Celebrating Queer Voices
Celebrating Queer Voices
Brave and beautiful stories
The Pride List of Queer Storytelling
June 2023: This Pride month, Audible has teamed up with non-profit organisation, Out on the Page, supporter and champion of LGBTQIA+ writers and writing, to release this extensive Pride List of Queer Storytelling, which features contributions from some of the UK’s most important and exciting voices from the LGBTQIA+ community.
From poems and novellas to memoirs and even speeches, the Pride List of Queer Storytelling celebrates a vast breadth of queer voices, featuring over 100 titles, hand-picked by 42 LGBTQIA+ writers. Accompanied by their compelling and insightful reasons for submitting each title, we encourage you to engage with, discover, and broaden your knowledge of LGBTQIA+ stories and authors.
Read on to discover your next treasured story, as recommended by: Adam Lowe; Alex Bertie; Andrew McMillan; Charlotte Mendelson; Damian Barr; Dean Atta; DJ Fat Tony; Elias Jahshan; Elizabeth Chakrabarty; Emily Ajgan; Gayathiri Kamalakanthan; Huw Lemmey; James McDermott; Jamie Windust; Jeremy Atherton Lin; Joelle Taylor; Jonathan Harvey; Juliet Jacques; Justin Myers; Keith Jarrett; Lauren John Joseph; Lisa Williamson; Liv Little; Luke Turner; Mary Jean Chan; Mary Paulson-Ellis; Meg-John Barker; Mendez; Natasha Carthew; Neil Bartlett; Okechukwu Nzelu; Ollie Charles; Patrick Gale; Paul Bradley; Paul Burston; Phil Stamper; Rosie Garland; Ruby Rare; Scott Aaron Tait; Shivani Dave; Travis Alabanza; Val McDermid.
Scroll across to uncover the recommendations from each contributor, many of which can be listened to on Audible.
Adam Lowe recommends...
Adam Lowe is the UK's LGBT+ History Month Poet Laureate and was Yorkshire's Olympic Poet for 2012. Born in Leeds of British and Kittitian heritage, he now lives in Manchester. He is a fellow of The Complete Works and Obsidian. His collection Patterflash was a Summer 2023 Poetry Book Society Recommendation.
Adam Lowe recommends...
Reader, I Married Him & Other Queer Goings On by Dorothea Smartt
Poetry Collection
In this poignant and passionate collection of poems, Dorothea Smartt sets aside Caribbean ideas of respectability to unleash the sensual realities of queer love and desire in the region. Smartt's lyricism is undeniable, and the stories she tells are more relevant today than ever.
Adam Lowe recommends...
Alaska by Cheryl Martin
Poetry collection
Alaska is Cheryl Martin's exploration of being a Black lesbian about to hit the menopause, having survived a life of depression and suicidal ideation. The poems within are often funny, frequently touching and always frank.
Alex Bertie recommends...
Alex is a 27 year old trans man from the UK. He documented his life for 10 years on YouTube to give the public an honest, unfiltered insight into life as a trans person. He now works as a game artist, creating graphics and game assets, with his other focus being writing, where he strives to create stories with authentic trans characters at the heart.
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Icebreaker
- By: A.L. Graziadei
- Narrated by: Tom Picasso
- Length: 8 hrs and 29 mins
- Unabridged
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Seventeen-year-old Mickey James III is a college freshman, a brother to five sisters, and a hockey legacy. With a father and a grandfather who have gone down in NHL history, Mickey is almost guaranteed the league's top draft spot.
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Cute and important
- By Robert on 23-06-24
Alex Bertie recommends...
Icebreaker by A.L. Graziadei
Novel
Who couldn’t love a secret gay romance between two college ice hockey rivals? Between diverse characters, LGBTQ+ people in sport, tough parental relationships and following your dreams... this book has so much powerful stuff going on! I found every aspect of Mickey’s struggle with anxiety and depression super relatable in particular, so it’s a special one for me.
Alex Bertie recommends...
The Pride Omnibus by Joe Glass
Comic book
Meeting Joe at comic con was a blessing, as he introduced me to the kind of comic I always wanted growing up... LGBTQ+ superheroes. It’s fun, it’s bold, and the characters are so beautiful it made me have a gay awakening all over again! Think Avengers, but queer.
Andrew McMillan recommends...
