🎶 and fortune loves the bold 🎶 (quote from "Fortune" by Heather Dale) currently working on a queer fantasy about changing the world. ask to tag. pronouns: slight preference for they. 🎗 half jewish, aroace enby. fun fact: bees can see ultraviolet. If we haven't interacted before, include a 💜 or ✨️ in your first message if you're not a bot
Just... going to make a short post to rb regularly 😅
Hi! I'm writing a queer fantasy called Shadowbird (on royal road (discontinued) and tapas) featuring a trans protagonist and a sapphic romance!
Short version (longer summary thingie here):
The world became a single empire a thousand years ago. Illustria had never known such peace as it did during the rule of the Light Lord. But his peace was kept by blood, and his subjects' natural magic restricted.... until now.
Destiny just wants to be themself. Unfortunately, sometimes you have to fight for that right.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
I bet, had he lived, Viren would have been so pissed that he was replaced by this nepo-baby who shows up late to official events, doesn't pay attention in meetings and ultimately betrays the crown for his gf.
Viren:And to top it all off, his craft game is ass.
And then you compare all of their techniques! Even down to how they hold the needle and thread and fabric.
Aaravos and Viren hold their needs with some similarity, pinched between their thumb and index fingers, but Aaravos doesn't rest the needle on his middle knuckle like Viren does (I also realized that after all of these years, Aaravos floats the needle into his fingers!)
Callum holds the needle like a pencil by habit of him being a paper artist. The thread is held between his index and middle finger, but it's pinched too tightly.
Aaravos is holding the fabric lower to his body, and as he's sewing, he's plucking the thread through, not too tightly, and when he pulls the thread long, it's straight up, but he doesn't keep it too far from the fabric. As he moves the needle, he also moves the fabric.
Viren holds pulls the thread and then points the needle toward his shoulder and away from the fabric. Unfortunately, we can't see if Viren is moving the fabric as he's sewing, or keeping it in place. I'd imagine Viren has handled needles, but uh. Not for fabric.
Aaravos keeps his fingers curled under his fabric so it hangs more. Viren keeps his fingers flat for more security. Callum puts the blanket on a low table, seated, so he can have a little more control over the needle, but the way he's pinching it like a pencil, it's at a very awkward angle, keeping it pointed away from himself. I wouldn't be surprised if this is Callum's first time even holding a needle.
RAYLA CALLS IT
K N I T T I N G.
And as a cap: the way they present their work
I also noticed that Aaravos uses a thread that's not only nearly used up, but is shinier than Viren's, and Callum probably just took whatever the tailor offered him while he was trying to get his idea done.
Sorry if I took over this post, because I ADORE these two scenes simply because of the enormous amount of work it does for all three of their characters in such an incredibly small way. Especially Callum at this time of his life, in his confidence with himself and his skill as a new mage, even with two arcanums under his belt. One of which has only very recently been acquired.
(Also, embroidery being stereotyped as women's work, but it's being done by three men of the same prestigious profession at different ages and skill levels. Clearly one of them is an active textile artist.)
there, I wrote NINE sentences on the story I haven't touched in months, which meant I had to figure out how to start the got dang chapter, are u happy
You get 5 sentences and they are not new ones bc this is a more fun scene than the new one
The dragon reached up to run his claws through his spines. “Good point. And… what does this do?” He indicated a joystick with one claw.
“Lasers,” Lilah said happily.
make me write or check out past the sun on tapas if you would like to read more about nonbinary space dragon and jewish space diplomat. there are so many neopronouns in this one.
Bee how dare. How absolutely dare you. I was in the ZONE writing Honey I'm Home and you make me open Weaving Constellations for the first time in ages.
Anyway here's 3 of your dang sentences.
The despair immediately shifts to rage. If Midnight has abandoned her, then she has nothing left to give him. He does not get the benefits of her loyalty, and he has officially lost the last feeble claim he held over her heart.
