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The Basics
I run the Lesbrary, and I'm also on booktube and goodreads.
Check out the Lesbrary Goodreads Project for lists of les/bi/etc books by topic and genre
See the Master List of Lesbian & Bi Women Books Recommendations for my favourites!
Support Bi & Lesbian Lit and the Lesbrary on Patreon for monthly book giveaways, or buy us a coffee on ko-fi if you're feeling generous!
Mostly lesbian lit, always bi-, ace-, aro- and trans-inclusive.
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Carolina reviews The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab
Carolina reviews The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab 
“Your characters begin to live the way you do, unrepentant. Never reduced to their queerness, only expanded by it. It infuses them in many ways, sometimes subtle, others loud.” What does it mean to be invisible? As queer people, most of us are familiar with invisibility in many forms. For some of us, it’s being in the closet, having to deliberately conceal parts of ourselves; for others it’s a…
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Posted 5 months ago reblog 6 notes
Zoe reviews Don’t Go Without Me by Rosemary Valero-O’Connell

Don’t Go Without Me is a triptych of comics written and illustrated by Spanish-American artist Rosemary Valero-O’Connell which deal with ‘love, loss, and connection.’ Valero-O’Connell is best known for her graphic novel collaboration Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me with Mariko Tamaki, a book about a teenage lesbian and her experience in a toxic relationship. Don’t Go Without Me has…
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Posted 6 months ago reblog 9 notes
Landice reviews Architects of Memory by Karen Osborne
Landice reviews Architects of Memory by Karen Osborne 
I’m not quite sure how to describe my experience of reading Architects of Memory. I started to say it was “a delight” to read, but that’s not even close to accurate, because this is an incredibly heavy book. And when I say heavy, I’m talking “what if corporations really were able to colonize space and then make everyone do incredibly dangerous labor to earn their place off-world, complete with…
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Posted 6 months ago reblog 5 notes
Sash S reviews Spellbound by Jean Copeland and Jackie D.
Sash S reviews Spellbound by Jean Copeland and Jackie D. 
“Hazel Abbot spent her whole life unaware she was a witch. When a spell thrusts her great-aunt Sarah Hutchinson forward from the Salem witch trials of 1692 and lands her in Hazel’s bookstore, everything Hazel thought she knew about herself changes…” If you want a read that’s fast-paced, fun, and filled with well-rounded and likeable characters, look no further than Spellbound, a perfect blend of…
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Posted 7 months ago reblog 10 notes
Shana reviews The Deep by Rivers Solomon

The Deep is the most beautiful book that I’ve read this year. It’s a lyrical novella based on a Hugo Award-nominated science-fiction song by clipping, a hip-hop group. The Deepis a reimagined mermaid story about an underwater society descended from African women tossed overboard during the transatlantic slave trade. We learn about the culture and history of these people, the wajinru, through the…
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Posted 7 months ago reblog 25 notes
Shannon reviews I’ll Be the One by Lyla Lee
Shannon reviews I’ll Be the One by Lyla Lee 
If you’re looking for something to make you smile just as much as it makes you think, Lyla Lee’s debut I’ll Be the One is the perfect book for you. It’s categorized as young adult romance, but don’t let that put you off. I’m in my forties and I loved every second I spent with these characters. Skye Shin has grown up knowing she wants to be a K-Pop star. She’s devoted every spare moment to…
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Posted 7 months ago reblog 9 notes
Carmella reviews All Men Want to Know by Nina Bouraoui
Carmella reviews All Men Want to Know by Nina Bouraoui 
Content warning: this review references sexual assault In the first chapter of her auto-fictional novel All Men Want to Know, Nina Bouraoui (translated from French by Aneesa Abbas Higgins) writes: “I want to know who I am, what I am made of, what I can hope for; I trace the thread of my past back as far as it will take me, making my way through the mysteries that haunt me, hoping to unravel…
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Posted 8 months ago reblog 7 notes
Rachel Friars reviews Cinderella is Dead by Kalynn Bayron
Rachel Friars reviews Cinderella is Dead by Kalynn Bayron 
Kalynn Bayron’s Cinderella is Dead is the queer fairy-tale retelling we needed in 2020. Bayron’s novel is doing amazing things for queer fiction, fantasy, and YA. If there’s anything we need more of, it’s books like this, and more from Bayron herself. It’s been a long time since we’ve seen a Cinderella with queer girls. I can only recall Malinda Lo’s Ash(2009), which I read as a very confused…
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Posted 8 months ago reblog 13 notes
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5 Star Reads
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid
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