
Sapphic Books to Read While Listening to Hayley Kiyoko’s Expectations
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If you’re anything like me, you’ve probably been waiting for Hayley Kiyoko to drop an album ever since the legend that is the Girls Like Girls music video happened. Well, about a week ago, we were actually blessed with a full-length Hayley Kiyoko album, filled with songs about being a woman who is attracted to other women! As I listened to the album on repeat a few hundred times though, I had to pause and think about all of the wonderful sapphic books that I had devoured during this long wait for Hayley Kiyoko’s album. And I thought about how many of them are the perfect accompaniment to this album. So here are a few sapphic books that you should absolutely read as you listen to Hayley’s latest album, Expectations:
Emi is a film buff who is struggling in the romance department. But when she finds a mysterious letter from an old-school Hollywood star, she is led to Ava, who is more complex than Emi could have anticipated. Everything Leads To You is a brilliant novel about love, family, acceptance and…well, film. It’s both sweet and complex enough to go perfectly with almost any of Kiyoko’s song on this album. Plus, I can definitely envision Emi and her fellow film buff friends creating the perfect music video to almost every single song Kiyoko has.
I only recently finished The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, so as soon as I heard Kiyoko’s ‘What I Need,’ that’s the book I was reminded of. The novel follows Monique Grant who has the opportunity to interview the film star Evelyn Hugo about her life. What she learns about Evelyn Hugo’s life is different from anything she could have expected, and includes a forbidden, and tumultuous romance, with one of her female co-stars. Evelyn and Celia’s relationship is complex for a whole host of reasons, but much of their strife comes from not being able to give each other what they need, and needing to hide their relationship from the rest of the world.
Allison Lee is making a fresh start at college, trying to reinvent herself. But she finds it difficult to fit in with the girls in her dorm. That is, until she meets Shar, who soon becomes the center of her universe. (You) Set Me On Fire brilliantly captures a rollercoaster relationship, and Allison’s coming-of-age through her often all-consuming love for Shar.
Pretty much all of Kiyoko’s songs are the perfect accompaniment to Treasure, which is an adorable story about Alexis, a young black college student who meets a stripper called Treasure during her sister’s bachelorette party. When they end up sharing a class, they both begin to develop feelings for each other. But Alexis and Trisha (Treasure) are from two different worlds and they must find a way to overcome these differences and fight for each other.