Rainbow Reading: It’s Showtime, Folks

illustration by A. Andrews

Hi everyone! I’m Yashwina, a longtime reader and new team writer here at Autostraddle, and it’s rad as hell to make your acquaintance and welcome you to Rainbow Reading, my new bi-weekly column surveying the lay of the literary land. It’s a real honor to follow in the footsteps of Lez Liberty Lit, the brainchild of Autostraddle’s beloved Ryan Yates which recently wrapped its nine (nine!!!!!!) year run.

Every other week, I’ll run my metal detector over the literary internet, dig up whatever beeps, and present to you my findings, whether that’s The Essay Everyone On Twitter Is Grumbling About, a new poem or short story from an up-and-coming queer writer, a thought-provoking book review, or a list of more cool queer books to get excited about. There may even be the occasional glint of book-world gossip. Who’s to say what all’s out there.

First of all, what am I reading right now? I just got my copy of Laura Horak’s Girls Will Be Boys: Cross-Dressed Women, Lesbians, and American Cinema, which Laura brought to my attention in the comments of my piece last week about the Hot Tomboys of Early Hollywood. When the comments section comes through, it really comes through — I’m having the time of my life reading about gender-transgressive old movies, my to-watch list has quadrupled in length, and I’m awed all over again at the wonderfully fascinating and deliciously readable queer texts coming out of university presses like Rutgers and Duke right now. You can join me and get your copy of Laura’s book from her publisher here, or have the fine folks at A Room of One’s Own bookstore in Madison, WI order it for you for the added satisfaction of supporting a superb queer- and trans-owned bookstore.

Alrighty, folks, let’s get this show on the road. On this week’s Rainbow Reading, we’ve got:


Shelf Care: Reviews, Essays, and other Things of Note


A Dream of a Woman by Casey Plett

A Dream of a Woman is a love story. It’s not girl-meets-boy-meets-happy-ending. It’s not even girl-meets-girl-meets-happy-ending. Instead, it’s a trans love story in the most literal sense — it’s about how we love and how we attempt to love.

Drew Gregory in her essay, Casey Plett’s “A Dream of a Woman” and Forgiveness as a Love Story


Anne List-her’s List of Lists (Gentleman Jack shout-out, anyone?)

This last one was sent to me by a handful of the others; clearly all of us at Autostraddle were stoked for this one! Carmen and I had to take a moment to compare notes about the cool books coming down the pipeline by WOC this year:


Rainbow Reading Superlikes:

As part of Rainbow Reading, I want to shine a light on a queer social media creator from Booktok, Bookstagram, and beyond whose work I think is worth a follow — this week, I’m kicking things off with @lupita.reads, who shares delightful and insightful recommendations on Instagram and TikTok for compulsively-readable books by LGBTQ+ and BIPOC authors!


Autocorrect: Books coverage from the last couple weeks at Autostraddle!

I wouldn’t want you to miss out on any of Autostraddle’s recent highlights just because you’ve been up to your eyeballs in Kayla’s Yellowjackets recaps or trying to find out what Bath & Body Works Classic Scent you are!

That’s all she wrote, folks! If you’re a queer writer, particularly an early-career queer writer: I’d love to hear about the cool things you’re up to so that I can share links to your published essays, book reviews, short stories, poems, and longform features on LGBTQ+ topics! Please email me links for consideration at info@autostraddle.com with the subject line “Rainbow Reading Submission” —I’m an avid browser-tab-collector, and I especially want to hear from you if you’ve just landed your first publication or first major byline.

Before you go! Autostraddle runs on the reader support of our AF+ Members. If this article meant something to you today — if it informed you or made you smile or feel seen, will you consider joining AF and supporting the people who make this queer media site possible?

Join AF+!

Yashwina

Yashwina Canter is a reader, writer, and dyke putting down roots in Portland, Oregon. You can find her online at @yashwinacanter.

Yashwina has written 53 articles for us.

16 Comments

  1. As a writer, reader, and former publishing assistant who is no longer on Twitter: This is the queer book world dispatch of my DREAMS THANK U

  2. Hello to Rainbow Reading!!! I love the puns especially! (and the thoroughness). And including a social media creator is a great idea!* Also THE essay on To Paradise to read is the Harper’s one 10/10

    *(the image link does seem broken, at least for me, however)

    • The link was broken!! We spent all day trying to fix it (first day jitters, I suppose!) — but we should have it ironed out by the time we next run the column!

  3. Excellent, glad to see a new column starting to bloom here. I’m excited to dig in to all these links!

  4. Love the rundown, thank you!

    I read a lot (mainly??) of romance lesfic and especially indie published stuff, so one book that just came out that deserves some love is ‘Whipped’ by JJ Arias. Nice workplace romance meets roller-derby, and it just was a nice comfort read.

  5. Thank you for book world gossip lol I always see tweets reposted on instagram but I’m far too lazy/out of touch to find out.

  6. Love this! The literary round up is fantastic, and Rabbit as a butch icon is truly the queer content we all deserve.

  7. omg this is way too overwhelming for me to actually figure out what I should read- I need more limited options <3

Comments are closed.