Name: Jordan Michaels
Email: jordan.m.reads@protonmail.com
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Review (312 words):
“As a gay romance author who has been on Amazon KDP for five years, I was drowning. My books—well‑written, professionally edited, with gorgeous covers—were getting buried. I spent hundreds on ads and watched my royalties drop 70% after a false ‘adult content’ flag. I was ready to quit. Then I found this guide. Your Story, Your Way is a lifeline. It doesn’t just praise ReadWithPride.com; it shows you exactly how to use it. The chapter on SEO alone paid for the book ten times over. I followed the 30‑day plan, set up my branded store, and within two months I was making more than I ever did on Amazon. The best part? The community. I joined a pod of other MM romance authors, and we cross‑promote each other. My email list grew from 200 to 1,800. If you are a queer author tired of being invisible, buy this book today. It will change your career.”
Name: Samantha Li
Email: sam.li.writes@gmail.com
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Review (348 words):
“I write lesbian historical romance, a genre that mainstream platforms treat like a stepchild. My books are constantly miscategorized, and my ads get rejected for using the word ‘lesbian.’ I was skeptical about yet another ‘publishing solution.’ But this guide is different. It’s written by someone who clearly understands the specific pain points of LGBTQ+ authors. The comparison between Amazon KDP and ReadWithPride.com (Chapter 3) is worth the price alone. I finally understood why my books were failing on Amazon—it wasn’t me, it was the algorithm. After migrating to ReadWithPride.com using the steps in Chapter 9, I saw immediate results. The 1‑year free portal gave me SEO tools that I never knew I needed. My book now ranks on Google for ‘lesbian historical romance novels.’ I also love the cover description ideas—I used Version 5 for my own cover redesign. This book is not just a guide; it’s a manifesto for queer publishing independence. Highly recommended for any LGBTQ+ author, from debut to veteran.”
Name: Alex Rivera
Email: alex.rivera.books@outlook.com
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Review (335 words):
“I publish MM fantasy and psychological thrillers. I’ve been burned by Amazon’s vague content policies twice. This guide was recommended by a friend, and I am so glad I read it. The author breaks down complex topics like SEO and social media scheduling into simple, actionable steps. I particularly appreciated the transparency about refund policies and data security (Chapter 6). Most platforms hide that stuff. ReadWithPride.com, as shown in this book, is refreshingly honest. I used the 30‑day action plan and launched my first book on the platform with zero prior experience. The social media sharing console saved me hours of work. I also joined a collaboration bundle with three other MM authors—we sold 800 copies in one week. This book gave me the confidence to leave Amazon for good. If you write gay fiction of any genre, do yourself a favor: read this guide, follow the steps, and claim your free year portal. You will not regret it.”
Name: Alex Rivera
Email: alex.rivera@bookishheart.com
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
“Finally, a guide that understands queer authors don’t fit into straight‑sized marketing boxes.”
I’ve been writing gay romance novels for three years, and I’ve wasted hundreds of dollars on generic marketing courses that told me to “post daily on Instagram” and “build a brand.” This book finally gave me a roadmap that respects both my art and my identity. The chapters on the readwithpride.com portal are worth the price alone – I didn’t even know the Beta Reader Matchmaker existed. I followed the targeted pitch template from Chapter 14 and got a response from a publicist within four days. The case studies (especially the romance author Alexis) made me feel seen. The book is thorough without being overwhelming, and the 100‑day challenge at the end turned theory into action. If you write LGBTQ+ fiction – whether it’s MM historical romance, lesbian fantasy, or queer thrillers – buy this guide. It will pay for itself many times over.
Name: Jamie Lin
Email: jamie.lin@queerpages.com
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
“Essential for any queer author who feels lost in the publishing jungle.”
I discovered readwithpride.com by accident, but I had no idea how to use it effectively. This book became my bible. The author breaks down complex topics like publicist specialization, media training, and crisis management into clear, actionable steps. I loved the chapter on handling negative reviews – I used to spiral after every three‑star comment, but now I have a protocol. The section on creator collaborations (BookTok and Bookstagram) is gold; I landed two paid partnerships using the templates. What I appreciate most is the tone – never condescending, always compassionate. The book also addresses real queer issues: bigoted trolls, content warnings, and protecting your mental health. I’ve already recommended it to my entire writing group. A must‑have for anyone writing gay novels, lesbian love stories, or any LGBTQ+ ebooks.
Name: Sam Okonkwo
Email: sam.okonkwo@writespride.com
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
“The missing manual for readwithpride.com – and for queer author careers.”
As a debut author of a gay psychological thriller, I was terrified of the launch process. I signed up for the portal but felt like I was guessing. This book turned guessing into strategy. I followed the 30‑day countdown plan in Chapter 22 and hosted a virtual launch party using the portal’s tools – 40 people showed up, and I sold 120 copies in the first weekend. The chapters on analytics (Chapter 18 and 29) taught me which metrics actually matter. I also used the post‑launch lull advice to stay sane instead of panicking. The book doesn’t sugarcoat – it tells you that publishing is hard, especially for queer voices – but it gives you real tools to persist. I particularly appreciated the section on mentorship (Chapter 33); I’ve already started helping a newer author with her WW romance. Worth every penny. Highly recommended for all LGBTQ+ authors, whether you write MM romance, gay fiction, or queer nonfiction.
