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60 LGBTQ+ Books That Reaaally Deserve a Spot on Your Shelf

Seriously, add ’em to your TBR list rn.

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Courtesy | Cristina Coppin

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This just in: You don’t have to be a member of the LGBTQ+ community yourself to enjoy a book with a queer narrative. There are more stories than ever featuring gay, lesbian, bisexual, trans, or queer characters, and if you’re looking for a read that reflects your own experience or one that’s entirely unlike your own, we’ve got some of the best LGBTQ+ books ever written here for you to enjoy. Whether you’re into classic coming-of-age stories, steamy romances, or works of nonfiction, we’ve got ’em all, and they’re all so. damn. good.

Pride Month may be limited to 30 days in June, but there are plenty of ways to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community (or, ya know, the beauty of diversity in general) all year round, including doing something as simple as enjoying a great book. After all, reading queer stories is a learning opportunity for literally E-V-E-R-Y-O-N-E on the gender spectrum—even those who are gender-non-conforming. Here are some of the best LGBTQ+ books of all time that need to be added to your reading list, stat.

This gender-flipped reboot of the iconic 1970's film Taxi Driver follows a rideshare driver who is barely holding it together on the hunt for love, dignity, and financial security...until she decides she's done waiting.

When magazine reporter Monique Grant is summoned by aging and reclusive Hollywood movie icon Evelyn Hugo, she's determined to use this opportunity to jump-start her career. Evelyn is finally ready to tell the truth about her glamorous and scandalous life, which includes tales of ruthless ambition, unexpected friendship, and a great love she's kept secret for decades. Monique begins to form a real connection to the legendary star, but as her story nears a conclusion, it becomes shockingly clear why Evelyn chose her.

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The Great Believers weaves the stories of a Chicago art gallery assistant who loses his friend (and soon everything he knows) to the 1980s AIDS epidemic and his friend’s sister, who grapples with her own loss 30 years later in Paris.

What happens when a detransitioned man discovers that he’s expecting a baby with his girlfriend (who also happens to be his boss)? He recruits his trans ex-girlfriend to help them raise the baby as an unconventional family unit, of course—and that’s exactly what happens in this laugh-out-loud debut.

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This retelling of a legendary Greek epic gives us the story of the Trojan War as told from the perspective of Patroclus. The Song of Achilles explores the true nature of his relationship—since the beginnings of their childhood friendship—with the great warrior Achilles, and their rarely-spoken-about romance.

Here Comes the Sun follows two sisters in Jamaica, the older one of the two hustling at an opulent resort in Montego Bay while hiding her secret preference for women and the younger one sent to school and surviving on her older sister’s profits.

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In this v charming debut, high schooler Ben comes out to their parents as non-binary...and they respond by forcing Ben to move in with their estranged sister and transfer high schools halfway through senior year. Luckily, a charismatic guy named Nathan befriends Ben, and it isn’t long before sparks are flying.

<i>Call Me By Your Name</i>, by André Aciman
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This book-turned-film (featuring everyone’s fave, Timothée Chalamet) is a beautiful love story centered around the blossoming relationship between young Elio and his father’s graduate student assistant, Oliver. With the northern Italian countryside as a backdrop to their summer romance, it’s hard not to feel the butterflies.

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We follow four college friends who, after graduating from a small college in Massachusetts, decide to move to the big city: New York. There's actor Willem, artist JB, architect Malcolm, and lawyer Jude. A Little Life goes over their lives through the years—as they aspire for wealth and fame. They experience both the most excruciating pains and the greatest of joys, face the biggest hurdles and the most successful milestones, and drift apart and fall in love.

Like a Love Story takes place in 1989 New York City, following three teens—a closeted Iranian immigrant, an aspiring fashion designer, and an openly gay photographer—who find themselves in a love triangle that threatens all their bonds.

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In Amy Feltman’s second novel, a neurodivergent single father and his non-binary teen find their routine turned upside down when Morgan’s mysterious, magnetic mother—who left them years earlier—suddenly reappears in their life after being dumped by her girlfriend.

David Santos Donaldson’s debut is a quirky novel-within-a-novel following a young queer writer in Brooklyn as he attempts to finish his masterpiece—which tells the story of Mohammed el Adl, the young Egyptian lover of British author E. M. Forster—before his publisher’s deadline.

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<i>The Color Purple</i>, by Alice Walker
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The Color Purple is a classic. Told through a series of painfully honest letters, the story follows Celie, a woman who lives in poverty and has experienced physical and sexual abuse at the hand of her father, and later her husband, all while exploring her sexuality.

In poetic prose, Ocean Vuong writes a letter to his mother who cannot read. He paints a portrait of his family with roots in Vietnam and war, talks through his feelings about being the son of Vietnamese immigrants, and shares intimate stories about his first love and heartbreaking losses.

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Needless to say, Ocean Vuong is a poetic genius and speaks so eloquently about the queer immigrant experience. This earlier collection of poems touches on romance, family, memory, grief, and so much more. It 's no surprise that it won the T. S. Eliot Prize in 2017, and the Whiting Award in 2016.

If you’re a sucker for star-crossed lovers, then you’ll be destroyed by this tearjerker, which follows the forbidden romance between two teenage girls in Iran and the lengths they go to in order to stay together after an arranged marriage threatens to tear them apart.

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Felix Ever After tells the sweet and moving story of a transgender teen coming to terms with self-discovery while also falling in love for the first time. Ya, you’ll wanna keep the tissues handy for this one.

Amy Bloom’s White Houses is a fictionalized retelling of the romantic relationship developed (and hidden) between Eleanor Roosevelt and “First Friend” Lorena Hickok, an openly gay reporter who took a job in the Roosevelt administration.

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With his mother as President of the United States of America, Alex Claremont-Diaz also becomes a notable public figure. But with all eyes on him, his feud and physical altercation with British Prince Henry becomes a scandal that doesn’t exactly bode well for their countries’ relations. Both parties settle on a staged truce, which unfolds as an Instagrammable friendship...and then way more than that.

Inspired by Nigerian folk tales, Under the Udala Trees tells the story of a young woman who comes of age during the Nigerian Civil War, understanding at once that she is attracted to women and that she will more than likely have to hide this fact of her identity as Nigeria recovers from the effects of war.

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