“Category Is Books is an independent LGBTQIA+ bookshop in the southside of Glasgow.
We hope the bookshop is a space to learn about, be inspired by and share in our love of queer books, writing, histories and storytelling.”
[image description: an illustration of Category is Books from the outside. It is snowing, there is a trans flag flying, and there is a sign outside reading “Queer Queer Queer Books.” There is a Christmas tree in the window and the words “Trans lives are beautiful.”]
I have a little collection of sapphic Christmas books that I save up to read in December. It isn’t a long list, but I try to make room for at least one every year. At first, I wasn’t sure why I was doing it. I don’t feel a strong pull towards Christmas books in general—although I celebrate, I’m not exactly a deck-the-halls-er. Usually my celebrations are a little more quiet, and the highlight is…
Shana reviews Comet’s First Christmas by Delilah Night
Shana reviews Comet’s First Christmas by Delilah Night
I love sappy holiday movies, and Comet’s First Christmas nailed the sweet and silly tone of some of my favorites, glossing over any plot holes with Christmas magic. It’s a sweet, earnest, PG-rated novella about a reindeer shifter who falls for an elf. The worldbuilding is excellent, but the storyline is unlikely to appeal to readers who aren’t die-hard fans of North American Christmas…
There are the wlw holiday romances I know; I’ll leave it to you to decide whether any of them qualify as rom coms because I never think anything the industry calls rom coms actually are:
As we enter into the end of 2020, if you’re someone who celebrates Christmas, you’re probably having some strong emotions about it right now. Maybe you want to forget the whole holiday, because we probably can’t celebrate it the way we usually do. Or maybe you, like me, are filling your Netflix queue with holiday romances and stocking up on eggnog, because we deserve a tiny sliver of hope and…
Sinclair reviews The Solstice Gift by Avery Cassell
The Solstice Giftby Avery Cassell is a queer love story in the best sense of the words. It doesn’t follow the traditional, heterosexual tropes of how the two characters meet and following them through their courtship, but comes in with the love story well under way, and continues with new and radical sexcapades that bring the couple closer together, exploring identity, gender, sex, kink, and…
Thanks, @lilyevenspotter ! And OP, I absolutely second Dahlia’s recommendation for Eight Kinky Nights. It’s a really thorough romance about healing and self care.