Queer Books to Read this Black History Month, and More LGBTQ Book Links


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Here’s all the latest queer book news and reviews from across the internet, including how to fight censorship of trans books, queer books to read this Black History Month (and the other eleven months), a Two-Spirit memoir in the 2025 Canada Reads competition, the new patron saints of lesbian fiction, and more.

How to Fight Book Bans and Censorship of Queer Books

In absolutely shocking news, this administration is not particularly concerned with book bans. In fact, the Department of Education put out a statement calling book bans a “hoax” and dismissed all outstanding complains about them. By any metric, book challenges have shot up dramatically in recent years, and diverse books are the target—particularly, queer books, BIPOC books, and sex education books. Check out Kelly Jensen’s article How to Critically Read a Press Release From the Federal Government for a thorough refutation of this press release, and sign up for her Literary Activism newsletter to stay informed.

The Trans Literature Preservation Project: A Practical Guide to Resisting Censorship offers some tips on how to fight censorship of trans books in particular. Personally, I’d push readers to think about systemic change first: keeping a collection of trans literature does very little to help the most marginalized readers, while attending school board and library board meetings and speaking up for trans literature has a much bigger impact.

For the author side of things, Maia Kobabe, author of Gender Queer—one of the most banned and challenged books of recent years—has posted a comic about why authors should join Authors Against Book Bans.

A Two-Spirit Memoir is a Canada Reads Selection

Despite how much I talk about U.S. politics, I actually live in Canada. And almost nothing is bigger in the Canadian book world than Canada Reads. Every year, CBC (Canada’s public broadcaster) hosts a “battle of the books,” where celebrities each champion a book they think all Canadians should read. For 2025, the theme is “One book to change the narrative.”

a two spirit journey covera two spirit journey cover

This year, a Two-Spirit memoir is in the mix! The book is A Two-Spirit Journey: The Autobiography of a Lesbian Ojibwa-Cree Elder by Ma-Nee Chacaby, and it’s represented by Shayla Stonechild, Red River Métis and Nehiyaw iskwew (Plains Cree woman) from Muscowpetung First Nations. She is a podcaster, wellness advocate, and global yoga ambassador for Lululemon.

I’m excited for Canada Reads to bring more attention to this memoir, and I am rooting for it! The Canada Reads debates will take place March 17-20.

More Queer Book News, Reviews, and Recommendations

Because I can’t stop there, please enjoy this potpourri of queer book links, including recommendation lists, essays, reviews, news, and more.

If you’re reading this newsletter online and want queer book news and recommendations in your inbox, sign up for Our Queerest Shelves here.



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