Ginger’s goal as a college freshman is to maintain her 4.0 GPA without being driven batty by her roommate Amy’s obsession with Greek life. But when she agrees to look at them to get Amy off her back, she can’t take her mind off the gorgeous girls of Alpha Beta Omega. Somehow, she finds herselfRead More
Danika reviews October by Reney Warrington
In many ways, October feel like a snippet from someone’s real life. It’s as if you sat someone down and said “So, what’s your story?” or “How did you two meet?” and they decided to tell you the whole story. It’s a short book, but it keeps a slow pace for the most part, focusing on theRead More
Ashley reviews Hard Love by Ellen Wittlinger
I first read Hard Love in 8th grade, about ten years before I figured out I was a lesbian. Later, I decided my fascination with this novel should have been a clue that I was gay—the bashful curiosity that caused me to shut myself in my bedroom and tear through this book in just aRead More
Link Round Up: Sept 4 – 10
AfterEllen posted The AfterEllen.com Book Club for September: “The Paying Guests” and Sarah Waters’ “Fingersmith” gets a big screen adaptation with a twist. Autostraddle posted Lez Liberty Lit #54: Libraries, Libraries Everywhere. Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian posted The Best Historical Queer Women’s Fiction: A List of Personal Favourites. Gay YA posted We Are Not Just a Diversity Checkbox Part 3 and Interview With Francesca Lia Block. LambdaRead More
Casey reviews A Map of Home by Randa Jarrar
Like many a classic coming-of-age or fictional autobiography, A Map of Home by Randa Jarrar begins with the birth of the heroine. What you don’t usually see, though, is a screaming match in an American hospital in Arabic between the mother and father after a disagreement about the baby’s name. If you don’t know anyRead More
Danika reviews Hild by Nicola Griffith
When you open up a book and it includes a map, family tree, glossary, and a pronunciation guide, you know you’re getting into something big. Hild is the first book in a (3 part?) series that explores the life of St Hilda of Whitby. Hild starts with her childhood and her ascent into being a king’sRead More
Danika reviews Lyme Light by Natalie H.G. London
Lyme Light is a memoir by Natalie H.G. London that focuses on her experiences with Lyme disease. This is the first time I’ve read a memoir focused around an illness, and I’ll admit, I was skeptical about how much London could write about having Lyme disease without rehashing the same topics. I was definitelyRead More
Link Round Up: August 28 – September 3
Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian posted This Year’s Queer Offerings from the Canadian Publishing Season. Lambda Literary posted Rebecca Coffey: On Sigmund Freud’s Relationship with His Lesbian Daughter Anna and Using Fiction to Explore the Truth. Women and Words posted My LATE post 2014 GCLS. SR Silcox posted On bad things happening to lesbian characters because they’re lesbians.Read More
Nicole reviews Out of This World by Maggie Morton
For once, I’ve found a lesbian erotica novel that has good proofreading, a solid plot, and steamy scenes that don’t make me cringe. And it’s not every day that I find one of those. Let’s get into a bit more detail here. First, the synopsis. Protagonist Iris finds herself trying to make a new beginningRead More
Abigail reviews Puzzled by the Clues by Jean Sheldon
“Fill me in, Nora. A dope-buying professor, a group of Nazi sympathizers, this is way beyond Chicago politics as usual.” That quote seems to nicely encapsulate the ambience of the second book in the Nic and Nora series. Puzzled by the Clues is involved with a much more dramatic plot than its predecessor, She OverheardRead More
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