Anyways yeah send me one of these emojis to make me write 🎪🐝🧙💫
Send an emoji to make me write 3-ish sentences from the corresponding WIP, and share 3-ish sentences that may or may not be the same ones, or 🌈 for the most recent one I worked on
🐦🔥🐇🌹🪶🌊⚔️🧚♀️🚀💫
rb with your own WIP emojis and I'll send you one too
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
[Video Description: An ad with piano music over it all, showing an elderly woman in her home, knitting, when two younger men walk by her window, which catches her attention. She stares out her window at them as they kiss each other while walking, the old lady staring in disbelief. Cut to the old woman approaching a residence with a broom in hand, staring up at the second floor window where a small rainbow Pride flag is hanging. The old woman stares up at it and mutters "Ridiculo", before getting up on a ladder with her broom to remove the flag. Focus on the flag fluttering to the ground as church bells chime. The scene then cuts to the couple from before, approaching their home with grocery bags in hand before one stops and stares at the second floor, stopping his partner who then drops the groceries as he too stares up. It's then revealed that the small pride flag had been replaced with a gigantic, hand-knit pride flag. It then cuts back to the old woman's home, where a tin of rainbow-colored yarn sits on her table. The hands of the old woman are holding and fondly touching an old black and white photo of two young smiling women, leaning against each other. Cut to the old woman's face as she stares out with a look of happy pride on her face. At the end of the video, the name "Idealista" appears on screen, followed by "buon pride" along with a rainbow. End VD.]
The old lady is not in her home. She is at work. She's meant to be what in Italian is called "la portinaia", aka a cross between a doorwoman and cleaner of a residential building. She's in her small "office" space, at the entrance of the building, from where she can survey the coming and goings of the inhabitants. It's a job that has mostly disappeared, but is culturally very clear to us as having the connotation of "potentially gossipy, one-million-percent judgmental woman who sees everything that goes on in the apartment complex, knows everyone and their secrets, and has Strong Opinions™️".
In this case, thankfully, the Strong Opinion™️ is that those two men are ridiculous with their teeny tiny flag for ants.
LGBTQIA+ Literature Recommendations by WritingWithColor: 2025-26 Releases
Happy Pride!
I decided to do this post for Pride to help fellow creators. Finding an audience for our creations can prove difficult, especially when we are marginalized artists that don’t fit the WASP (White Anglo-Saxon Protestants) mold. We creators need to look out for each other so we find an audience.
It is hard to find new titles by queer authors of Color. We can attribute this to the attacks on such authors thanks to certain conservative parties in power and legislative threats. It’s all the more reason why we have to protect these titles and make sure they come out into the world. And we are more than happy to hear your recommendations of which titles felt cathartic for the LGBTQ communities and individuals online.
If you are queer and scared of the present, please stay alive. We need you out there, living, feeling, and finding your true self and friends.
2026 Releases
Buy links:
You’ll Never Forget Me by Isha Raya
Shimmering Lake: Summer Camp Collection I by Laika Wallace
Journey to the Heartland (Second Edition) by Xiaolong Huang
On Sundays, She Picked Flowers by Yah Yah Scholfield
The Forest Bleeds by Rachel Kitch
The Perfect Match by Adiba Jaigirdar
The Obake Code by Makana Yamamoto
The Case of Elmwood Ranch by Deanna Grey
Milk & Mocha Comics Collection: Our Little Moments by Melanie Sie (USA release)
The Covenant We Cut by tzipporah-creates AKA WWC Mod Sci (ongoing webcomic)
Honey Bee and Lemon Balm 1 by Jil Hashikura (USA release)
Perfect Princess By Bambi Nieves, illustrated by Alison Nieves
The Most Magnificent Me by Chitra Soundar, illustrated by Sophie Bass
I Don’t Wish You Well by Jumata Emill
Love, Gods and Sinners by Camille Chong
Lake Life by Tanya Boteju
Good Luck, Babe! by Erin Baldwin
Love Makes Mochi by Stefany Valentine
Adult Books
You’ll Never Forget Me by Isha Raya
I’ve been trying to study noir. It’s a gritty genre where people rarely get their justice, and cruel people escape the consequences of their actions. We see a 2020s take on Hollywood noir when rising star Dimple Kampoor in a fit of rage pushes her Asian-diaspora actress rival down a flight of stairs in her own house during a party. She didn’t mean to kill Irene, but she can’t admit she’s sorry when offered a great acting role that Irene had won. The rival’s family hires private investigators, believing the fall was no accident; disgraced P.I. Saffi returns to the US to help the investigators. Despite the two women engaging in a high-stakes battle of wits, they also demonstrate a mutual attraction. Saffi promises to deliver the proof when she’s a hundred percent certain after a botched investigation five years ago, but getting to that hundred percent is the rub. Dimple will do anything to keep her acting career, no matter how many bodies ensue.
