biandlesbianliterature:

diverse-reads:

Powell’s will always be there to welcome you home. 📚

(In Powell’s City of Books (( @powells )), Oregon)

[image description: an endcap at Powell’s. It has a chalkboard sign with LGBTQ+ YA! written in rainbow. Most of the books have signs under them saying “Powell’s Bestseller” or “New”. Some of the (bi or lesbian) books are Dreadnought and Sovereign by April Daniels, Queens of Geek by Jen Wilde, Little & Lion by Brandy Colbert, 27 Hours by Tristina Wright, Dress Code for Small Towns by Courtney Stevens, and That Inevitable Victorian Thing by EK Johnston]

A complete listing:
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, Carry On, Simon vs the Homo Sapiens Agenda, Unbecoming, History Is All You Left Me, Dreadnought, Sovereign, Queens of Geek, When the Moon Was Ours, Little & Lion, 27 Hours, Vanilla, Grasshopper Jungle, Dress Code for Small Towns, The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue, Perfect Ten, Will Grayson, Will Grayson, That Inevitable Victorian Thing, Proxy, Mask of Shadows, Ramona Blue, They Both Die at the End, The Love Interest.

A varied diet

Trying to balance the grim textbookiness of Naomi Wolf’s The Beauty Myth with Beneath the Sugar Sky by Seanan McGuire, The Rules of Magic by Alice Hoffman, season six of Castle, and Avengers Academy 2.0 and I think I’m getting whiplash. I mean, we need more feminism and magic and less patriarchy and captialism and variety is the spice of life, and The Beauty Myth is too hardcore to read without breaks, but going from that to magical doors and back again is kinda wild.

Using my powers for good

thequietestlilbucket:

seananmcguire:

iamshadow21:

Just requested five purchases from my local library: Autoboyography, Beneath the Sugar Sky, When the Moon was Ours, Not Your Sidekick, and Dreadnought.

They bought Tell Me Again How a Crush Should Feel and Down Among The Sticks and Bones for me last year, so. *fingers crossed*

Reminder that you can request items for purchase, and then, not only do you get to read them if the library buys them, but you’re making them available for others, for example, closeted queer kids who can read them at the library under the guise of study if their home isn’t a safe space. Be the change you wish you had when you were a kid.

❤ ❤ ❤

Wait, Dreadnought by April Daniels?! It’s so good! I mean, gonna warn you that it has hella transphobic characters (including an emotionally abusive father) that you’re supposed to hate, but it’s really good if that’s not an issue for you.

I actually own it already – I bought a second hand copy from BetterWorldBooks – and I love it and think it’s super important. I know the transphobia in it is hard to read, but it’s not sugar-coated and it’s an #ownvoices writer describing a very common transgender experience through the lens of science fiction. I don’t think there’s anything quite like it in my library’s YA collection yet. Thanks for the warning, though.

ya-pride:

the-tur-tle-king:

ya-pride:

smirky-lil-meerkat:

ya-pride:

kuttithevangu:

ya-pride:

(Image Description: Black background with blue and yellow lettering reading “What were your favorite LGBTQIAP+ books you read in 2017?”. Along the side, in white lettering, reads “Happy New Year!”)

We can’t believe 2018 is right around the corner! We want to know YOUR favorite LGBTQIAP+ books you read in 2017, whether they were 2017 books or older books you’ve just discovered! Comment or reblog to share the YA Pride!

THE ART OF STARVING
HISTORY IS ALL YOU LEFT ME
NOT LIKE IT’S A SECRET
WE ARE OKAY
NOT YOUR VILLAIN
WILD BEAUTY
A LINE IN THE DARK
CROOKED KINGDOM
NOTEWORTHY
RAMONA BLUE
LITTLE & LION

That’s all I can remember from the top of my head but !!

This is an amazing list!!

Just to add a few…

-Autoboyography by Christina Lauren

-Release by Patrick Ness

-They Both die at the End by Adam Silvera

-The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee

-The Love Interest by Cale Dietrich

-The Inexplicable Logic of My Life by Benjamin Alire Saenz

-At the Edge of the Universe by Shaun David Hutchinson

Here’s to an even better book-year in 2018!

We’re definitely looking forward to 2018 releases! Make sure you check out Dahlia’s (of @lgbtqreads) list of YA LGBTQIAP+ releases for the first half of 2018 on BN Teen!

right off the top of my head i have

10 Things I can See From Here

Song Of Achilles

In Other Lands

Girl Mans Up

When the Moon was Ours

Symptoms of Being Human

So many great books!! Thanks for sharing!