Andrew McMillan's debut physical was the only poetry book to ever win the Guardian First Book Award; it was also awarded a Somerset Maugham award, an Eric Gregory Award, the Aldeburgh First Collection Prize and in 2019 was voted as one of the Top 25 Poetry Books of the Past 25 Years by the Booksellers Association. His second collection, playtime, won the inaugural Polari Prize. A third collection, pandemonium, was published in 2021 and in 2022 he co-edited the acclaimed anthology 100 Queer Poems, which was shortlisted in the British Book Awards. He is Professor of Contemporary Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University and a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
Andrew McMillan recommends...
Fourteen Poems
Magazine
Not a single book but a brilliant magazine which, every issue, gathers together 14 queer poets and showcases new and exciting work. When I was starting out, it didn’t feel like those kind of dedicated queer spaces existed in poetry, and it's so thrilling to see that they now do.
Andrew McMillan recommends...
Collected Poems by Thom Gunn
Poetry collection
Thom Gunn was the first poet I felt as though I ever fell in love with. When I came out to my parents at 16, I was given a copy of his Collected Poems as a gift. It sat on my bedside table like a thick slab of red meat, like a beacon of hope, like a confirmation that the life of a gay man could be poetry, and could be worthy of literature.
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Here Again Now
- By: Okechukwu Nzelu
- Narrated by: Clifford Samuel
- Length: 10 hrs and 23 mins
- Unabridged
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Achike Okoro feels like his life is coming together at last. His top-floor flat in Peckham is as close to home as he can imagine, and after years of hard work, he's about to get his break as an actor. He's even persuaded his father, Chibuike, to move in with him, grateful to offer the man who raised him as a single parent a home of his own. Between filming trips, Achike is snatching a few days in London with Ekene, his best friend of 20 years, the person who makes him feel whole. Achike can put the terrible things that happened behind him at last; everything is going to be alright.
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Here Again Now
- By Sue Myring on 23-02-24
Andrew McMillan recommends...
Here Again Now by Okechukwu Nzelu
Novel
A heartbreaking, gorgeous novel about love and loss from one of our most interesting and important contemporary novelists. Highly recommended!
Charlotte Mendelson recommends...
Charlotte Mendelson’s novels include Daughters of Jerusalem, When We Were Bad and Almost English. She has won both the Somerset Maugham Award and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, has been longlisted for the Man Booker, and has been longlisted and shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction. She is also the author of one work of non-fiction, Rhapsody in Green, and is the gardening correspondent for The New Yorker. The Exhibitionist was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction and was The Times's 'Book of the Year' 2022. She lives in London.
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Fingersmith
- By: Sarah Waters
- Narrated by: Juanita McMahon
- Length: 23 hrs and 35 mins
- Unabridged
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Story
London 1862: Sue Trinder, orphaned at birth, grows up among petty thieves - fingersmiths - under the rough but loving care of Mrs Sucksby and her 'family'. But from the moment she draws breath, Sue's fate is linked to that of another orphan growing up in a gloomy mansion not too many miles away.
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Brilliant!
- By joanna on 02-10-14
Charlotte Mendelson recommends...
Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
Novel
There's nothing like Sarah Waters' Fingersmith. It's sexy, deeply dark, completely gripping, intellectually subtle and has the best, most stunning plot-twist of any modern novel. If you haven't read it, you must, right now.
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Rapture
- By: Carol Ann Duffy
- Narrated by: Carol Ann Duffy
- Length: 1 hr and 7 mins
- Unabridged
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The effortless virtuosity, directness, drama and humanity of Carol Ann Duffy's verse have made her our most admired and best-loved contemporary poet. Rapture, her seventh collection, is an audiobook-length love poem and a moving act of personal testimony; but what sets these poems apart from other treatments of the subject is that Duffy refuses to simplify the contradictions of love and read its transformations - infatuation, longing, passion, commitment, rancour, separation and grief - as simply redemptive or destructive.
Charlotte Mendelson recommends...
Oppenheim's Cup and Saucer by Carol Ann Duffy
Poem
Carol Ann Duffy's work, particularly Oppenheim's Cup and Saucer and Girlfriends but also most of the rest of Standing Female Nude and The Other Country, and then Rapture, is beautiful, filthy and evocative. She writes about longing and sex so brilliantly, leaving just enough space between the lines for one's own imagination.
