
Our First LGBTQ+ Books
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Everyone remembers their first. Whether it was Will Grayson, Will Grayson or Brokeback Mountain, our first exposure to LGBTQ+ life often comes in the form of books that surprise us, dare us, and sometimes scare us. Our first LGBTQ+ book becomes our avenue of discovery and, if we’re lucky, our secret confidante and comfort. Here’s what Book Rioters had to say about their first LGBTQ+ books.
Aristotle and Dante is considered a quintessential queer YA love story, but when I read it as a teen, I had no idea what was coming. For most of the novel, Ari is still figuring out his sexuality, so he doesn’t necessarily see it coming, either. Looking back, this made Aristotle and Dante the perfect introduction to the world of queer lit. It’s a coming out narrative woven into a familiar bildungsroman structure, and (spoiler alert?) it ends happily. I love these boys and their complicated relationships to each other, to their families, and to the world.
—Emily Polson
Reading the description of this book, I realize that I remember almost nothing about it besides the fact that I loved it. I think what I dug about it was that it doesn’t present queerness as a tragedy but just an aspect of everyday life. Because of that, it can move beyond the *shocking* nature of being queer and into the struggles that we all face, queer or not queer. These include trying to fit in, having crushes, losing friends and love and winning them back. This book also made me think a lot about my own sexuality and I consequently sought out more queer media, so it holds a special place in my heart.
—Katherine Packer
I read this book when I was in middle school. As a child, I was never exposed to any informed viewpoint on the LGBTQ+ community or issues due to a religious upbringing. But I remember going out to the public library once I was considered old enough to go by myself and seeing this book on the shelf. I was intrigued by the pink and the blue on the cover, so I got it and read it.
Before that point, I was pretty clueless about the experience of other LGBTQ+ people regardless of their gender identity or sexual orientation, besides snippets of what I’d seen on the internet. However, Just Add Hormones blew the door wide open to reading more about LGBTQ+ people and experiences through books. The late Matt Kailey provided a real and humorous account of his experiences before and throughout his transition. Without that book, I might not have had the courage to get real with myself about who I was, whom I loved, and how I felt about it.
—David Mitchell Som
I had a few first LGBTQ+ books. This one is the first one that was actually about LGBTQ+ people and not sexy skinny sci-fi chicks who kiss each other for the titillation of the male gaze, AHEM.
Even though it was dated, self-hating, and politically incorrect, I recognized my kin in Well of Loneliness and felt a little better about my obvious sapphicity. Not much, since the story ends so sadly, but the book was way more sympathetic to Stephen than I was being to myself at the time.
Later, I heard that WoL was partially autobiographical and looked up Hall’s life. Surprise! She didn’t actually lose the girl. Hall and her girlfriend Una Troubridge stayed together. They had a big gay life with loads of dyke drama and Radclyffe cheating with ballerinas and such. Hall was not even a little sorry about being a lesbian! She just had to stick in the bad ending to satisfy her publishers.
—Anna Gooding-Call