The story establishes itself as LGBTQ noir in a racist Hollywood with double standards against women. No good person wins in this story, and we know that from the outset. It is fun to read though, and delivers on the noir promise. The “dead dove: do not eat” labels are very clear, however, and this time the dead dove has a red carpet.
Shimmering Lake: Summer Camp Collection I by Laika Wallace
Shapeshifters, vampires and werewolves are too absurd for some families, but not for the ones featured here. A bullied child with a narcissistic mother gets bitten by what looks like an injured wolf, and the decision empowers him, while another is determined to photograph what they call a frogcruncher. Pride parades show promises of friends banding together despite a few insensitive remarks, and vampires debating the power of LED versus the sun.
Be prepared that plenty of stories occupy these 530 pages. It’s a long time investment, but fun and going by fast.
Journey to the Heartland by Xiaolong Huang (Second Edition, originally published in 2023)
Content warning: This story covers grooming, parental abuse, and child sexual abuse.
Oy, what a hard story. And yet a necessary one, as a boy named Hanwei endures an abusive father who beats him for crimes like not brushing his teeth. Neighbors gossip about how Gaoming Zhu brings men home and how cute they are, embarrassing Hanwei and his mother Rulan. Rulan never loses her temper, but she also refuses to accept needless blame when Gaoming rails at her. Hanwei starts emulating her as a teenager, protecting his mother from Gaoming’s abuse. Gaoming then leaves when Hanwei is seventeen; a situation that should freak them both out becomes liberation.
A grown-up Hanwei explores his sexuality in California after a grad school program accepts him in Los Angeles. Though Rulan remains reticent, reminding Hanwei how his father hurt them all, she listens when he cites statistics of same-sex behavior and attends Pride with him. Settling in a new country brings its own woes, however; Rulan can’t speak English when she attends Hanwei’s doctoral graduation ceremony while wondering if he’s emulating his father, and immigration law along with systematic homophobia dog Hanwei’s partners. Bankers also screw up the US economy, adding only more woes.
On Sundays, She Picked Flowers by Yah Yah Scholfield (reprint; first published in 2020)
A sinister and surreal Southern Gothic debut novel, about a woman who escapes into the uncanny woods of southern Georgia and must contend with ghosts, haints, and most dangerous of all, the truth about herself.
When Judith Rice fled her childhood home, she thought she’d severed her abusive mother’s hold on her. She didn’t have a plan or destination, just a desperate need to escape. Drawn to the forests of southern Georgia, Jude finds shelter in a house as haunted by its violent history as she is by her own. Jude embraces the eccentricities of the dilapidated house, soothing its ghosts and haints, honoring its blood-soaked land. And over the next thirteen years, she blossoms from her bitter beginnings into a wisewoman, a healer. But her hard-won peace is threatened when an enigmatic woman shows up on her doorstep. The woman is beautiful but unsettling, captivating but uncanny. Ensnared by her desire for this stranger, Jude is caught off guard by brutal urges suddenly simmering beneath her skin. As the woman stirs up memories of her escape years ago, Jude must confront the calls of violence rooted in her bloodline. Written by a Black lesbian author, with a Black lesbian lead.
The Forest Bleeds by Rachel Kitch (Oct 13)
A dark academia horror novel about a group of PhD scholars held hostage by a billionaire in his remote mansion in the Appalachian mountains, who must use their combined knowledge of bioengineering and occult spellcraft to save themselves. A very eerie, claustrophobic and grotesque horror thriller, great commentary against big-pharma and unethical research in biomedical research–it's just refreshing to see dark academia that is centred around STEM disciplines for once!
The horror fantasy elements are inspired by both Appalachian as well as South-East Asian folklore. It's also quite a visceral study of exploitation of racialized labor, and the marginalization of Asian-American women in academia. Saige Chambers, the protagonist, is a disabled bisexual woman of Thai descent, and her love interest is an Indian-American lesbian!