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The Folding Star
- By: Alan Hollinghurst
- Narrated by: Samuel West
- Length: 16 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
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Edward Manners - 33 and disaffected - escapes to a Flemish city in search of a new life. Almost at once he falls in love with 17-year-old Luc and is introduced to the twilight world of the 1890s Belgian painter Edgard Orst.
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Sam West’s Accents
- By Anonymous User on 01-08-20
Charlotte Mendelson recommends...
The Folding Star by Alan Hollinghurst
Novel
Alan Hollinghurst's The Folding Star was so important to me when I first began to think about my own, and others', sexuality. Although it's almost entirely about gay men, its main character is so convincingly, yearningly in love that it utterly moved and thrilled me, a woman; it still does.
Damian Barr recommends...
Damian Barr is a writer and broadcaster. Maggie & Me, his memoir of coming of age and coming out in 1980s Scotland, won Stonewall Writer of the Year. It’s being adapted for stage. His debut novel, You Will Be Safe Here, was A BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week.
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At Blackwater Pond
- Mary Oliver reads Mary Oliver
- By: Mary Oliver
- Narrated by: Mary Oliver
- Length: 1 hr
- Unabridged
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Mary Oliver has published fifteen volumes of poetry and five books of prose in the span of four decades, but she rarely performs her poetry in live readings. Now, with the arrival of At Blackwater Pond, Mary Oliver has given her audience what they've longed to hear: the poet's voice reading her own work.
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Poetry to feed hour soil
- By Mina on 05-09-24
Damian Barr recommends...
Wild Geese by Mary Oliver
Poem
‘You do not have to be good,’ is the first line of the poem Wild Geese by Mary Oliver. ‘You only have to let the soft animal of your body, love what it loves’. Oliver’s poems are deceptively simple – she shifts between nature in its everyday magic and more spiritual thinking. She is always soothing, like cool moss. Oliver, winner of the National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize, died in 2019 age 83. She’d lived with her partner, photographer Mary Malone Cook, in Provincetown, for 40 years until Cook’s death in 2005. Knowing she enjoyed this long love, and that it was with another woman, lends different meaning to her words. Truly, I think listening to her poetry is healing. ‘Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, the world offers itself to your imagination’. Loneliness - feeling like you’re the only one in your class, village, company – is still a central part of the LGBTQ+ experience. This poem makes it clear that we do not fly alone, we are always part of a bigger flock, even if we don’t yet know it.
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The Gender Games
- The problem with men and women, from someone who has been both
- By: Juno Dawson
- Narrated by: Juno Dawson
- Length: 8 hrs and 50 mins
- Unabridged
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'It's a boy!' or 'It's a girl!' are the first words almost all of us hear when we enter the world. Before our names, before we have likes and dislikes - before we, or anyone else, has any idea who we are. And two years ago, as Juno Dawson went to tell her mother she was (and actually, always had been) a woman, she started to realise just how wrong we've been getting it.
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Hilarious and informative
- By Kirsten Ball on 03-11-17
Damian Barr recommends...
The Gender Games by Juno Dawson
Memoir
Juno is a YA superstar and has recently broken records with Her Majesty’s Coven. But the book that made me fall in love with her as a writer is her heart-warming and hilarious memoir/manifesto: The Gender Games. Dawson lays bare our culture’s obsessions with dividing our world and our selves into rigid categories of masculinity and femininity. She shares her own experiences of growing up in Bingley in West Yorkshire, attending university in Bangor, Wales and eventually becoming a primary school teacher then bestselling YA novelist all before she began the process of transitioning. The book begins in 2016 where, at the age of 30, Juno comes out to her mother as trans and her mother says “Well I can’t say I’m surprised”. Encompassing Dawson’s Spice Girls obsession, her own musical adventures and her journey towards becoming herself, it’s a funny, smart memoir you don’t want to miss.
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The Color Purple
- By: Alice Walker
- Narrated by: Alice Walker
- Length: 7 hrs and 58 mins
- Unabridged
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Celie has grown up poor in rural Georgia, despised by society and abused by her own family. She strives to protect her sister, Nettie, from a similar fate, and while Nettie escapes to a new life as a missionary in Africa, Celie is left behind without her best friend and confidante, married off to an older suitor, and sentenced to a life alone with a harsh and brutal husband. In an attempt to transcend a life that often seems too much to bear, Celie begins writing letters to God. The letters, spanning 20 years, record a journey of self-discovery and empowerment guided by the light of a few strong women.
