Orange Queer Books #PrideLibrary19 🌈

The Pride Library 2019 Challenge is hosted by Library Looter, Anniek’s Library and Michelle Likes Things. Join in on it anytime or link your post in the comments so I see it! Also all reviews I’ve written will be linked.

Orange for … kickass characters and special relationships of all kinds, platonic and romantic? I haven’t read too many orange lgbtq books, but I’ll go with that guess.

What If It’s Us by Becky Albertalli and Adam Silvera

goodreads

This cover was just more orange, haha. I dnf’ed this book because while it had a cute gay romance and gay main character, it was just so slow and the plot about nothing – which I found wasn’t for me in this case because I couldn’t connect that well with the characters. Would recommend giving it a try though!

I Was Born for This by Alice Oseman

Full review: 5/5 stars

Bisexual, gay and trans male characters

The ultimate book about fandom and finding yourself, about identity and friendship. It just did everything so great and still lingers in my mind months later.

TBR

Naturally Tan by Tan France

goodreads

Queer Eye’s Tan France’s memoir. It has to be gay af by definition and I’ve seen lots of people liking it.

Not Your Sidekick by C. B. Lee

goodreads

From my research there’s supposed to be a trans character and queer girls. And lots of characters with superpowers, where the protagonist doesn’t have any of them, but still gets involved in danger somehow. Seems fun.

The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon

goodreads

Epic fantasy novel that I’ve seen recommended and hyped up so much, but also looks so cool. With F/F romance.

Let me know if you’ve read any of these books and if you liked them! Please link your post if you’re participating so I see it and recommend any LGBTQ books you’ve loved.

Red Queer Books #PrideLibrary19 🌈

The Pride Library 2019 Challenge is hosted by Library Looter, Anniek’s Library and Michelle Likes Things. Join in on it anytime or link your post in the comments so I see it! Also all reviews I’ve written will be linked.

Red comes with drama and mystery! And also identity crises, apparently?

The Morning Star by M. Chandler

goodreads

3/5 stars. A spy series with M/M romance between an art thief and a FBI agent, it’s entertaining, while not realistic, with enemies to lovers kind of vibe.

Will Grayson, Will Grayson by John Green

goodreads

Gay main characters and musicals is what I remember from this book. I liked this book when I read it, but it’s honestly been a while.

Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo

goodreads

5/5 stars, it’s such great heist fantasy with awesome friend-group. Bisexual male characters (maybe one of them was gay?).

Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli

Full review: 5/5 stars

Cute YA coming of age story with gay main character and him coming out and starting to date.

Girl Mans Up by M-E Girard

Full review: 3/5 stars

Queer girl main character. YA contemporary novel about struggling with gender identity, fitting in with friends and dealing with her family negative attitude about her not being ‘girly’ enough

TBR

Demon Road by Derek Landy

goodreads

YA fantasy book with a queer girl main characters, I think. I’m not sure if it’s explicitly said before the sequel. She’s on the run from demons, so that’s why it’s on my TBR, haha. I love that we’ve come to a point where I constantly find books that have queer characters by accident, instead of having to go on a hunt for queer books.

Let me know if you’ve read any of these books and if you liked them! Please link your post if you’re participating so I see it and recommend any LGBTQ books you’ve loved.

Pink Queer Books #PrideLibrary19 🌈

Pink books for all your sweet romances ❤ Well, except Solitaire? I usually don’t like romances, have had that problem since I was a kid. But then I found queer romances and my bi heart realized that – while I’m still not that into romances – there’s some really cute ones out there.

The Pride Library 2019 Challenge is hosted by Library Looter, Anniek’s Library and Michelle Likes Things. Join in on it anytime or link your post in the comments so I see it! Also all reviews I’ve written will be linked.

Everything Leads to You by Nina LaCour

Full review: 4/5 stars

F/F relationship

LaCour is a great author that writes queer books all so different and amazing. This is a lovely story of a girl who works with decorating movie sets falling in love with a mystery and then the girl underneath it. It’s sweet, it’s mystery, it’s drama and most of all entertaining all the way through.

