
10 Books to Read Before THE L WORD Comes Back
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In case you’re not plugged in to lesbian Twitter, there’s (finally) new buzz about The L Word reboot. It’s been a hundred years since 2017 when we first started hearing serious teasers about The L Word coming back.
We grasped our phones in our hands and delighted in the crumbs creator Ilene Chaiken and stars Jennifer Beals (Bette), Katherine Moennig (Shane), and Leisha Hailey (Alice) threw to us. https://twitter.com/jenniferbeals/status/884817052988518400 But finally we have an update! The sequel to the groundbreaking series about a group of lesbian women living and loving in Los Angeles is due by the end of the year. Showtime has ordered eight episodes to start, and we can only hope that might mean even more in the future.‘The L Word’ Sequel Series in Development at Showtime https://t.co/AejghMA6Oo via @variety
— Ilene Chaiken (@ilenechaiken) July 11, 2017
The L Word was iconic, and bonkers, and broke a mold that made some lesbians feel seen for the first time. It was all we had—young lesbians in not-LA could actually see other lesbians living and interacting and falling in love. But there’s also a lot of really valid criticism on how the show handled race, socioeconomic issues (how the hell does Shane afford to live next door to Bette and Tina?), and transgender issues, among others. The show’s first iteration ended in 2009, before we saw the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell; before marriage equality became the law of the land; and in our current political landscape, with our current administration in place, I have to wonder how Chaiken and her team of writers will address the aforementioned issues. (Also, will Carmen and Shane get back together? Because they need to. The whole thing went to pot after Shane set fire to that. And actress Sarah Shahi has confirmed she will be in the sequel, so…) I’m also reaching for the wisdom of Roxane Gay: she wrote in her essay “Girls, Girls, Girls” in Bad Feminist about the extreme pressure we put on movies and TV shows to represent the full spectrum of experience.It's real. So excited! https://t.co/6IMF4HuA4P
— Ilene Chaiken (@ilenechaiken) January 31, 2019
“[A]ll we want is everything from each movie or television show or book that promises to offer a new voice, a relatable voice, an important voice. We want, and rightly so, to believe our lives deserve to be new, relatable, and important. We want to see more complex, nuanced depictions of what it really means to be whoever we are or were or hope to be. We just want so much. We just need so much.”Point being: I have a lot of complicated feelings here. Deep breath. Manage expectations. via GIPHY But y’all, it’s not even spring yet, which means we have a lot to do: rewatch the entire series, and (very optional) all of The Real L Word; worry over what Jenny’s role in this whole thing is going to be; try to figure out if Shane’s style game will have changed at all; re-mourn the loss of Dana. And I mean, this is Book Riot—we need to read a bunch of books before then. I’m here to help. I’ve composed a list of 10 books to help prepare you for the sequel. When it finally drops, we shall all run to our screens and ignore our responsibilities, knowing that we’ve done our reading, our prep work, and that the fashion can only have improved. (Right?)