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Even better as an audiobook
- By OSR on 13-12-19
Damian Barr recommends...
The Colour Purple by Alice Walker
Novel
I will never stop recommending this book. It changed my life when I read it as a closeted teen growing up in a violent household in a community riven with injustice and inequality. I identified with Celie and my gay best-friend identified with her sister Nettie. Walker’s language is raw and real—you feel you are hearing from a teenage girl, it feels like memoir sometimes. Celie’s beautiful bond with her sister Nettie is forged by the fists of their father. Defiant Nettie is sent away leaving brave, but broken, Celie a domestic slave. When glamorous nightclub singer Shug Avery arrives unexpectedly, Celie falls in love with her glamour and her body. The least likely, and most tender, love affair blooms between the confident older woman and the seemingly defeated teenage girl. Somehow both sisters must survive. Will they be reunited? You should watch Spielberg’s film and sway along to the hit musical but don’t miss this brutal, beautiful queer book.
Dean Atta recommends...
Dean Atta is an award-winning British author and poet whose works have received praise from Bernardine Evaristo and Malorie Blackman. His novel in verse, The Black Flamingo, about a Black gay teen finding his voice through drag, performance and fashion, won the Stonewall Book Award and was shortlisted for numerous further prestigious awards. His poetry collection, There is (still) love here, explores acceptance, queer joy and the power of unapologetically being yourself and fully embracing who you are.
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What Belongs to You
- By: Garth Greenwell
- Narrated by: Garth Greenwell
- Length: 6 hrs and 10 mins
- Unabridged
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Performance
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Story
On an unseasonably warm autumn day, an American teacher enters a public bathroom beneath Sofia's National Palace of Culture. There he meets Mitko, a charismatic young hustler, and pays him for sex. He returns to Mitko again and again over the next few months, their relationship growing increasingly intimate and unnerving. As he struggles to reconcile his longing with the anguish it creates, he's forced to grapple with his own fraught history.
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This is good!
- By Amazon Customer on 29-06-17
Dean Atta recommends...
What Belongs to You by Garth Greenwell
Novel
I took my boyfriend's recommendation to read What Belongs to You by Garth Greenwell several months ago, and I've been thanking him for this recommendation ever since. Greenwell's stunning 2016 debut novel deals with sexuality, shame, masculinity, violence, poverty and privilege. The narrator's longing, lust, and lost connections felt painfully familiar to me. So many things about this story seemed inevitable, yet every word felt precisely placed and carefully considered as if to make the reader somehow complicit in this tragic tale.
Dean Atta recommends...
Close to the Knives: A Memoir of Disintegration by David Wojnarowicz
Memoir
I'd been familiar with the artwork of American artist and AIDS activist David Wojnarowicz for many years before picking up his memoir last year. Close to the Knives: A Memoir of Disintegration by David Wojnarowicz was first published in 1991, the year before Wojnarowicz died of AIDS. His anger about the AIDS crisis, his dying friends and community members and his imminent death are all felt with great urgency in this rallying cry of a book. It's also full of life, love and humour. I was enthralled by the tape recordings – including conversations with friends and community members – that punctuate the essays and help the reader feel closer to everyone involved.
DJ Fat Tony recommends...
DJ, producer and Instagram icon, DJ Fat Tony is the one of the best known names on the global social scene. DJ’ing for brands such as Beckham, Vogue and Versace, Tony Marnoch is also a British designer (Arrogant Hyporcrite), podcaster and now a best-selling author. Tony spent the early part of his adult life jetting around the world as one of the world’s most in demand and notorious DJs but those years were also juxtaposed with a huge struggle with extreme addiction. In 2006 Tony found sobriety. His Sunday Times best-selling autobiography I Don’t Take Requests was published in May 2022 to rave reviews. The book follows his journey from humble Battersea beginnings to working as a prostitute’s receptionist to becoming a star of the London scene to addict and back again. Dog lover, fashion fiend and instagram influencer, Tony is also passionate about not only helping but saving those with addiction and mental health issues.
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The Color Purple
- By: Alice Walker
- Narrated by: Alice Walker
- Length: 7 hrs and 58 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Celie has grown up poor in rural Georgia, despised by society and abused by her own family. She strives to protect her sister, Nettie, from a similar fate, and while Nettie escapes to a new life as a missionary in Africa, Celie is left behind without her best friend and confidante, married off to an older suitor, and sentenced to a life alone with a harsh and brutal husband. In an attempt to transcend a life that often seems too much to bear, Celie begins writing letters to God. The letters, spanning 20 years, record a journey of self-discovery and empowerment guided by the light of a few strong women.
