

If you love historical romance with a heavy dose of queerness, hit up her work, especially Tommy Cabot Was Here. Cat Sebastian– Cat’s books are notoriously tender, and what I love most about her work is that even the MF romance is queer.Magen Cubed– Magen’s Leather and Lace is the buddy cop/monster hunters in love kind of story that has a ton of action that is balanced with tenderness and silliness.Bross– Bross’s The Roots that Clutch is a fantasy story set in a desert world with lots of queer characters, found family, magic, and interesting world-building. I highly recommend all of his series, but I particularly enjoyed Widdershins as well as his latest book The Forgotten Dead. Hawk– Jordan’s books are a lot like mine (gay, monsters, mysteries), so if you like my work, you will love Jordan’s. Today, I’ll be posting the first 12, and I will do another 12 next week as well since there are way too many amazing queer books/authors for one post. Since June is Pride Month, now is the perfect time to share some queer authors/books that I think you should read. What starts as an adventurous trip abroad turns into mayhem, murder, and…a magical moose? And everyone-well, perhaps not the moose-is a suspect in the death of the ghostly young man who brings them together to expose secrets, loves lost, and a crime that will shock them all.īook 2: Where There’s a Kilt, There’s a WayI am deep in the writing trenches this week, so today’s blog is going to be a little different from the usual fare. Life among the living is complicated, too, by a gruff professor who can’t take his eyes off Ainsley, and an enticing new job offer for Joachim. Their idyllic trip to Sweden is interrupted by a ghost with a proclivity for rude hand gestures and graphic curse words-and a ghastly history begging to be investigated. A change of scenery might be just the thing. But a trip to Sweden to research at a prestigious university for the summer is nothing to sneeze at, especially since his partner, psychologist Joachim Cockburn, will be teaching alongside him.

Ainsley Graham proved the existence of ghosts and fell in love-hard to top that.

This book was a total delight - Cat Sebastian, author of Two Rogues Make a Right on Best Laid Plaids