The Perfect Match by Adiba Jaigirdar
Dina is done. She's burnt out after years in corporate London and now is working in her family's struggling Bangladeshi restaurant. The last thing she expects is to be roped into coaching a football team of disadvantaged amateur players–or to say yes.
Maya is back. She could have had a brilliant career, but it all went wrong. Now she's back home, back in her childhood bedroom. Her only escape is agreeing to coach her old secondary school's team.
It doesn't take long for them to bump into each other again and for as long as anyone can remember, Dina and Maya were rivals. But will the very game that tore them apart bring them back together?
The adult debut of popular Bangladeshi-Irish YA author Adiba Jaigirdar (The Henna Wars, Hani and Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating), this is an enemies-to-lovers, angsty queer sports romance set in London, featuring Bengali bisexual and sapphic leads.
The Obake Code by Makana Yamamoto
An all-new, standalone sci-fi heist thriller about a bored hacker named Malia, who is forced by vicious gangsters to take down a crooked politician, only to find herself up against a code she might not be able to crack. This novel is part of a series of generally connected “lesbian heist” stories, each featuring an all-lesbian and trans cast, set in the Kepler space station–basically a futuristic Hawai'i. While I preferred the first novel in the series, Hammajang Luck, I also thought that the cyberpunk thriller plotline in this one was more interesting and impactful, using popular tropes like sentient AI systems and evil clones to criticize gentrification, unethical data surveillance and the many exploitative practices of big-tech companies. Malia is a Black lesbian, and Yamamoto is a Native Hawaiian and multiracial lesbian author.
The Case of Elmwood Ranch by Deanna Grey (Release date: July 15)
A Black bi4bi sapphic indie romance between a legacy paranormal investigator and a loner horse rancher, set on a haunted ranch.
Octavia doesn't believe in ghosts, but she can't deny something's wrong with the land she's sunk her entire savings into.
Rae Jones is in the business of ending nightmares. She comes from a long line of paranormal investigators. One of four, she's set herself apart from the Jones sisters by making their legacy into a commercial success. After years of enjoying said success, she's hit a wall. Whether it's burnout or a full-blown existential crisis, she doesn't know. One guaranteed way to avoid a downward spiral? Take every interesting job she can get. And that includes one from a very stand-offish, non-believing rancher who thinks she's a scam artist.
I read Grey's sapphic romance Outdrawn last year; it was the sweetest story, so I'm definitely excited for this.
Speaking of BIPOC sapphic romances:
Tanya Boteju also has a Christmas romcom coming up: Setting the Stage for Christmas (Oct 13, pretty rare to find a festive lesbian romance with non-white leads), and Zakiya N. Jamal has a Black sapphic sports romance coming up: Two Can Play That Game (Nov. 17).
Graphic Novels and Webcomics
Milk & Mocha Comics Collection: Our Little Moments by Melanie Sie
The title characters aren’t explicitly labeled as queer, given they are mascots for an international messaging service LINE. Milk and Mocha live together, however, ordering food and sharing their sleeping space. They enjoy the little moments together, from playing video games together to vibing. Love doesn’t mean being happy together all the time, but it can mean putting in the work to not let little conflicts become big ones. Also, these two are so CUTE.
The Covenant We Cut by tzipporah-creates
One of our WWC mods (Mod Sci) created this one! Content warning: This story covers mental illness and the parental abuse that results from it.
We see a queer Jewish adaptation of Tanakh (Sh'muel Aleph (Samuel I) 20:1-20:42). Caught between his lover David’s safety and his father King Shaul’s suspicion of David, Yonatan comes up with a plan to assess the danger. However, things quickly go awry at the New Moon banquet when his father finds out. You can tell how much Yonatan and David love each other and what Yonatan will risk to prevent losing him. The coloring adds to the tension while the two meet in secret.
The webcomic comes in two languages: an English translation from Everett Fox (more text) and the original Biblical Hebrew (less text).
Children’s Picture Books
Perfect Princess by Bambi Nieves, illustrated by Alison Nieves
I knew this story would be good when Princess Amina winces when giving knights hi-fives but being too polite to offer constructive feedback. Her childhood friend Keiran opposes how Amina has come out of the closet, expressing it with a spell that sends her far from home. Amina has to find her way back without her cosmetics, sword, or silverware. A blue rabbit agrees, joining her and a tiny dragon on the long walk home. Amina has to accept her lack of perfection when not having silverware for a snack or a sword to handle enchanted townspeople. Likewise, Keiran has to accept that his friend has become her real self and watch what his magic does.
