80 Queer and Feminist Books Coming Out Winter 2022
If you thought 2021 was a banner year for LGBTQ+ books, wait until you see what the first three months of 2022 have in store for queer book lovers.
If you thought 2021 was a banner year for LGBTQ+ books, wait until you see what the first three months of 2022 have in store for queer book lovers.
Are you a cucumber melon gay or a warm vanilla sugar gay?
Consider this your reminder to get caught up on “Yellowjackets” but also your reminder that coats are a fun fashion staple.
We’ve got Season 2 of Euphoria, very talented (gay!) teens in the Mexican telenovela reboot REBƎLDE, a Freeform recovery dramedy teeming with queers, a lesbian in “How I Met Your Father” and more!
We’ve made it to 2022 somehow. Through inertia and exhaustion and sheer hanging on, we’ve arrived in a new year.
“i don’t care about this at all except i would like to request hot pictures of the lesbians involved for a feature”
“Thinking about the stud who hit on me in Penn Station. They were so smooth that I’m still thinking about it three years later.”
Plus an update on Hightown and a happy New Year!
Social media is bad. Cats are good!
Waking up early and standing out in the cold may not seem like self-care, but to me, it is.
Just look at all these queer celebrities announcing their love, getting engaged, getting married, having babies and kissing at the Olympics!
The wild story of eggnog, Sarah Jessica Parker nostalgia and a million other reads for your New Year.
Carrie gets a new hip, Charlotte’s kid gets a new name, and Miranda gets some gay sex.
We asked our editors to pick one thing published on Autostraddle in 2021 that they had absolutely zero things to do with. Something that they loved purely as a reader.
“Eddy and Becky, best friends who boned on OnlyFans to earn cash to fund Gay Chaos’ first album, started out with bathtub ukelele covers and careening, desperate ballads that made rock bottom sound like the world’s only emotional truth.”
Tasting notes: This one is real, like a hallucination. You can feel it, see it, and it leaves very little evidence of its passing through your body. Lingers barely on the tip of the tongue, with high notes of bright genders named like quarks.
Dickinson’s third and final season was funny and fun and deep and wild and so, so gay. Emisue, forevermore.
Does Kayla work for-hire to investigate food mysteries/memories? Because I have a caramel apple cookie mystery I’d love some help solving!
Over the decade-ish that I’ve been writing this column, the number of published queer and trans stories has exploded.
Friendship truly has no boundaries!