Author: Read with Pride
Pages of Pride #45: Under the Whispering Door: Klune's Cozy Tale of the Afterlife
What happens when you spend your entire life chasing success, only to realize you missed the point? And what if death gave you a second chance to figure it all out? Welcome to TJ Klune’s Under the Whispering Door, one of the most heartwarming and soul-stirring MM romance books of recent years. If you’re searching …
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Pages of Pride #46: The House in the Cerulean Sea: A Masterclass in Found Family
Sometimes the most magical thing about a book isn’t the wyverns or sprites or literal Antichrist, it’s the way it reminds us that family isn’t about who gave birth to you. It’s about who shows up, holds your hand, and loves you exactly as you are. Welcome to Pages of Pride, where we’re exploring the …
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Pages of Pride #47: Swimming in the Dark: A Love Story Behind the Iron Curtain
Some love stories unfold under sunshine and celebration. Others bloom in shadows, whispered between heartbeats, hidden behind closed doors and watchful eyes. Swimming in the Dark is one of those stories: a haunting, achingly beautiful tale of forbidden love that reminds us why gay romance novels that tackle historical oppression still matter today. Set against …
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Pages of Pride #48: The Prophets: A Lyrical Epic of Black Queer Love
Some love stories whisper. Others roar. And then there are the ones that sing: haunting, beautiful, and impossible to forget. Robert Jones Jr.’s The Prophets is that kind of story. It’s the kind of gay romance novel that stays with you long after you turn the last page, etching itself into your bones. This isn’t …
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Pages of Pride #50: A Little Life: A Modern Epic of Friendship and Pain
Let’s talk about a book that doesn’t just break your heart, it shatters it into a thousand pieces, then makes you pick up each shard and examine it closely. A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara has become one of the most talked-about, debated, and yes, controversial entries in contemporary LGBTQ+ fiction. Whether you love it, …
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Pages of Pride #49: Great Circle: A Swashbuckling Epic of Freedom and Desire
Some books take you on a journey. Others strap you into a vintage biplane and send you soaring across decades, continents, and the boundaries of what it means to be free. Maggie Shipstead’s Great Circle is firmly in the latter category: a sweeping, ambitious novel that weaves together early 20th-century aviation, queer desire, and the …
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Girl, Woman, Other: Bernardine Evaristo's Intersectional Masterpiece
Let’s talk about a book that changed the game. When Bernardine Evaristo won the 2019 Booker Prize for Girl, Woman, Other, she didn’t just make history as the first Black woman to receive this prestigious honor: she gave us a literary tapestry that’s as complex, messy, and beautiful as real life. And honestly? It’s the …
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The Guncle: Steven Rowley's Heartwarming Comedy
Sometimes the best families are the ones we never saw coming. The Guncle proves that gay literature doesn’t have to choose between making you laugh and making you cry, it can brilliantly do both at the same time. When Your Gay Uncle Becomes Your Only Option Picture this: Patrick O’Hara, a washed-up sitcom star living …
Bath Haus: P.J. Vernon's Gay Noir Thriller
If you’re hunting for spicy MM romance recommendations that veer into darker territory, buckle up. Bath Haus isn’t your typical gay romance: it’s a psychological thriller that’ll have you white-knuckling your Kindle at 2 a.m., texting your book club: “WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT THIS.” P.J. Vernon’s debut novel broke ground as the first major …
Beyond the Page: The Future of Global LGBTQ+ Literature
Look, we’re not going to sugarcoat it, LGBTQ+ literature is having a moment. And by moment, we mean a full-blown renaissance that’s showing no signs of slowing down. If you’ve been paying attention to the best MM romance books 2026 has been serving up, you already know what we’re talking about. But here’s the thing: …
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Stone Butch Blues: Leslie Feinberg's Groundbreaking Journey
Some books don’t just tell stories: they crack open the world and show us truths we didn’t know we needed. Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues is one of those rare, necessary books. Published in 1993, this groundbreaking novel shattered expectations about gender, identity, and what it means to survive in a world that refuses to …
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Tales of the City: Maupin's San Francisco Chronicles
Before binge-watching was a thing, there was binge-reading. And back in 1976, San Francisco residents got hooked on something magical appearing in their morning newspaper, a serialized story about the wonderfully weird, deeply human lives unfolding at 28 Barbary Lane. Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City didn’t just chronicle queer life in San Francisco; it …
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The Swimming-Pool Library: Alan Hollinghurst's Masterclass
Let’s talk about a book that changed the game for gay literature before most of us even knew what the game was. Published in 1988, The Swimming-Pool Library arrived like a beautifully tailored suit at a beach party, sophisticated, unexpected, and absolutely unforgettable. This wasn’t just another coming-out story or AIDS crisis narrative (though it’s …
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Tales of the City: Maupin's San Francisco Chronicles
Before binge-watching was a thing, there was binge-reading. And back in 1976, San Francisco residents got hooked on something magical appearing in their morning newspaper, a serialized story about the wonderfully weird, deeply human lives unfolding at 28 Barbary Lane. Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City didn’t just chronicle queer life in San Francisco; it …
Tales of the City: Maupin's San Francisco ChroniclesRead More
The Swimming-Pool Library: Alan Hollinghurst's Masterclass
Let’s talk about a book that changed the game for gay literature before most of us even knew what the game was. Published in 1988, The Swimming-Pool Library arrived like a beautifully tailored suit at a beach party, sophisticated, unexpected, and absolutely unforgettable. This wasn’t just another coming-out story or AIDS crisis narrative (though it’s …
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Faggots: Larry Kramer's Controversial Satire
Sometimes the most important books are the ones that piss everyone off. Larry Kramer’s 1978 novel Faggots wasn’t just controversial, it was practically radioactive. The gay community didn’t just dislike it; they tried to bury it. Manhattan’s only gay bookstore banned it. Critics begged people not to buy it. The New York Times called it …
Dancer from the Dance: The Peak of 70s Gay Literature
Before the plague years. Before the grief. Before everything changed forever, there was a moment in gay history that burned so bright, it practically incinerated the page. Andrew Holleran’s Dancer from the Dance, published in 1978, captured that incandescent pre-AIDS world of New York City gay life with such raw beauty and honesty that it’s …
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The City and the Pillar: Gore Vidal's Bold Leap
Picture this: It’s 1948, post-war America is in full swing, everyone’s trying to be as “normal” as possible, and suddenly a 23-year-old writer drops a literary bomb that would change gay literature forever. Gore Vidal’s The City and the Pillar didn’t just crack open the closet door, it kicked the damn thing off its hinges. …
Giovanni's Room: James Baldwin's Heart-Wrenching Classic
Some books don’t just tell stories, they reach into your chest and squeeze. James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room, published in 1956, is one of those books. It’s a masterpiece of gay literature that still hits like a freight train seventy years later, exploring the devastating cost of living in the closet and the tragic beauty of …
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Maurice: E.M. Forster's Hidden Masterpiece
Imagine writing a love story so honest, so raw, that you lock it away for 57 years, not because it’s bad, but because telling the truth could destroy you. That’s exactly what E.M. Forster did with Maurice, a novel that wouldn’t see daylight until after he was safely dead and buried. Talk about the ultimate …