The Most Magnificent Me by Chitra Soundar, illustrated by Sophie Bass
This book is more LGBTQ+ coded than LGBTQ, but it does the job with internal validation and positive affirmations. Plus, if you have a toddler with doting parents, they will love hearing how magnificent they are; I can verify this courtesy of a video call with some younger family members. Babies have big egos, and they need to sustain them as they grow older.
Manga
Honey Bee & Lemon Balm 1 by Jil Hashikura
I was on the fence about this manga because the situation seems contrived at first: a yakuza in a nighttime district gets a job at a flower shop following a stint in prison -- where he took the fall for some superiors -- and getting booted from his old gang. Kaoru Mitsuya tries to be tough but starts falling for the owner,
The manga went from standard romance to great writing when we meet Yuichiro’s siblings -- and one very clearly defies gender roles. You can see a family that cares about each other but doesn’t know how to communicate their concerns, with Yuichiro working 24/7 and refusing to take care of his health and his siblings forcing him to rest.
Young Adult Literature
I Don’t Wish You Well by Jumata Emill
True crime can hit or miss for me; in this case, the hit comes from a fair-play mystery. College student and amateur podcaster Pryce gets a lead on a seemingly closed case. Five football players were murdered, ostensibly by a gay classmate they drugged and assaulted. One witness, however, has stated for years that the ostensible serial killer had an alibi. Pryce thinks he can expand on the story after recording the witness’s story, especially when finding out other witnesses are still alive.
Love, Gods and Sinners by Camille Chong
Harper and Tia are roommates, and interns at the same tech company. They clash, they fight, they flirt. And, under cover of night, the two of them adopt secret identities and head out on missions across the city for their respective magical clans. Tia is the beautiful descendant of the Moon Goddess, and Harper is secretly Raven, the leader-in-waiting of the feared and villainous Foxes. When each is tasked by their clan to kill the other, a deceitful game of cat-and-mouse begins. And Harper and Tia will start to understand that the concepts of right and wrong can be just as complicated–and dangerous–as falling in love.
Set in an alternate futuristic world, where descendants of ancient magical clans don secret identities and battle on the streets of Singapore, this debut novel, the first in a planned duology, is a glittering, action-packed urban fantasy, with an enemies-to-lovers romance at its heart. Singaporean author, Asian lesbian and bisexual leads.
Lake Life by Tanya Boteju
A charming sapphic summer romance with environmental activism themes, about two teens who agree to fake-date when stuck together in a quirky, scenic lake town. Written by a Sri Lankan-Canadian author, and featuring an interracial sapphic romance.
Good Luck, Babe! by Erin Baldwin
Reality TV enthusiasts Noelle and Yumi spent a decade attached at the hip—until one ill-fated night (and one awkward kiss) ended their friendship. After a year of no contact, fate throws the girls back together when they’re offered a last-minute spot on their favorite race-around-the-world reality show.
It’s a chance to put their superfan status to the test, a dream come true. Except for a few snags: it’s an all-couples season, filming starts in two days, and Noelle hasn’t spoken to her “girlfriend” in a year. But she already has plans to use the prize money on her ailing father’s medical expenses, and she would do anything for him—including fake dating her ex-bestie on national television. This sapphic YA romcom is written by a Filipino-American author, and features Filipino sapphic leads.
Love Makes Mochi by Stefany Valentine
A cute sapphic YA romance between a goth fashion designer and a tattoo artist. Written by a Taiwanese-American author, featuring Asian-American and Japanese lesbian leads.
Lilyn Jeong is living her best life—in Tokyo! She gets to learn from the legendary yet notoriously terrifying tailor Mrs. Matsumoto. Getting a glowing recommendation from her could be Lilyn’s ticket into her dream fashion school.
So when the latter is tasked with designing an entire collection, panic sets in. She has only weeks to figure out how to mix her goth aesthetic with traditional Japanese style. Thankfully, Mrs. Matsumoto’s rebellious, tattooed, rainbow-haired daughter Yua offers to help. But going on cozy dates with this cute girl is way easier than sewing yukatas. Can Lilyn find a path forward in fashion and love? Or will she watch as everything falls apart at the seams?
