Asexual book about lesbians and gays for children

LGBTQ Book List for Children

This is my Pride Book List for Kids from 2020 for this year’s list of 90 LGBTQ+ positive books for children check out The 2021 Ultimate Celebration Book List here.

 

It’s been seven years since I published my first LGBTQ book list for children. That list had nine books on it, and they were all focused on families. Since then, there has been a shift, and books that include and focus on kids and families in the LGBTQ collective are more diverse in all distinct ways. We still have a drawn-out way to proceed both in publishing and in getting these books on bookshelves, in the hands of children, and being scan by teachers during storytime. The society is a large place with all kinds of people. Parents and teachers alike want to teach their children to be caring yes, ut to also recognize and do something when things aren’t equitable. We can not do that without making our bookshelves and storytimes inclusive too. We can not tell our children everyone is worth the identical, everyone deserves respect, and then build these books “a sensitive subject” to only be discussed at home because some think they are inappropriate for school.  That teaches our ch

If you’re an avid reader of YA, chances are you’ve read a publication with a queer protagonist. Take Simon vs the Homo Sapiens Agenda for example, or The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice & Virtue. While there’s still an overwhelming amount of YA books published with allocishet main characters, we’ve definitely come a long way in terms of representation in the past five years.

But when thinking about books with queer characters, most of the time I’ve create that people are likely to recommend novels with gay, lesbian, or multi-attracted protagonists – not ones who are of unlike identities from what people perceive as ‘more common’. I want to study more books about aromantic characters, or people who are nonbinary, or those who are pansexual. I just want more advocacy in general – and I do believe we’re getting closer to that.

But today, I’m going to share my top five recommendations for YA novels featuring asexual characters! While not all of these books feature asexual protagonists, all the characters I note play a major role in the novel and are explicitly on the asexual spectrum.

The Lady’s Manual to

LGBTQIA2S+ fiction for children

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Awesome books featuring LGBTQIA2S+ (lesbian, gay, bi-curious, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual, two-spirit) characters and themes. Selected by Anne P.

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  • Book, 2021New York : Alfred A. Knopf, [2021] — Children's Fiction Book
  • Book, 2021New York : Farrar Straus Giroux Books for Young Readers, 2021. — Children's Fiction Book
  • eBook, 2020New York : Scholastic Squeeze, 2020. — Children's Fiction eBook

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Источник: https://hclib.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/619290358/781892907

Children's and YA LGBTQ Books: Spring 2021

We’ve compiled a list of some new and noteworthy LGBTQ-themed books coming this spring and summer for children and teens. Readers can dive into budding lgbtq+ romances, discover the importance of one’s pronouns, peruse up on memorable LGBTQ icons, own their possess bodies with guides on sex, puberty, and growing up, and much more.


Picture Books

Adventures with My Daddies

Gareth Peter, illus. by Gary Parsons. Peachtree, Apr. 1 $16.99 ISBN 978-1-68263-281-9. Ages 4–8.

Peter and Parsons track a loving and diverse family, featuring an interracial gay couple and an adopted nongendered young protagonist, as they explore the different worlds that reading stories transports them to.


Born Ready: The True Story of a Boy Named Penelope

Jodie Patterson, illus. by Charnelle Pinkney Barlow. Crown, Apr. 20 $17.99 ISBN 978-0-593-12363-8. Ages 4–8.

In this companion to activist and Chair of the Human Rights Campaign Foundation Board Jodie Patterson's adult memoir, The Bold World, Patterson shares her son Penelope’s frustrations and triumphs on his journey to distribute himself

6 Queer Books with Asexual Characters

 

Asexuality is still an “invisible” and often ignored sexual orientation, and it’s rare to find books with asexual characters. To celebrate Asexual Education Week, I lay together a list of six books with characters on the asexual spectrum. 

I also invited the authors of these books to an Ace Characters Chat in my Facebook Reader Group on Friday, October 25, 2019. Join us for some absorbing book discussions and fun giveaways! We’re starting at 6 p.m. EST. 

 

Learning Curves by Ceillie Simkiss

Genre: Contemporary romance

Character: Cora McLaughlin

Buy the manual on Amazon

Elena Mendez has always been career-first; with only two semesters of law school to go, her envision of working as a family lawyer for children is finally within arrive. She can’t give distractions. She doesn’t have time for love.

And she has no idea how much her existence will change, the day she lends her notes to Cora McLaughlin.

A freelance writer and MBA student, Cora is just as career-driven as Elena. But over weeks in the library together, they discover that as strong as they are apart, they’re

asexual book about lesbians and gays for children