lfriend Lana disappeared. She was found dead several months later. Now, Alissa’s current girlfriend Hannah Desarno has gone missing as well. Not only that, but Alissa keeps receiving mysterious notes; notes that make her think that perhaps Lana and Hannah’s disappearances have something to do with her. I want to start off by saying thatRead More
The Lesbrary Now Has a Newsletter!
Want to keep up with all the Lesbrary posts, plus select posts from our tumblr account (Fuck Yeah Lesbian Literature), and any other queer women book content I stumble on that’s worth talking about? Sign up for the weekly newsletter! It will also include any queer booktube videos or Book Riot posts that I make! NotRead More
Queer Women Books New In April!
Get It Together, Delilah! by Erin Gough (YA) Seventeen-year-old Delilah Green wouldn’t have chosen to do her last year of school this way, but she figures it’s working fine. While her dad goes on a trip to fix his broken heart after her mom left him for another man, Del manages the family cafe. Easy,Read More
Megan Casey reviews The Ghost Network by Catie Disabato
This novel reminds me of everything, so forgive me if I drop more names in a short period of time that maybe I should. The plot is a simple one: a world-famous pop star who calls herself Molly Metropolis vanishes in the middle of her tour. An obsessed journalist and fan, Caitlin Taer, is determinedRead More
Julie Thompson reviews The Dark Wife audiobook by Sarah Diemer, narrated by Veronica Giguere
BEFORE. I am not my mother’s daughter. I have forfeited my inheritance, my birthright. I do not possess the privilege of truth. The stories told by fires, the myth of my kidnap and my rape, are all that remain of me. Forever I will be known as the girl who was stolen away to beRead More
Danika reviews Star-Crossed by Barbara Dee
This has been a much-anticipated read for me! Back in 2016, I saw a tumblr post by Barbara Dee’s daughter talking about the upcoming release of her mom’s book, Star-Crossed: a middle-grade book with a bisexual girl as the main character. The first middle-grade novel with a girl who likes girls as the main character! AndRead More
Shira Glassman reviews Mistress Moderately Fair by Katherine Sturtevant
The English Restoration, i.e. when Charles Stuart II returned to England to take his father’s throne back from the Puritans, fascinates me for being a renaissance of both art and hedonism. Theaters opened again after being banned, and all kinds of sexual openness flourished. I purposely sought out queer lit set in this time period–notRead More
Maddison reviews Bingo Barge Murder by Jessie Chandler
I have a major soft-spot for cozy mysteries and am always on the lookout for one featuring a lesbian protagonist. So imagine my joy when I discovered The Shay O’Hanlon Capers by Jessie Chandler. Even better than a finding a single cozy mystery with a lesbian protagonist, I had managed to stumble across a wholeRead More
Link Round Up: March 30 – April 12
Autostraddle posted Drawn to Comics: Chicana Bisexual Maddi Gonzalez Makes Beautiful Comics About Mental Illness and Life Lez Liberty Lit: Dangerous Stories. Drawn to Comics: Marguerite Bennett Talks Batwoman, Representation and the Importance of Fallible Queer Heroes Punk, Ghosts, and “Coady and the Creepies” Lambda Literary posted 5 Reasons We NeedRead More
Susan reviews In The Name of The Father by Gerri Hill
In The Name of The Father by Gerri Hill is the sequel to her 2007 novel Hunter’s Way (which I reviewed here at the Lesbrary!), with Hunter’s newest case being investing the murder of a Catholic priest, complicated by publicity issues, homophobia, outside interference, and the attempts to bury any suggestion that the victim mayRead More
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