Queer Romance

  • Glitterland by Alexis Hall

    It would be easy label Alexis Hall’s debut novel Glitterland as literary fiction masquerading as romance. The language he uses – his metaphors are often show stoppingly gorgeous – and his narrator, a bipolar depressive – beg to be read by those who dismiss genre fiction as lowly. The next time someone sniffs derisively at…

  • Out of the Blackness

    Years of mental and physical abuse leave marks that take a monumental support system to ease, but never erase. Fortunately, the protagonist of Quinn’s newest novel not only finds the support system, but also is pulled from the blackness surrounding him in a series of tiny steps that will make readers appreciate the effort it…

  • Don’t Trust the Cut

    The “cut” of the title cuts a number of ways – from former Marine Jesse Bauer’s close-cropped haircut to Tucker Grey’s penchant for self-mutilation when his life turns rough. While Jesse seems more trustworthy than cutting himself as far as putting life’s ups and downs in perspective, Tucker has to determine which can ultimately bring…

  • Taboo for You

    Sunday’s latest gay romance twines three story lines together tightly to make one wonderfully refreshing novel. Divorced father Sam is facing his 30th birthday having done nothing but work and be a parent since he was 15. His next door neighbor Luke lusts after Sam but settles on being his ultra-support. And nearly 15-year-old Jeremy…

  • The Return by Brad Boney

    Boney’s latest is the epitome of Yogi Berra’s famous quote: “It’s like deja vu, all over again.” Unlike Berra, Boney’s book dabbles in reincarnation and the parallel lives of two lovers music critic Stanton Parrish has at either end of his life. When he’s a young man, Parrish falls for a budding musician and songwriter…

  • In Pieces

    A gay San Francisco cop in a Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer sweater and an art student who pays his tuition from his earnings as a prostitute meet at a Christmas party and fall in lust. Sounds like the beginning of a bad joke, right? Fortunately, the two protagonists are strong enough characters that Land’s…

  • Sidelined by Mercy Celeste

    Turns out that money and fame don’t = happiness. At least, not if you’re a gay pro football player from small town Alabama. Big surprise? Not really. But at least Celeste adds a few twists and turns to make this a more unusual gay romance. Levi Brody, last seen peripherally in Celeste’s Six Ways from…

  • A Casual Weekend Thing

    Bad family relations and ugly relatives abound in romance fiction, usually holding either the hero or heroine back from reaching a happily ever after. But few have loaded a character with such a horrific backstory as Thomas does in her debut. Christopher, raised in a foster home, is the brother of a convicted pedophile, whose…

  • Raining Men

    In Chaser, the previous book in this series, the villain of the piece is Bobby who loves Caden so much that he tries to sabotage Caden’s love affair with another man. Making Bobby the protagonist of the sequel is a risky step for Reed to take, but he makes it pay off in spades. Although…

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