Gay novels 2024

Every Book a Doorway

This was one of my most popular posts last year, so I decided to do it again &#; and actually post it on July 1st this time! WOO!

What is &#;this&#;? Queer Grown-up SFF books coming out post-Pride that you REALLY ought to know about! I have read or am reading most of these, so I can personally vouch for almost all of them!

(I&#;m alert this list is a little light on the sci fi side of things &#; if you have any queer (Adult!) sci fi you&#;re looking forward to, leave a comment, and I may end up adding it to the list!)

STAY Satisfied AND ENJOY!

:edit October I&#;ve the ones that I don&#;t want to rec, actually, after having read them! But just because I didn&#;t relax them doesn&#;t mean you won&#;t!

The Failures (Wanderlands #1)by Benjamin Liar
Genres:Adult, Fantasy, Grand Fantasy, Queer Protagonists
Representation:Bi/pansexual MC
Published on:2nd July
Goodreads

In an unparalleled blend of apocalyptic science fiction and epic fantasy akin to masterpieces like Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere, N. K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth trilogy, and

JANUARYTHE SLAIN DIVINE by David Dalglish:
&#; sapphic MC
&#; god&#;s come to fuck things up
&#; the rebellion is fracturing
&#; and this cursed mask might be the only thing that can interrupt a god &#; but at what cost?
&#; last in THE VAGRANT GODSTHE PRINCIPLE OF MOMENTS by Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson:
&#; m/m
&#; a fugitive engineer plans to rescue her sister, no matter the cost the universe
&#; a time-traveler in regency London in a fling with the crown prince
&#; their paths are intertwined by prophecy and space
&#; vacuum opera + create family!FAEBOUND by Saara El-Arifi:
&#; sapphic
&#; elves, fae, & humans once co-existed, but now only the elves remain
&#; except wait, we just found this long-lost city and it&#;s&#; fae??
&#; and now their politics are kinda our problem, as successfully as their relationships VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED by Frances White:
&#; homosexual male MC
&#; twelve heirs to a centuries&#; aged empire embark on a voyage to celebrate peace
&#; then, the murders began
&#; Death on the Nile, but with magic & chaotic queers

Stuck waiting for the hot weather to finally get here? Leave us heat you up with some of this summer&#;s hottest queer book releases instead&#; 🔥 Summer is the season of steamy new romances, escapist sci-fi, and some of the most cutting-edge lit fic you can find on your bookshop shelves. Keep reading to discover over 30 new summer titles from the best and brightest LGBTQIA+ authors.*

Tryst Six Venom

By Penelope Douglas

Berkley — US / Paperback / / Out April / £

It&#;s away games, back seats, and the locker room after hours in this spicy new mature person romance, now with bonus material.

Selamlik

By Khaled Alesmael & translated by Leri Price

World Editions / Paperback / / Out April / £

An emotional and unflinching story about Arab masculinity and homoeroticism.

Amma

By Saraid de Silva

Weatherglass Books / Paperback / / Out April / £

, Singapore. Josephina is She is sexually assaulted — and then kills her attacker.

Juliet The Maniac

By Juliet Escoria

Melville Home Publishing / Paperback / / Out April / £

A confident and raw novel from a tal

13 New Queer Novels We Can&#;t Wait to Scan in

Like Happiness is a stunning coming-of-age debut novel that delves into gender, sexual orientation, racial identity, and the charged power dynamics of fame. In the novel, writer Ursula Villarreal-Moura uses dual timelines to tell the story of Tatum Vega, a woman who years ago shared a destructive relationship with a known author named M. Domínguez. In the present timeline of , Tatum lives in Chile with her partner Vera and works at a museum in a job that she loves. Her fraught days in New York with M. Domínguez are distant behind her. That is, until she gets a call from a correspondent asking for an interview, as Domínguez has been accused of sexual assault. In an instant, Tatum’s former life comes flashing back, along with a series of pointed questions: What really happened between her and Domínguez all those years ago? As Tatum grapples with hard truths in the display, the second timeline, told through a letter Tatum writes to Domínguez, takes us back to the decade she spent in New York City and the complex, destructive relationsh