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Even better as an audiobook
- By OSR on 13-12-19
DJ Fat Tony recommends...
The Colour Purple by Alice Walker
Novel
One of my all-time favourites, The Color Purple makes it to the top of this list. Not only is it a painfully beautiful read, a depiction of the struggles of black women in the early 20th century, but also one of love and the nuances of sexuality. A masterpiece.
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Orlando
- Penguin Classics
- By: Virginia Woolf, Sandra Gilbert
- Narrated by: Ms Pippa Nixon
- Length: 8 hrs and 22 mins
- Unabridged
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Written for Virginia Woolf's friend, the charismatic writer Vita Sackville-West, Orlando is a playful mock 'biography' of a chameleonic historical figure, immortal and ageless, who changes sex and identity on a whim. First masculine, then feminine, Orlando begins life as a young 16th-century nobleman, then gallops through three centuries to end up as a woman writer in Virginia Woolf's own time. A wry commentary on gender roles and modes of history, Orlando is also, in Woolf's own words, a light-hearted 'writer's holiday' which delights in ambiguity and capriciousness.
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Pronounciation
- By Damien L. on 12-04-21
DJ Fat Tony recommends...
Orlando by Virginia Wolf
Novel
One of modern literature's quintessential stories on gender fluidity. Woolf was a pioneer on equality and for good reason. Her storytelling is second to none, and truly daring for the time.
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Tales of the City Audio Collection
- Tales of the City, Books 1-6
- By: Armistead Maupin
- Narrated by: Armistead Maupin
- Length: 18 hrs and 21 mins
- Abridged
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Among the cast of this groundbreaking saga are the lovelorn residents of 28 Barbary Lane: the bewildered but aspiring Mary Ann Singleton; the libidinous Brian Hawkins; Mona Ramsey, still in a'60s trance; Michael "Mouse" Tolliver, forever in bright-eyed pursuit of Mr. Right; and their marijuana-growing landlady, the indefatigable Mrs. Madrigal.
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This is not Unabridged as advertised
- By Sheila on 23-06-15
DJ Fat Tony recommends...
Tales Of The City by Armistead Maupin
Novel
A fantastic recount of a group of gay friends living their lives in San Francisco. I found it to be quite an honest depiction of our day to days and while perhaps not encompassing all the problems our beautiful, colourful community face, it’s the perfect bit of light reading. They even turned it into a great HBO show.
Elias Jahshan recommends...
Elias Jahshan is a Lebanese-Palestinian journalist and writer based in London. He is the editor of THIS ARAB IS QUEER: An Anthology by LGBTQ+ Arab Writers, and his short memoir Coming Out Palestinian was anthologised in Arab, Australian, Other. He has also been published in the Gay Times, the Guardian, and more.
Elias Jahshan recommends...
The Angel of History by Rabih Alameddine
Novel
I had known about Rabih Alameddine for so long since his seminal work Koolaids: The Art of War is regarded as a trailblazer of sorts for queer Arab fiction. But it was this novel that introduced me to him and made me a lifelong fan. An allegory of death and loss; sex and religion; war; acceptance and stigma; art and love; politics and AIDS; and the need to remember – The Angel of History is simply as wonderful as it is moving.
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On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
- By: Ocean Vuong
- Narrated by: Ocean Vuong
- Length: 7 hrs and 19 mins
- Unabridged
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On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous is a letter from a son to a mother who cannot read. Written when the speaker, Little Dog, is in his late 20s, the letter unearths a family's history that began before he was born - a history whose epicentre is rooted in Vietnam - and serves as a doorway into parts of his life his mother has never known, all of it leading to an unforgettable revelation. At once a witness to the fraught yet undeniable love between a single mother and her son, it is also a brutally honest exploration of race, class and masculinity.
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Couldn't bear the Author's narration
- By S. Collis on 21-01-20
Elias Jahshan recommends...
On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong
Novel
This is one of the most beautifully written novels I have ever read. The exploration of family history, the Vietnam War and the trauma and displacement that comes with it, masculinity and sexuality, immigration and the matriarchy, all against a backdrop of working class America. It all comes together so beautifully. Ocean Vuong's prose is poetic and emotive, and truly, a pleasure to read.
