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16 LGBTQ+ books to add to your must-read list in 2025

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Find here our list of 16 books you won’t want to miss in 2025.You might know Jeremy Atherton Lin from his 2021 nonfiction book Gay Bar, which came to us like a gift at a time when we hadn’t been to gay bars for a year.

His follow up is Deep House: The Gayest Love Story Ever Told, in which he tells the story of “how he fell in love across borders.” Taking place in 1996, the book chronicles the love story of Atherton Lin and his British partner finding ways to be together as the U.S.

Congress is working on the Defense of Marriage Act, which denies federal rights—immigration among them—to same-sex couples. If anyone can combine queer history and memoir in a compelling, moving way, it’s Jeremy Atherton Lin, and this is sure to be a captivating Pride month read.A new memoir from viral sensation Dylan Mulvaney, who documented her transition through her “Days of Girlhood” series on TikTok.

Filled with witty and intimate reflections on her life, Paper Doll pulls back the curtain on the ups and downs of fame, advocacy, and being out so publicly.

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A sweetly intimate bromance plays out in this progressive Canadian indie from 60 years ago
Welcome back to our queer film retrospective, “A Gay Old Time.” In this week’s column, as the New Year brings us right until the middle of winter, let’s revisit 1965’s seasonally appropriate gay indie, Winter Kept Us Warm.Happy 2025! To start the year off with the right intentions, this week we’ll take a look at an underrated, under-seen movie from across the northern border that—even though it’s never really gotten its due diligence—occupies a niche space in the queer film canon. It’s a film with a production and a legacy that perfectly reflect the scrappiness, ingenuity, and creative spirit that has characterized our community.As we’ve discussed in this column for almost two years now, making a queer movie has never been an easy task.Subscribe to our newsletter for your front-row seat to all things entertainment with a sprinkle of everything else queer.Particularly in the early and middle decades of the last century, a myriad of obstacles would prevent our stories from being told, both within the Hollywood system and the broader culture: strict moral codes that stopped any “controversial” characters or plotlines from being portrayed, narrative conventions that limited the kind of lives and stories that could be explored, and a heavily religious and homophobic society that wasn’t ready to welcome us into their movie screens.But if it was hard to get queer movies made (and seen) in the United States—within the giant Hollywood machinery backing the productions—it was much, much more difficult in other countries.
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