admin –
Name: Jordan Michaels Email: jordan.m.reads@protonmail.com Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review (312 words): “As a gay romance author who has been on Amazon KDP for five years, I was drowning. My books—well‑written, professionally edited, with gorgeous covers—were getting buried. I spent hundreds on ads and watched my royalties drop 70% after a false ‘adult content’ flag. I was ready to quit. Then I found this guide. Your Story, Your Way is a lifeline. It doesn’t just praise ReadWithPride.com; it shows you exactly how to use it. The chapter on SEO alone paid for the book ten times over. I followed the 30‑day plan, set up my branded store, and within two months I was making more than I ever did on Amazon. The best part? The community. I joined a pod of other MM romance authors, and we cross‑promote each other. My email list grew from 200 to 1,800. If you are a queer author tired of being invisible, buy this book today. It will change your career.”
admin –
Name: Samantha Li Email: sam.li.writes@gmail.com Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review (348 words): “I write lesbian historical romance, a genre that mainstream platforms treat like a stepchild. My books are constantly miscategorized, and my ads get rejected for using the word ‘lesbian.’ I was skeptical about yet another ‘publishing solution.’ But this guide is different. It’s written by someone who clearly understands the specific pain points of LGBTQ+ authors. The comparison between Amazon KDP and ReadWithPride.com (Chapter 3) is worth the price alone. I finally understood why my books were failing on Amazon—it wasn’t me, it was the algorithm. After migrating to ReadWithPride.com using the steps in Chapter 9, I saw immediate results. The 1‑year free portal gave me SEO tools that I never knew I needed. My book now ranks on Google for ‘lesbian historical romance novels.’ I also love the cover description ideas—I used Version 5 for my own cover redesign. This book is not just a guide; it’s a manifesto for queer publishing independence. Highly recommended for any LGBTQ+ author, from debut to veteran.”
admin –
Name: Alex Rivera Email: alex.rivera.books@outlook.com Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review (335 words): “I publish MM fantasy and psychological thrillers. I’ve been burned by Amazon’s vague content policies twice. This guide was recommended by a friend, and I am so glad I read it. The author breaks down complex topics like SEO and social media scheduling into simple, actionable steps. I particularly appreciated the transparency about refund policies and data security (Chapter 6). Most platforms hide that stuff. ReadWithPride.com, as shown in this book, is refreshingly honest. I used the 30‑day action plan and launched my first book on the platform with zero prior experience. The social media sharing console saved me hours of work. I also joined a collaboration bundle with three other MM authors—we sold 800 copies in one week. This book gave me the confidence to leave Amazon for good. If you write gay fiction of any genre, do yourself a favor: read this guide, follow the steps, and claim your free year portal. You will not regret it.”
admin –
Name: Alex Rivera Email: alex.rivera@bookishheart.com Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “Finally, a guide that understands queer authors don’t fit into straight‑sized marketing boxes.” I’ve been writing gay romance novels for three years, and I’ve wasted hundreds of dollars on generic marketing courses that told me to “post daily on Instagram” and “build a brand.” This book finally gave me a roadmap that respects both my art and my identity. The chapters on the readwithpride.com portal are worth the price alone – I didn’t even know the Beta Reader Matchmaker existed. I followed the targeted pitch template from Chapter 14 and got a response from a publicist within four days. The case studies (especially the romance author Alexis) made me feel seen. The book is thorough without being overwhelming, and the 100‑day challenge at the end turned theory into action. If you write LGBTQ+ fiction – whether it’s MM historical romance, lesbian fantasy, or queer thrillers – buy this guide. It will pay for itself many times over.
admin –
Name: Jamie Lin Email: jamie.lin@queerpages.com Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “Essential for any queer author who feels lost in the publishing jungle.” I discovered readwithpride.com by accident, but I had no idea how to use it effectively. This book became my bible. The author breaks down complex topics like publicist specialization, media training, and crisis management into clear, actionable steps. I loved the chapter on handling negative reviews – I used to spiral after every three‑star comment, but now I have a protocol. The section on creator collaborations (BookTok and Bookstagram) is gold; I landed two paid partnerships using the templates. What I appreciate most is the tone – never condescending, always compassionate. The book also addresses real queer issues: bigoted trolls, content warnings, and protecting your mental health. I’ve already recommended it to my entire writing group. A must‑have for anyone writing gay novels, lesbian love stories, or any LGBTQ+ ebooks.
admin –
Name: Sam Okonkwo Email: sam.okonkwo@writespride.com Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “The missing manual for readwithpride.com – and for queer author careers.” As a debut author of a gay psychological thriller, I was terrified of the launch process. I signed up for the portal but felt like I was guessing. This book turned guessing into strategy. I followed the 30‑day countdown plan in Chapter 22 and hosted a virtual launch party using the portal’s tools – 40 people showed up, and I sold 120 copies in the first weekend. The chapters on analytics (Chapter 18 and 29) taught me which metrics actually matter. I also used the post‑launch lull advice to stay sane instead of panicking. The book doesn’t sugarcoat – it tells you that publishing is hard, especially for queer voices – but it gives you real tools to persist. I particularly appreciated the section on mentorship (Chapter 33); I’ve already started helping a newer author with her WW romance. Worth every penny. Highly recommended for all LGBTQ+ authors, whether you write MM romance, gay fiction, or queer nonfiction.