Solitaire by Alice Oseman

Review will be out soon (just finished this book): 2/5 stars

Gay side characters

I adored the characters, but not the story or the writing itself. It’s the first of Oseman’s books, written when she was a teenager, and I think that’s too apparant for me – I’ve loved every other book from her as well as the very gay Heartstopper comics she’s made featuring the gay boys in this book.

We Are Okay by Nina LaCour

Full review: 4/5 stars

F/F relationship

The protagonist girl leaves her old life behind very abruptly and goes away for school, and while she’s alone at the school for vacation her old best ‘friend’ comes to visit and then there’s drama and mystery about how they’re going to reconnect and why she left at all. Beautiful writing, it’s a magical experience on the first read through, until you get to know the reasons behind the mystery.

TBR

Soft Science by Franny Choi

goodreads

Poetry collection exploring “queer, Asian American femininity” and “how to be tender and feeling and still survive a violent world filled with artificial intelligence and automation” which sounds absolutely fascinating.

The Lessons by Naomi Alderman

goodreads

Are you ever unsure of if you want to read a book and then you see it has queer characters and change your mind? Happens with me a lot. I found this book recommended as a ‘dark academia’ book, meaning it has some kind of mystery and is set on a college/university, in this case Oxford. I just want to read more books like “the secret history” by Donna Tartt, especially gayer versions.

Queens of Geek by Jen Wilde

goodreads

I’ve seen this contemporary novel recommended so many places. F/F relationship, I think.

Let me know if you’ve read any of these books and if you liked them! Please link your post if you’re participating so I see it and recommend any LGBTQ books you’ve loved.

Queer Girls YA Book Recommendations #1

As a queer girl I’ve certainly read too few books where women love women (wlw). Complete reviews I’ve written are linked.

We Are Okay by Nina LaCour

  • Marin leaves her old life behind without telling anyone. She’s already chosen her college for fall, so she leaves early and stays at a run down motel until it opens. The book starts with Marin staying behind at the college dorm as everyone leaves for winter break. She’s anxiously awaiting the visit from her “old” friend Mabel and that her lives, which she’s managed to keep seperated until now, are going to clash.
  • The lesbian relationship was so cute in that they had history, both fucked up and now have no idea how to talk to each other. There’s this whole mystery about why Marin left her old life so abruptly, which it’s obvious Mabel is trying to figure out too. It slowly unfolds until it both doesn’t matter and you kind of understand it. It’s a weird feeling, but I adored it.
  • Snowed-in scenes like it’s an actual fanfic, where the couple just spends large parts of the book alone at the college

The Miseducation of Cameron Post

  • A SAD STORY, but also about being brave and sticking up for others
  • The main character is finding themselves as a lesbian, growing up in Montana
  • At one point in the story her family sends her to a religious conversion therapy camp – which I think you should be prepared for going into this book
  • Queer people bonding together and becoming friends
  • Has a movie adaption with the same name, which conveys some of the same messages, but not so in-depth and emotion as this book. For example there’s this huge betrayal that happes, wrecking Cameron Post’s life for a while, and in the movie she just seems generally depressed for a while because of her circumstances. Also the movie is worth it simply because Chlow Grace Moretz is the lead *hearteyes*.

Girl Mans Up by M-E Girard

  • Penn is 16 years old and struggling with her gender identity, especially with hanging around tougher boys that doesn’t leave her alone to figure it out. Definitely a lot of unwelcome questions and harassment about it.
  • Loves video games
  • She seems to go towards idenitifying as a butch lesbian and the parts where she’s figuring out her attraction to girls and going into her first relationship are so cute. The balance between the cute and ugly parts in this book is really special.
  • Dealing with family that doesn’t understand or accept non-hetero sexualities

Everything Leads to You by Nina LaCour

  • It’s a lovely story of a girl who works with decorating movie sets falling in love with a mystery and then the girl underneath it. 
  • Entertaining, sweet and filled with special moments

Which queer books (especially with queer girls) have you read?

Why Audiobooks Are Great (I Changed My Mind) & Some Recommendations

I’ve experimented with what kind of audiobooks I like, through different free trials of platforms, before eventually paying for one. I went through the whole summer on free trials, listening to the beginning of a lot of books. I didn’t like audiobooks until this summer because I really like to read books myself. I’ve read a lot and have become good at it, I don’t need to narrate voices in my head always, so info can go in and translate to pictures in my head – it’s a lot faster. Reading physically I can choose the pace myself, pausing at sections with beautiful writing. Physical books are easier to bookmark or take notes in.