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Losing Face
- By: George Haddad
- Narrated by: Elias Anton, Nicole Nabout
- Length: 7 hrs and 48 mins
- Unabridged
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Joey is young, indifferent. He’s drifting around Western Sydney, unaware of how his passivity might lead him even further adrift, off the rails, into a violent crime. Meanwhile his grandmother, Elaine—a proud Lebanese woman—tries to save face and hold herself together in the wake of Joey's actions. In her family, history repeats itself, vices come and go and uncovering long-buried secrets isn't always cathartic.
Elias Jahshan recommends...
Losing Face by George Haddad
Novel
A fairly recent release but one where I felt so seen. The story evolves around a young Lebanese-Australian man in the working class suburbs of western Sydney (where I am from) coming to terms with his sexuality while also being dragged into a criminal court case - and the fallout the latter has on his family dynamics. While I can’t relate to the court case aspect of this, everything else about this novel seemed like it was written for me: the Lebanese cultural references; the Aussie-Arab dialect and vernacular; the experience of being queer in an area entrenched in toxic masculinity; and the maternal figures. This book can also be seen as exceptional commentary on the police force.
Elizabeth Chakrabarty recommends...
Elizabeth Chakrabarty’s debut novel Lessons in Love and Other Crimes was longlisted for the Desmond Elliott Prize and shortlisted for the Polari First Book Prize 2022. Writing essays, poems and short fiction too, Elizabeth was shortlisted for the Dinesh Allirajah Prize for Short Fiction 2022 and the Asian Writer Short Story Prize 2016, her stories published in Crime Stories (Comma, 2022) and Dividing Lines (Dahlia, 2017).
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The Night Watch
- By: Sarah Waters
- Narrated by: Juanita McMahon
- Length: 19 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged
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Moving back through the 1940s, through air raids, blacked out streets, illicit liaisons, sexual adventure, to end with its beginning in 1941, The Night Watch is the work of a truly brilliant and compelling storyteller. This is the story of four Londoners, three women and a young man with a past, drawn with absolute truth and intimacy.
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Atmospheric and gripping
- By Karen on 26-03-06
Elizabeth Chakrabarty recommends...
The Night Watch by Sarah Waters
Novel
The Night Watch, published in 2006, is my favourite Sarah Waters novel, and one I’ve returned to as a writer for its storytelling and craft. This historical novel, set during and after the Second World War, has a melancholic tone, reflected in the moving back in time of the narrative arc, through the extraordinary, everyday and split second decisions of queer lovers and friends living and loving despite the war, and what’s left for them to pick up in its aftermath.
Elizabeth Chakrabarty recommends...
Sita by Kate Millett
Memoir
I first read Sita, the renowned feminist Kate Millett’s 1977 memoir, in the early 1980s, and it was the first time I’d read writing that so captured a certain kind of lesbian love affair — obsessive, yet doomed — but it was also compulsive reading. Rereading it now I see its flaws, how the character Sita is exoticized, and yet that itself is part of our queer cultural history: whose memoirs get published, and who gets to tell what happens when we fall in and out of love.
Elizabeth Chakrabarty recommends...
My Beautiful Laundrette by Hanif Kureishi
Film
Representation matters, to see people like us. The film My Beautiful Laundrette, written by Hanif Kureishi and released in 1985, was the first time I’d seen Asian queer characters on the screen — that was exciting — and besides that, the film is extremely funny and astutely political, and has believable Asian families and interracial relationships. It’s also a beautiful depiction of a queer love story between two young men.
Gayathiri Kamalakanthan recommends...
Gayathiri is a Tamil poet and facilitator. They won the Faber & Andlyn Publisher’s Prize and were shortlisted for the Bridport Poetry Prize. Gayathiri is published in bath magg, Propel and Magma. They run the poetry workshop WORD-BENDERS at The Common Press, East London. They’re represented by Curtis Brown.
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She of the Mountains
- By: Vivek Shraya
- Narrated by: Vivek Shraya
- Length: 2 hrs and 52 mins
- Unabridged
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She of the Mountains is a beautifully rendered novel by Vivek Shraya, the author of the Lambda Literary Award finalist God Loves Hair. Shraya weaves a passionate, contemporary love story between a man and his body, with a re-imagining of Hindu mythology. Both narratives explore the complexities of embodiment and the damaging effects that policing gender and sexuality can have on the human heart.
