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Continue reading →: Welcome!Take a look around, and take your time. Looking for editing services or your next read? You’re in the right place!
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: Symbiote“We are Ben, but we are also Adam. First of our people, and the harbinger of many.” In the long, dark winter of Antarctica, something is coming to life. Michael Nayak’s Symbiote follows a group of scientists who encounter a mysterious and violent parasite that turns an already challenging environment…
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: A Song for You and IAfter reading The Moth Keeper last year, I fell in love with K. O’Neill’s gorgeous, soft illustrations and thoughtful themes, so when I saw that A Song for You and I was set to release for this March, I had high hopes. I’m pleased to say that this new Middle…
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: Not for the Faint of HeartThis Queer YA novel about the younger generation of Robin Hood’s Merry Men was very merry, with significantly fewer men than its source material (which I’m not mad about)! As any good enemies-to-lovers adventure does, Not for the Faint of Heart starts with a kidnapping; although, is it really a…
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: Don’t Let the Forest InWhat if you loved someone so much it destroyed you? In Don’t Let the Forest In, C.G. Drews writes a gory poem, a love letter to all the things that hurt and haunt. While marketed for YA and full of teen angst, I felt like the themes were much more…
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: Voyage of the Damned“You don’t need a Blessing to be a miracle.” Just because Ganymedes “Dee” Piscero is likely to be murdered on this magical 12-day voyage, doesn’t mean he won’t go down with a joke, a kiss, and some Agatha Christie-style sleuthing. Frances White’s debut novel is marketed as a magical gay…
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: Sloe Moon: Stoneharp“It was what it should feel like to embark on a journey, and even with all the big questions in it, my heart skipped, wanting to whirl around with the wind that made the winter-bleached grasses quiver.” In Sloe Moon: Stoneharp, Kuhtz takes the world they established in Tall Trees…
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: The Family ExperimentTen families are given the opportunity to raise their own MetaChild under the watchful influence of…well, the entire world. At the end of the new nine-month reality show, The Family Experiment, one winner will choose between keeping their virtual son or daughter or receiving a cash prize large enough to…
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: Bury Your Gays“Tragedy is inevitable. Fortunately, so is joy.” Chuck Tingle doesn’t pull any punches in Bury Your Gays, the story of a Queer horror screenwriter who finds himself haunted and hunted in Hollywood. What begins as a criticism of corporate greed contorts into a novel of horror, thrills, Queer trauma, and…
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Continue reading →: Reading Desk: MasqueradeThe fact that Masquerade is Sangoyomi’s debut novel is shocking to me. Very loosely based on the Persephone myth, the novel features a 15th-century West African blacksmith, Òdòdó. Blacksmiths are known as “witches” in Yorùbáland because they don’t belong to a man (widows, single mothers, unmarried, etc.), and they are…

