Skip to main content

The Manual may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

10 Amazing LGBTQ+ Books to Add to Your Reading List

As a queer reader, there’s nothing I like more than sinking my teeth into a good LGBTQ+ book. Though I like a lot of different types of writing, I’m always drawn to ones that reflect issues relevant to my diverse and varied community.

Over the years, queer-focused writing has challenged me to confront my biases, come to terms with my identity, and extend empathy to groups outside my own lived experience. In a way, it’s taught me how to be queer, or at least how to interrogate and define what that means for me. So, I thought it’d be nice to round-up some fantastic LGBTQ+ reads for your own perusal. This is by no means an exhaustive list but includes a nice mix of memoir, history, fiction, and graphic texts.

Recommended Videos

Gay New York by George Chauncey

Image used with permission by copyright holder

A beast of a non-fiction tome, Gay New York tells the story of the burgeoning queer scene in 20th-century New York. Though it can read a bit dry in some places, the history is rich with details, names, major figures, stories, and scintillating gossip. It’s a must-read for folks looking to learn about the forebears of modern LGBTQ+ culture.

Christopher and His Kind by Christopher Isherwood

Christopher and His Kind by Christopher Isherwood
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Christopher and His Kind is a tender and funny memoir from writer Christopher Isherwood. The book focuses on the decade between 1929 and 1939 in which Isherwood ditched his staunch British upbringing for the decadent world of Weimar Berlin (first characterized in Goodbye to Berlin and, later, Cabaret). For those familiar with the writer’s other works, this memoir feels fresh and unapologetically queer in ways his earlier novels weren’t.

Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston

Red, White & Royal Blue
Image used with permission by copyright holder

I hate to describe a novel as cute, but gosh darn it, Red, White & Royal Blue is capital-C “Cute.” And weirdly, I feel like that’s kind of a big deal for an LGBTQ+ novel, as so many of them end in tragedy. Here, you’ll find a sweet love story between the first son of the United States and his princely counterpart in the United Kingdom. If it sounds cheesy … OK, it kind of is, but it’s also a deeply moving read.

Fun Home by Alison Bechdel

Image used with permission by copyright holder

If graphic novels are more your speed, you’ve gotta check out Fun Home. This memoir always ends up on lists like these, but for good reason — it’s hilarious, tragic, infectious, and absolutely beautifully rendered. Though the setting (the family funeral home) and main relationship (that between a queer daughter and her closeted father) is highly specific, the messages of acceptance, love, and inherited trauma are about as universal as it gets.

Under the Udala Trees by Chinelo Okparanta

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Though Under the Udala Trees is certainly a devastating read (centering as it does on the Nigerian Civil War), it is also a beautiful one, especially as we watch protagonist Ijeoma fall in love with her best friend, Amina. Circumstances may rip the young lovers apart, but not before providing us with a series of strikingly intimate scenes between the pair.

Dancer from the Dance by Andrew Holleran

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Dancer from the Dance is a slightly pulpy, slightly dated novel about a group of queer folks in 1970s New York. It’s lush, evocative, and exuberant, perfectly encapsulating a very specific time and a very specific cast of city dwellers. If you like colorful characters, boozy party scenes, and finely detailed sex scenes, this is the book for you.

Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin

Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin
Image used with permission by copyright holder

You’ve likely heard of Giovanni’s Room, possibly even read it, but its inclusion on this list is a must. Personally, there is a lot I don’t love about this novel (specifically in how it kind-of-sort-of demonizes femme and older queer folks), but there’s no denying that it opened up a world to me as a young, closeted reader. Worth it for Baldwin’s gorgeous, heartbreaking prose.

We Are Everywhere by Matthew Riemer

We Are Everywhere by Matthew Riemer
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Adapted from the uber-popular @lgbt_history Instagram account (which you should follow immediately), We Are Everywhere offers a sweeping photographic history of the Queer Liberation Movement. In a word, it’s stunning and could make for a fantastic coffee table book. I especially like that it highlights and uplifts the trans and POC (people of color) voices that have been leading the movement since day one.

Stung with Love by Sappho

Stung with Love by Sappho
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Ah, mesmerizing and prolific Sappho. The foremother of an entire literary tradition, this ancient poet wrote exquisite (and oftentimes explicit) verse about her many queer love affairs. Though her poems survive today mostly in fragments, Stung with Love does a fantastic job of bringing together the disparate pieces to form a cohesive portrait of the Greek writer.

Beyond Magenta by Susan Kuklin

Image used with permission by copyright holder

In a collection of interviews with genderqueer and trans teens, author Susan Kuklin paints a compelling portrait of what it means to live outside the binary. The resultant Beyond Magenta is a fabulous read for folks looking to learn more about the T and + communities of the rainbow, as well as what it’s like to exist all over the gender spectrum.

For more delicious book content, check out our guide to the coolest indie bookstores in the United States.

Cody Gohl
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Cody Gohl is a Brooklyn-based writer who enjoys covering a wide range of topics, including travel, fashion, literature, LGBT…
The 10 best snowboarding movies and documentaries to add to your watch list
Inside and cozy, and dreaming of snow
A snowboarder hits a park feature on their freestyle snowboard.

It's the season for stoke. This is one of our favorite parts of the snowboarding season, when the snow is just settling, and the excitement is rising inside us all. Snowboarders worldwide are pulling their beloved quiver out of storage and waxing it for winter. We're eyeing up lines, watching weather patterns, and laying out what tricks we'll dial in this winter.

And there's another way to build stoke; we can watch the biggest hitters in the business laying it down. Whether you're looking for inspiration to get you psyched or making yourself a must-watch list for those long winter nights while you service your snowboard or get all cozy while your boots dry out from another rad day, there are some films, documentaries, and series you have to watch.

Read more
The 13 best Stephen King books to read, ranked
Need a horror story for the winter? Here are our top picks from acclaimed author Stephen King
Stephen King book signing

We live among walking legends, from LeBron James and Steven Spielberg to Paul McCartney and Meryl Streep. In the category of writing, Stephen King is among the very best. The 76-year-old from Maine has written countless classics, with a signature ability to both instill fear and keep readers helplessly attached to the plot.

Dubbed the "king of horror," King is a living icon, still turning out quality material. Some of the scariest concepts that continue to creep you out — the clowns, the twins in the hallway, the buried pets — are the handy work of King. It's no wonder many consider him to be one of the greatest writers of all time.

Read more
From the Sun Also Rises to Death in the Afternoon: The best Ernest Hemingway books you need to read right now
If you're a Hemingway fan, make sure you read every one of these books
Ernest Hemingway

"In order to write about life first you must live it," is a quote by the late Hemingway himself. Not only did he quite literally live up to those words but his life was seemingly a never-ending adventure. It is arguably what made him charismatic as a man and an even larger-than-life figure during his time on earth.

It's also been said that after Ernest Hemingway, one either tried to write like Hemingway or one tried not to write like Hemingway. Such was the enormous impact on the craft of English letters by the late writer, and for his contribution, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954. Many are first introduced to "Papa" and his work in middle school or high school with The Sun Also Rises, The Old Man and the Sea, or one of his numerous short stories, all of which are damn fine, to borrow his verbiage. While some of these titles are a century old, his books continue to influence and inspire in the present. But there are many more Ernest Hemingway books that he wrote or was writing that, while overshadowed by the titans of his canon, are nevertheless worth a read by more than just the die-hard fan.

Read more