10 LGBT Teen Novels that Tackle Teen Suicide & Bullying

by Collin Kelley

In September, the suicide of 18-year-old Rutgers University student Tyler Clementi was a tragic close to a shocking month of gay teens taking their own lives. Clementi’s dormmate secretly recorded the teen having sex with another man, sent out messages on Twitter and broadcast it across the Internet. Clementi jumped from the George Washington Bridge.

Clementi’s death also brought attention to three other teen suicides–Seth Walsh, Asher Brown and Billy Luca–that occurred in September; all had been bullied over their sexuality. We’ll never know exactly how many LGBT teens have taken their lives because of physical or cyber bullying.

So although the media glare has revealed that bullying is an epidemic, LGBT novelists have long tackled this issue in the pages of their books.

In my own novel, Conquering Venus, the story is set in motion by the suicide of a high school student, Peter, fearful that family and friends will abandon him if they discover he is gay. Peter’s boyfriend, Martin, goes to Paris to try and move on with his life, but meets another young man tormented by his sexuality who seems to be heading down the same irrevocable path.

Here are 10 books for teens and adults that confront bullying and suicide in frank language and tone, not to mention providing hope that “it gets better.”

By The Time You Read This, I’ll Be Dead by Julie Anne Peters

A bullied high school student trolls a suicide “completers” website determined to get it “right” after several botched attempts. Then she meets a young man dying of cancer, who is just as determined to make sure she lives.

Peters includes information about suicide prevention at the end of the novel.

Bait by Alex Sanchez

Told from the prospective of the bully, Sanchez charts the course of a 16 year old coming to terms with his abusive past after he is arrested for assaulting a gay teen.

Suicide Notes by Michael Thomas Ford

A 15 year old tries to commit suicide and wakes up in a juvenile psych ward, where he confront his burgeoning sexuality with the help of three other teens.

Parrotfish by Ellen Wittlinger

LAMBDA AWARD FINALIST

A transgendered high school student gets support from his family while trying to defend himself from bullies and act on his attraction to the hottest girl in school.

Down to the Bone by Mayra Lazara Dole

A Cuban-American girl in a Catholic school is expelled and abandoned by her mother after they discover she is a lesbian.

A Scout is Brave by Greg Novak

A Native American is bullied at a Boy Scout summer camp as he faces his own sexuality and the traditions of his family.

The Side Door by Jan Donley

A teen gets bullied after coming out at her high school and tries to uncover the secret behind the suicide of another bullied teen, whose death has been hushed up by the small town.

Freak Show by James St. James

LAMBDA AWARD FINALIST

Teenage drag queen Billy (or “gender obscurist” as he calls himself) faced down bullies as he seeks to become the homecoming queen at his conservative high school.

Finlater by Shawn Stewart Ruff

A book for older teens and adults, this story of a young African American teen and his Jewish boyfriend in 1969 is sexually frank and shows that bigotry and bullying roots are deep. (Reviewed for LLF by Reginald Harris)

Hello Cruel World: 101 Alternatives to Suicide for Teens, Freaks and Other Outlaws by Kate Bornstein

Okay, this isn’t a novel, but it’s definitely a book for bullied teens that belongs on any list. The celebrated transgender writer offers up suggestions from the witty to the controversial, but all with one simple message: “Don’t be mean.”

originally published on October 28th at lambdaliterary.org, republished with permission

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10 Comments

  1. Kind of related, I was reading about the Better Book Project. As implied by the title, the project aims to be literary equivalent of It Gets Better, asking for people to submit their own stories, make a donation of words.

    I am overlooking that the editor wants submissions as MS Word docs. The health of gay teens trumps file format snobbery, right? right?

  2. i’m pretty sure sara quin wrote an intro for ‘hello cruel world’, can someone back me up? (that alone is enough to get me to buy it)

  3. I would like to hear from teachers/school librarians – which of these books would you recommend for a high school library? I am considering making a book donation to my Alma Mater. There is very little ethnic or religious diversity there. It is very “Middle America.”
    Thanks!

  4. As a librarian, I have to say that you have done a great job compiling this list. If you wanted to make a donation, pick the award winning books first. Librarians like to know that the books they add to the collection come with positive reviews and/or critically acclaimed. Awesome list.

    • Great advise. Thanks. I agree it is an awesome list. But then again, everything Audostraddle does is AWESOME to me!

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