Gayathiri Kamalakanthan recommends...
She Of The Mountains by Vivek Shraya
Novel
This illustrated novel is a lyrical journey towards gender and sexual expansiveness. It was instrumental in my understanding of language as a living, melting, growing thing.
Gayathiri Kamalakanthan recommends...
I invite My Parents to a Dinner Party by Chen Chen
Poem
Building bridges with family can be a struggle. This narrative poem, woven with humour and joy is such a relatable map towards queering family dynamics.
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Pet
- By: Akwaeke Emezi
- Narrated by: Christopher Myers
- Length: 5 hrs and 33 mins
- Unabridged
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Performance
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Story
There are no more monsters anymore, or so the children in the city of Lucille are taught. With doting parents and a best friend named Redemption, Jam has grown up with this lesson all her life. But when she meets Pet, a creature made of horns and colours and claws, who emerges from one of her mother's paintings and a drop of Jam's blood, she must reconsider what she's been told. Pet has come to hunt a monster, and the shadow of something grim lurks in Redemption's house. Jam must fight not only to protect her best friend but also to uncover the truth.
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loved it
- By Crimson Whispers VA on 18-09-21
Gayathiri Kamalakanthan recommends...
Pet by Akwaeke Emezi
Novel
This speculative YA novel was the first story I read where a trans child’s identity was incidental to the plot. This shouldn’t be radical, but it is. Reading about transness in this most ordinary way was so validating.
Huw Lemmey recommends...
Huw Lemmey is a novelist, artist and critic living in Barcelona. He is the author of four books, including Bad Gays: A Homosexual History and Unknown Language. He writes on sex, culture, history and cities for numerous magazines and journals including Frieze and Architectural Review. As an artist and filmmaker, his work has appeared at numerous international institutions.
Huw Lemmey recommends...
After Delores by Sarah Schulman
Novel
Any reading of Sarah Schulman’s ground-breaking non-fiction work, such as Let the Record Show, should be accompanied by her novels. After Delores is a sharp, witty, biting story of lesbian love and heartbreak twisted around violence in the 80s, all set in Schulman’s home territory of the Lower East Side.
Huw Lemmey recommends...
Times Square Red, Times Square Blue by Samuel Delany
Non-fiction
Perhaps better known as a titan of science fiction, Samuel Delany explores New York’s complex, thrilling landscape of public sex in this fascinating treatise that blends rich theory with personal memoir. What can public sex cultures teach us about class, about cities, about desire: indeed, about the very way we organise society?
Huw Lemmey recommends...
100 Boyfriends by Brontez Purnell
Novel
Reading Brontez Purnell is just a kick. 100 Boyfriends is about what queer desire as it really is: messy. Rattling through love, hook-ups, work, partying, the story spins recklessly through gay life, knocking over everything precious that it touches on the way. For me, these books represent what is best in queer literature: stories that reflect our lives as they are lived. Rather than neat, idealised, sanitised appeals to a heterosexual society, they are for us, sharing rich testimonies of queer life in all its weird and exciting glories.
James McDermott recommends...
James McDermott's plays published by Samuel French include Rubber Ring (Pleasance Islington) and Time and Tide (Park Theatre). His poetry books include Wild Life (Nine Arches), Erased (Polari Press) and Manatomy (Burning Eye; long-listed for Polari’s First Book Prize 2021). James is also one of the writers on EastEnders
James McDermott recommends...
Jumpers For Goalposts by Tom Wells
Play
I first read this play in 2013 and it made me laugh, cry and want to write for the theatre. The play follows the highs and lows of a Northern gay five a side football team and quietly but powerfully explores so many huge LGBTQ+ issues through a cast of hilarious big-hearted intricately observed characters.
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Soho
- By: Richard Scott
- Narrated by: Richard Scott
- Length: 1 hr and 18 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
In this intimate and vital debut, Richard Scott looks into the places not everyone sees or chooses to see. Against the backdrop of London's Soho, he creates an uncompromising portrait of love and shame, questioning our sense of the permissible and the perverse. Scott takes us back to our roots: childhood incidents, the violence our scars betray, forgotten forebears and histories. The hungers of sexual encounters are underscored by the risks that threaten when we give ourselves to or accept another. But the poems celebrate joy and tenderness, too, as in a sequence reimagining the love poetry of Verlaine.
James McDermott recommends...
