant/secretary and Andromeda the dressmaker, are fully fleshed out even within the novella’s small scope — it feels fully complete and I truly felt like I watchedRead More
Megan G reviews Keeper of the Dawn by Dianna Gunn
Lai has spent her entire life training to be a priestess for the gods, taking in her mother and grandmother’s steps. Yet, when her trials arrive, she finds herself rejected by the gods after a mysterious vision from her favourite goddess. Confused and lost, Lai makes the decision to leave the only home she hasRead More
Link Round Up: Jan 4 – 17
Book Riot posted Our Most Anticipated LGBTQ Books of 2018 The Book Squad: How Books Give Me A Way to Love Women Lesbian Poetry: Because It Didn’t End with Sappho (I wrote this!) Curve posted Bi The Book: Our Top 10 Bisexual Woman Authors. DIVA posted LGBT literature was my saviour. Read More
Megan Casey reviews Swamp Girl by Iza Moreau
There was a recent article in The Washington Post about young adult novels written from the queer perspective. The gist of the article was that these novels “have begun to feel mainstream.” I’m sure that this is true to some extent; that a queer point of view is becoming increasingly more accepted by today’s readers,Read More
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