Keep reading to see our recommended 2025 releases!
2025 Releases
Buy links:
Angelica and the Bear Prince by Trung Le Nguyen
Before You Go Extinct by Takashi Ushiroyato
Good Soil by Jeffrey Chu
Graphic Novels
Angelica and the Bear Prince by Trung Le Nguyen
Angelica has anxiety. Lots of it. So much that she’s burned out, and her mother allows her to work in a theater to recharge. Her childhood friend is also working at the theater, though neither of them can explain why they stopped being friends. They each blame the other, but the truth is more complicated.
Trung Le Nguyen’s The Magic Fish captures what it feels like to be queer in an immigrant family. Thankfully, Tien’s parents weren’t like mine about children still in the closet. Angelica and the Bear Prince adds burnout and generalized anxiety disorder to the mix. It understands how repairing mental health and ghosted bonds can be super difficult.
Manga
Before You Go Extinct by Takashi Ushiroyato
Another queer-coded story rather than obliquely rainbow, this one-volume manga with six chapters provides a melancholy existential seduction. A penguin couple attempts to deliver a mercy extinction to their flock, only to die and reincarnate into several endangered species runs the risk of Bury Your Gays. Pen and Merle, rather than suffering the typical fate of gender-ambiguous creatures fiddling with life, keep discovering new incarnations and approaches to death’s inevitability.
Entropy is scary. So is knowing when creatures like us are dropping like mosquitoes after an industrial spray. How we react to it, though, can be healing and help with that melancholy.
Nonfiction
Good Soil by Jeffrey Chu
If you had told me I would enjoy a memoir about a gay magazine editor finding solace at a Christian farming seminary, I would have looked at you funny. Jeffrey Chu, editor at Travel+Leisure, might agree; he had sustained a complicated spirituality due to being queer and Hong Kong diaspora. After some crises, however, Chu decides to attend the Farminary to figure out his spiritual side. The experience provides perspective on our relationship with nature and agriculture. For example, he thinks how we disparage worms, but worms revive the soil, and the ways in which we distance ourselves from killing the meat needed to feed a society. Killing chickens actually takes more effort than one may think, and it can bring tears to the people who raised them.
Chu is quite honest that his family has a mixed relationship with queerness and Christianity; missionaries converted his family decades ago, and his mother and father refused to attend his wedding. He also feels that exploring religion through the Farminary has improved his life, even with the ups and downs of co-op farm life.
Honorable Mentions; aka Handful of White Queer Authors Who Published Books 2025-26
Gender Queer: The Annotated Edition by Maia Kobabe (2026)
Lucky Day by Chuck Tingle (2025)
Wearing the Lion by John Wiswell (2025)
Gender Queer: The Annotated Edition by Maia Kobabe (2026)
Maia Kobabe didn’t expect a firestorm when publishing a graphic novel about eir gender exploration. This very personal story shows Maia’s journey through an AFAB childhood and latent body dysmorphia. (I relate about the leg hair considering a penguin bit me to grab one of them at a local ecoadventure park.)
The annotated edition has notes from people in Maia’s life, from college professors to dear friends and fellow artists. Maia and Phoebe Kobabe, the latter doing the book’s coloring, also contribute. Each note feels so meaningful. Especially knowing how certain people really hate individuals not fitting into narrow gender molds, the contributions remind us we are not alone.
Lucky Day by Chuck Tingle (2025)
Okay to be fair, we don’t know Chuck Tingle’s true identity, but it’s best to err on the side of caution. While I could list Fabulous Bodies, as I’m currently reading it, I still have a ways to go. Lucky Day is about a leading expert on chaos theory surviving the possibly unluckiest day for anyone on the planet shortly after coming out to her mother, and how Vera fares a few years later when asked to do more calculations about the cause. Vera wants nothing to do with a world that took everything but her life, but finding out why the Low-Probability Event happened might give her closure. It is grim and ominous, with biting humor puncturing the tension. Mind the body count and violence.