Soho by Richard Scott
Poetry Collection
I remember reading this poetry collection for the first time in 2018 and feeling winded by the strength and vulnerability of the verse. This vivid luscious collection tells stories of gay shame and queer joy, hungry loneliness and queer ancestry.
James McDermott recommends...
The History Boys by Alan Bennett
Film
I first saw this film in 2011 when I was a lost closeted bookish gay sixth former in Lincolnshire. Alan Bennett's witty intelligent story asserted and celebrated working class bookish young gay lives, which helped me find pride in my otherness, embrace my identity and come out.
Jamie Windust recommends...
Jamie Windust is an award-winning writer, author and editor specialising in sharing stories from the LGBTQ+ Community. Over the past six years, their passion for sharing messages of hope, reality and humour from their own experiences as well as those of the queer community has seen them work for brands and organisations across the globe. Discussing their gender identity, mental health and creative process publicly has helped them to understand who they are, as well as helping others begin their journeys to understand themselves better. They have spoken at The Oxford Union, Cambridge University and the University for The Creative Arts, as well as sharing a powerful rallying cry to support for trans people in their TEDxLondon Women talk in 2019. Their debut book In Their Shoes: Navigating Non-Binary Life was published in 2020, debuted in the Top 3 of the Trans Book Charts and remains in the Top 10 to this day. The book explores their life growing up as a young person, exploring their gender identity and coming to realise its brilliance. As a model and broadcaster they have starred in global campaigns for the likes of Jean Paul Gaultier, H&M and Clarks, sharing their one of a kind style and message on exploring gender through fashion. Through social media they also continue this message, using it as a space for fun and silliness. They have long standing partnerships with brands such as Google Pixel, Sky TV and Netflix.
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None of the Above
- Reflections on Life Beyond the Binary
- By: Travis Alabanza
- Narrated by: Travis Alabanza
- Length: 6 hrs and 23 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Travis Alabanza examines seven phrases people have directed at them about their gender identity. These phrases have stayed with them over the years. Some are deceptively innocuous, some deliberately loaded or offensive, some celebratory; sentences that have impacted them for better and for worse; sentences that speak to the broader issues raised by a world that insists that gender must be a binary. Through these seven phrases, which include some of their most transformative experiences as a Black, mixed-race, non-binary person, Travis Alabanza turns a mirror back on society.
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Moving insight into being trans non binary
- By Rikki Arundel on 05-09-22
Jamie Windust recommends...
None of The Above by Travis Alabanza
Non-fiction
There is such rich work coming out from trans writers, and None of The Above was a stunning piece of work that felt like it was for the trans community first and foremost. Alabanza's work always challenges my inner self-critic that tells me I am unlovable or less than, and this work is firmly cemented into my library as one that has enriched my life and reminded me of how capable of love trans people are.
Jamie Windust recommends...
London Triptych by Jonathan Kemp
Novel
London Triptych is a very interesting and often dark story of three men across many decades of rich queer history. The way that the stories intertwine, yet showcase our often-plagued history as LGBTQ+ people was a real educative piece for me at the time I read Kemp's work. I can find queer fiction easily falls into exaggerative stereotypes of what queerness 'should' be, but this work is perfect in the way that it's written by and for our community in a clever, sexy and informative way.
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Diary of a Drag Queen
- By: Tom Rasmussen
- Narrated by: Tom Rasmussen
- Length: 8 hrs and 29 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Northern, working-class and shagging men three times her age, Crystal writes candidly about her search for ‘the one’; sleeping with an editor in an attempt to become a world famous journalist; getting hired and fired by a well-known fashion magazine; being torn between losing weight and gorging on KFC; and her need for constant sexual satisfaction (and where that takes her). Charting her day-to-day adventures over the course of a year, we encounter tucks, twists and sucks, heinous overspending and endless nights spent sprinting from problem to problem in a full face of makeup.
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Loved it! 10/10
- By Miss A A Bowers on 23-06-20
Jamie Windust recommends...
Diary of a Drag Queen by Tom Rasmussen
Memoir
This is a book that I will keep forever because of how enjoyable it is to read and how important it is to connect with literature that is still joyous, raucous and obscene. It's a book that I felt like really speaks to a generation of young queer people who are just figuring out their identities in messy, exploratory and beautiful ways. Reading this book was at times like looking in the mirror and for me, that's what I love about LGBTQ+ storytelling.
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