Emil Ferris's debut graphic novel features a 10-year-old narrator discovering her queer identity through finding herself in the demons, vampires, and other monster figures she finds in both camp horror and high art. Read More
Following in the footsteps of the very popular Butch Lesbians of the 20s, 30s, and 40s Coloring Book, this sequel is just as remarkable as its predecessor Read More
Wang’s book is a rarity among kids’ books, in that it doesn’t try to assign a gender or sexual identity to its young characters, choosing instead to let them define themselves Read More
Elizabeth Beier's new book chronicles her trajectory away from a relationship with a man towards dating women and will appeal to anyone who's ever gone through the frustration of dating. Read More
Sugar Town, cartoonist Hazel Newlevant's sweet memoir of a polyamorous encounter, shows how relationships can work outside of binary definitions. Read More
Henry Rollins and Glenn Danzig are fundamentally inseparable in the pages of Tom Neely’s queer punk comic Henry & Glenn Forever & Ever: The Completely Ridiculous EditionRead More
In the graphic novel Spinning, Tillie Walden recounts the years she spent in competitive figure skating, joining other adolescent accounts that counter the myth that there’s only value in winning Read More