Simon vs the Homosapiens Agenda/The Upside of Unrequited

Ash/Huntress

Carry On

10 Things I Can See From Here

Every Heart A Doorway/Down Among The Sticks and Bones

Six of Crows/Crooked Kingdom

Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe

Five Books With Asexual Protagonists

dreamerandthedarkhalf:

I was looking for more Ace stuff. I found this, but haven’t read any of the books mentioned. Now I intend to. Maybe I can find one Asexual book per month to read during 2018?

If you read Clariel make sure you read Goldenhand too! I mean, better still, read the whole Old Kingdom series, but those two books encapsulate the majority of the character’s arc. Also, Clariel is not only ace, she’s autistic-coded too, so there’s more than one form of minority representation going on.

Five Books With Asexual Protagonists

drabblemeister:

OKAY
I have been meaning to do this for MONTHS but hey, there’s no better time than the present so buckle up, here we go!

THESE BOOKS ARE A GODSEND.

I am ALWAYS on the lookout for writing aids that ACTUALLY HELP. If you’re like me, and occasionally venture out to buy books on, let’s say, showing vs telling – you will always get the same rehearsed speeches on what that means. -summons pretentious writer’s voice- You’ve got to shoooooow what’s happening in the scene, not teeeeeeell~~ BAH! What you NEVER get, however, is how to do it, or how do it better.

THESE BOOKS ARE THE STUFF OF DREAMS

Each of these is so freaking helpful, I can’t even convey. They all follow the same format as the pictures I’ve shown above, so you get one detailed page of descriptions followed by tons of more in-depth, thought provoking concepts.

I’ll do my best to lay out the five that I have and if you are interested, hop on over to Amazon and buy these suckers up because they are AMAZING; I have NEVER used a writing resource more than I use these.

Negative Trait Thesaurus & Positive Trait Thesaurus
-gives you a definition of said negative trait
-gives you similar flaws also found in the book
-gives you possible causes of WHY the character might have this trait
-gives you a list of other behaviors the chara might have
-gives you examples of the chara’s thought process
-gives associated emotions
-gives positive aspects of the trait, as well as negative
-gives examples of well known chara’s that have this trait
-talks about how the chara might overcome it
-gives traits that, when combined with this one, might cause conflict
How I use this information:
Chara building, or when I get stuck on what I want a character to do. Man, I just can’t decide what they WOULD do. Well, awesome, I have a little guide to help me think through the character’s possible motivations. Also, I get help building a potential backstory because I get a framework of which to think, why is the character this way?

Urban Setting Thesaurus & Rural Setting Thesaurus
-gives a whole lot of examples of sights, smells, tastes, and sounds
-gives examples of textures and sensations (ie at an ‘antique shop’ you may encounter chipped paint, distressed wood, etc)
-gives you possible sources of conflict (ie at a ‘hotel’ you might have noisy neighbors)
-gives list of people you might expect to find at said location
-gives related settings
-gives tips on this type of setting
-gives a setting description example
How I use this information: IMAGERY IMAGERY IMAGERY

Emotion Thesaurus (aka MY FAVORITE)
-gives a definition of the emotion
-gives physical signs and signals (ie chara may look pale, might fidget, etc)
-gives internal sensations (aka, blood pounding in the ears, dry throat, adrenaline rush)
-gives mental responses (ie fight or flight)
-gives cues of acute or long-term impacts of the emotion
-gives ‘may escalate to _______’ and directs you to other emotions
-gives cues of suppression (ie cues of suppressed rage)
-gives writer tips
How I use this information: I love this book so hardcore, it’s so helpful with internalizing. It’s great because I get to step outside of that box of using the same five responses to a certain emotion and start really thinking about, what can a character do instead to show that they are feeling this, rather than me using adverbs or his adrenaline pumped fifty gazillion times.

These books are all co-written by Angela Ackerman and Becca Puglisi (bless their souls) and if this sounds of interest LOOK INTO IT!! I get such buyer’s regret after buying writing guides but these are legit the best ones I have found and I reference them so, so, so much.

Hope this helps anyone out there looking for something life-changing!!

THEY ARRIVED TODAY!!!

Every Heart a Doorway and Down Among the Sticks and Bones, Wayward Children #1 and #2. (Beneath the Sugar Sky is on pre-order.)

Here you see them in their covered, ready-to-shelve state. (Yes, I cover my hardbacks, so sue me.)