Tag: LGBTQ+ fiction
Pages of Pride #8: Maurice: E.M. Forster's Secret Happy Ending
A Love Story Too Dangerous to Tell Picture this: You’ve just written the most hopeful, authentic love story of your life. It’s beautiful. It’s honest. It’s exactly what you need to say. And then you lock it in a drawer for fifty-six years because publishing it could literally ruin your life or land you in …
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Pages of Pride #9: The Price of Salt: Highsmith's Bold Romantic Vision
Let’s talk about a book that gave the middle finger to every tragic lesbian trope in 1952, a year when being queer could literally get you arrested, fired, or institutionalized. The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith didn’t just whisper about sapphic love; it screamed it from the rooftops, then had the audacity to give …
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Pages of Pride #10: A Single Man: Isherwood's Study of Grief and Grace
Some books hit you like a tidal wave. Others seep in slowly, like water through cracks in concrete. Christopher Isherwood’s A Single Man does both. Published in 1964, this slender novel about one day in the life of a grieving gay man broke ground in ways that still resonate today. If you’re searching for gay …
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Pages of Pride #11: City of Night: Hustling Through the Queer Underground
Let’s talk about a book that changed everything. When John Rechy’s City of Night hit shelves in 1963, it didn’t just ruffle feathers, it ripped open the closet door and showed America what had been hidden in the shadows all along. This wasn’t your typical coming-out story wrapped in a neat bow. This was raw, …
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Pages of Pride #12: Last Exit to Brooklyn: Raw Reality on the Margins
Some books whisper. Others scream. And then there’s Hubert Selby Jr.’s Last Exit to Brooklyn, which grabs you by the collar and drags you through the grimy streets of 1950s Brooklyn, refusing to let you look away from what polite society wanted to keep hidden. This isn’t your typical historical MM romance novel, it’s raw …
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Pages of Pride #13: The Left Hand of Darkness: Redefining Gender in Sci-Fi
Picture this: It’s 1969, and while Stonewall is erupting and changing the world forever, a science fiction novel drops that essentially says, “What if gender… just wasn’t a thing?” Before most of us were even thinking about pronouns, Ursula K. Le Guin created an entire civilization where gender fluidity isn’t just accepted, it’s the biological …
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Pages of Pride #14: Rubyfruit Jungle: A Fearless Coming-of-Age Story
www.readwithpride.com Let’s talk about a book that changed everything. Before Rubyfruit Jungle hit shelves in 1973, lesbian fiction was either non-existent or buried in coded language and tragic endings. Then Rita Mae Brown said, “Not today, patriarchy,” and gave us Molly Bolt, a character so unapologetically herself that she kicked down doors for generations of …
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Pages of Pride #15: Dancer from the Dance: The Glamour and Loss of Fire Island
There’s a specific kind of nostalgia that comes with reading about a world that no longer exists: especially when that world burned so brightly before it was forever changed. Andrew Holleran’s Dancer from the Dance, published in 1978, captures the intoxicating, hedonistic pre-AIDS era of New York’s gay scene with such vivid detail that you …
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Pages of Pride #16: Tales of the City: Maupin's San Francisco Symphony
Before “Queer as Folk,” before “Looking,” before streaming services made queer stories accessible with a click, there was a little serialized story in the San Francisco Chronicle that changed everything. Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City didn’t just tell LGBTQ+ stories, it smuggled them into the daily routine of millions of straight newspaper readers over …
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Pages of Pride #17: Zami: Audre Lorde's Mythic Journey of Identity
Before there was “intersectionality” as a buzzword, there was Audre Lorde living it, breathing it, and writing it down. Her 1982 masterwork Zami: A New Spelling of My Name isn’t just another memoir: it’s what Lorde herself called a “biomythography,” a revolutionary blend of autobiography, mythology, and history that changed the landscape of queer Black …
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Pages of Pride #18: The Color Purple: A Celebration of Resilience and Love