But here’s why I changed my mind and now also like audiobooks:

  • Audiobooks can be enjoyed by people who don’t like to read for so many different and good reasons, like just not being able to sit down and focus for that long. It makes books more accessible.
  • There’s easier to find time for audiobooks and you can do other things while listening (the reason I love podcasts), like cleaning, training, sitting on the bus for hours or try to fall asleep
  • BUT MOST OF ALL – I was admitted to the hospital this summer and because of illness I could not focus enough to read. It’s so hard to read without concentration or your mind in the right place, in a way it isn’t so difficult to listen to small chunks of audiobooks. This really converted me, as I saw why audiobooks are better than physical ones in certain situations or for some people
  • It’s so much cooler to hear a memoir told by the author themselves! This is my favourite type of audiobook as you’ll see in my recommendations, it’s just so comforting or adds an extra layer of emotion and realness to the story.

Here’s the recommendations:

Memoirs narrated by the author

Born a Crime by Trevor Noah: IF YOU WANT TO PICK ONE, PICK THIS. It’s so damn good, as Trevor is already a driven comic and an amazing story-teller. It’s hilarious, it’s heart-warming, heart-wrenching, informative. Just 10/10 will listen to it a lot and one that many will love without knowing much about Trevor Noah.

Buffering by Hannah Hart: I wrote and then lost the review of this book, but it’s so heartwrenching, good and honest. She talks about being lesbian and how it was to realize that in a family where her dad later became jehovas witness and her mom was a schizofrenic. About having to make choices for the family and the best of her sister, of growing up to soon and trying to find herself afterwards. I cried, a lot.

My Fight / Your Fight by Ronda Rousey: Listen to this to get motivated to train your ass off or excell at anything really. It’s written before she lost and her popularity went downhill quick, but it really brings out the human sides of Ronda as well, in a sometimes natural way.

Secrets For the Mad by dodie: If you like dodie, her voice is really calming to listen to for so long and the audiobook itself is excellent. If you don’t know who she is, don’t pick it up, it doesn’t really tell a powerful stand-alone story like the others here.

I’ve Only Found One Fictional Audiobook I Loved? And A Lot of Okay Ones

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo reads like a memoir/biography, only it’s fictional and not only is the story excellent, but it’s the only fictional audiobook I really fell into and embraced as possibly better than the physically reading it. The narrator is excellent.

If you just want to find audiobooks that have good narrators here’s a short list: If we were villains by M. L. Rio, The poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo, The price guide to the occult by Leslye Walton (didn’t like the story personally) and The power of habit.

PS: If you want more – here’s all my audiobook reviews tagged. And if you like poetry, poetry collections on audio are so great to listen to! I recommend Mary Oliver’s.

Do you like audiobooks or do you prefer ebooks/physical books? I’ll appreciate audiobook recommendations!

Books That Take Place In Another Country | Top Ten Tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl to bring bookish friends together. A new topic is posted each week. 

TTT

Most of the books I read are from another country, since I’m norwegian. But I’ll include more books that aren’t placed in the US/America, since that’s where most of the authors I read are from.

Kafka on the Shore and Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami

  • Japan
  • Absoloutly worth reading, the writing, the characters, the plot all amazing

The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini

  • Kabul, Afghanistan
  • Haven’t read the whole book, only long excerpts for class, but it’s heartwrenching and I have to pick up the whole book soon

Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer

  • Alaskan wilderness, USA
  • Okay book, based on a better story

Life of Pi by Yann Martel

  • Pacific Ocean, with a Tamil boy

The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

  • Germany
  • Historial fiction from nazi germany with a girl who steals books, her parents taken away to concentration camp.

Across the Nightingale Floor by Lian Hearn

  • Japan
  • A fantasy book I read as a child and loved, but I can’t vouch for how good it is since it was so long ago

The Angel’s Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafón

  • Barcelona, Spain
  • Gothic mystery

I Am Malala by Malala Yousafzai

  • Pakistan
  • Non-fiction and biographical book of Malala’s life in Swat Valley in Pakistan and how she got shot in the head fighting for her education

The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke

  • Venice, Italy