Wearing the Lion by John Wiswell (2025)
John Wiswell is the queer short fiction writer you need to follow online. With stories like “D.I.Y,” “Welcome to Heroism” and “Bad Doors,” you can’t turn your eyes away. Wearing the Lion is his second novel, the first being Someone You Can Build A Nest In, published in 2025. Hera takes offense when Zeus announces that his next affair baby will be the best hero of Ancient Greece; she’s further insulted when the baby is named for her, Heracles. The irony is that Heracles is a nice guy, calling Hera “auntie” when praying to her, and thanking her for the many monsters that she sends his way. He’s basically Disney’s Hercules, a nice guy whose world abruptly shatters when Hera’s machinations lead to his sons’ deaths. And like that farmer boy Hercules, Heracles finds himself doing the right thing and believing in his namesake, despite the evidence piling up. While not an obliquely queer story, Wearing the Lion focuses on found family and those othered as monsters. Also, it has a lion which acts like a housecat; what is there not to love?
Especially love how Lia got, like, motivations and reasoning for the "beautiful cinnamon roll too good for this world, too pure" and "helpless Cinderella-in-distress can't defend herself from an unkind word" performance
And the interplay between Eric the Golden I Wear My Emotions On My Sleeve Except I'm So Dramatic About It Everyone Thinks I'm Faking Cobra and Marius I Was Never Taught How To Recognize Emotions So Mine Live In An Oubliette With A Spiked Lid To Keep Them There Valerius the Last Brick Wall Of A Man Hope
Hhhh. And the foreshadowing is impeccably done, I missed so much of it the first time around and I'm catching probably all of it on the reread
(oubliette metaphor courtesy of @indigo--montoya )
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
so for anyone else out there on Tapas there's a community event going on (nother link overlapping info) where you can nominate your favorite series published in 2025 to get featured in one of six categories! creators can nominate their own stories and anyone with or without a Tapas account can vote!
(and if you've got a Tapas account but no story, consider nominating Shadowbird (or one of my other stories!) or voting for it if it makes it into the next stage? I don't think it will but wouldn't it be funny if my gay little story did get noticed?)
ok so this is The Court Jester with Danny Kaye and it is the best fucking movie i swear. It’s a comedy musical robin hood parody thing about an incompetent moron and his extremely competent ass-kicking girlfriend taking down a tyrannical king and restoring the throne to the rightful heir
-the rightful heir is a baby and they can tell it’s the right baby because of a giant birthmark on his asscheek
-the main character’s only talent is singing and the rest of the pseudo robin-hood group just kinda tolerate him because he repeatedly fucks up
-he gets hypnotized into believing he is this amazing swashbuckling sword fighting hero along the lines of Wesley from the Princess Bride and ends up fighting the villain while snapping in and out of hypnosis
-the vessel with the pestle has the pellet with the poison, the chalice with the palace has the brew that is true “what”
-he stumbles his way through the entire plot and never knows what the hell is going on
-Danny Kaye is the funniest motherfucker you’ve never heard of
And a fun tidbit from the filming was that Danny Kaye had never fenced before this film, so he was trained by Basil Rathbone’s stunt double who was also the fight coordinator. Kaye got so proficient so quickly, that Rathbone himself had to do most of the duel scenes between them as the fight coordinator eventually couldnt keep up with him on the more technical parts of the fight. If you watch closely, you can see that Rathbone stays on camera doing the fencing for a much larger percentage of time than he normally did by that point in his career, and Kaye does all but a couple of shots of his own fencing, because HIS double couldnt keep up and make it believable.
put trans people in everything. make terfs uncomfortable. give trans people every possible type of representation. normalize gender nonconformity. no downsides.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality✓ Free Actions
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
okay no but it's so funny to me that Elliot Schafer is the one who decided at 13 that he knew who his true love was, who he had to court, but Luke Sunborn is the one who still liked the same person four (close to 5) years later
Luke's the only one of the usdiots who did that. Elliot and Serene both end the book with someone they openly detested in first year and I kinda love that for them all tbh.
Don't know how long it'll be til I actually do color and whatnot so here have a sketch of two spacefarers who never came back
but imagine if, through some miracle, some wrinkle in time and space... imagine if they found each other?
couple art notes under the cut
I wanted them to look like they're both floating in space so hopefully that came across
Also wanted Grace to be almost touching Laika but not quite
The stars in the background circle form the Canis Major and Andromeda constellations: the dog and the sacrificial princess. Some stars are hidden by Grace's and Laika's bodies