When we talk about groundbreaking LGBTQ+ literature, we need to talk about the books that didn’t just whisper about queer love: they sang it from the rooftops, even when the world wasn’t ready to listen. Alice Walker’s The Color Purple is exactly that kind of book. Published in 1982 and awarded the Pulitzer Prize for …
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Pages of Pride #19: The Swimming-Pool Library: Hollinghurst's Sensual Debut
Some books whisper their truths. Others shout them from the rooftops. And then there’s Alan Hollinghurst’s The Swimming-Pool Library, which arrived in 1988 like a champagne cork popped at a funeral: audacious, exhilarating, and unapologetically queer in an era that was doing everything possible to silence us. This wasn’t just another entry in the gay …
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Pages of Pride #17: Zami: Audre Lorde's Mythic Journey of Identity
Before there was “intersectionality” as a buzzword, there was Audre Lorde living it, breathing it, and writing it down. Her 1982 masterwork Zami: A New Spelling of My Name isn’t just another memoir: it’s what Lorde herself called a “biomythography,” a revolutionary blend of autobiography, mythology, and history that changed the landscape of queer Black …
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Pages of Pride #19: The Swimming-Pool Library: Hollinghurst's Sensual Debut
Some books whisper their truths. Others shout them from the rooftops. And then there’s Alan Hollinghurst’s The Swimming-Pool Library, which arrived in 1988 like a champagne cork popped at a funeral: audacious, exhilarating, and unapologetically queer in an era that was doing everything possible to silence us. This wasn’t just another entry in the gay …
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Pages of Pride #20: Stone Butch Blues: A Testament to Trans Resilience
Some books don’t just tell a story: they bear witness. They document survival when survival itself was an act of resistance. Stone Butch Blues is one of those books. Published in 1993 by Leslie Feinberg, this semi-autobiographical novel stands as a cornerstone of trans literature and queer fiction. It’s raw, unflinching, and absolutely essential reading …
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Pages of Pride #21: Tipping the Velvet: A Victorian Romp of Discovery
Before Gentleman Jack graced our screens and before sapphic TikTok became a thing, there was Nancy “Nan” Astley, a Whitstable oyster girl who fell head over heels for a male impersonator and embarked on one of the most deliciously scandalous journeys in LGBTQ+ literature. Sarah Waters’ debut novel Tipping the Velvet (1998) didn’t just crack …
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Pages of Pride #22: The Perks of Being a Wallflower: A Modern YA Essential
www.readwithpride.com Sometimes, the books that mean the most to us aren’t the ones with perfectly polished prose or elaborate plots. They’re the ones that feel like they were written just for us, messy, raw, and painfully honest. Stephen Chbosky’s The Perks of Being a Wallflower is one of those books. Published in 1999, this epistolary …
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Pages of Pride #23: Middlesex: An Epic Journey of Gender and Family
Some books don’t just tell a story, they rewrite what we thought stories could do. Middlesex is one of those rare literary earthquakes that shook the ground beneath our feet and left us standing in a completely different landscape. Published in 2002 and winning the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2003, this sweeping epic doesn’t …
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Pages of Pride #24: The Line of Beauty: Politics, Class, and Desire
Some novels capture a moment in time so perfectly that they become historical documents disguised as fiction. Alan Hollinghurst’s The Line of Beauty is one of those rare gems: a Booker Prize-winning masterpiece that plunges us into 1980s Britain, where Thatcherism reigned, wealth was worshipped, and being openly gay could still ruin your life. Published …
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Pages of Pride #25: Fun Home: A Graphic Revolution in Queer Storytelling
Sometimes a book comes along that doesn’t just tell a story: it rewrites the rules of how stories can be told. Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home did exactly that when it dropped in 2006, proving that queer narratives could be both devastatingly honest and artistically groundbreaking. This isn’t your typical coming-out memoir. It’s a masterclass in …
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