Gay urban fiction books


10 items

  • This is the first novel in the Streets Have No King series. After 7 years of prison, multi-millionaire drug mogul Kane Garrett is back on the streets. Instead of returning to the drug game, he’s teaching a college class. When a student and heroin…

  • Jay Crawford has spent too long paying for a crime he didn't commit. For ten years, he's been in prison and waiting for the chance to confirm his innocence. But when his family is threatened, he decides he is done waiting.

  • This is the first book in the Thug series. Angel, Jaz, and Kyra are all leading double lives. They are torn between working hard to leave the ghetto behind and being lured back in by the lying, pimping, drug-dealing men they can't seem to let go.

  • This is the eight book in the Cartel series and is a standalone. On the surface, the LaCroix Group is a venture capitalist company, but underneath, it’s much more. The four sisters have a system: Find the perfect mark, create the challenge, then…

  • King is an underground verb producer in Detroit who is finally being recognized for hi

    11 gay books every queer man should read, at least once


    By Emen8, updated 2 months ago in Lifestyle / Entertainment

    Whether your interest is in complex gay characters or historically poignant homosexual love stories, here are eleven gay books every queer man should read, at least once.

    Here are some of the best gay books for anyone looking to lose themselves in beautifully crafted stories. This list of gay books contains some of the stories that verb shape our understandings of the gay experience, our history, our loves and our families. If you have already read them all, please get in verb, I think we may be soulmates. While you&#;re at it you can also check out our 6 gay fantasy novels to add to your reading list.

    1. Call Me by Your Name, Andre Aciman

    Many will realize the gorgeous film by the same title, starring Timothée Chalamet, the king of the straight twinks. Well, the book it’s based on, written by the talented Andre Aciman, is equally captivating. For those unfamiliar, the novel follows year-old Elio Pearlman’s summer love affair with his father’s PhD stu

    Gay/LGBTQ2IA etc. Series or Stand Alone

    Hello,

    Firstly, apologies if this is a repeat thread. I tried to filter and search for answers to what I had in mind to ask and my search came up sparse. Admittedly, my librarian and IT skills are incredibly under developed so there may be a section of threads I missed altogether. That said

    I really like reading gay sci fi and fantasy series and verb read a few and now wish to consume more. I have tried to navigate Goodreads but the lists are so dated and massive that finding anything appealing is difficult. Reddit is also hit or lose so here I am.

    To clarify, I do not scan books with lesbian or sapphic vibes. Similarly, I do not read books with trans MCs. I avoid these POV MCs not because I undervalue their importance rather I just wish to imagine myself as someone else and I only aspire to do that through gay or bi usually cis male MCs.

    I have read many series about gay men written by female authors and verb come to truly feel frustrated by the disconnect I experience when I read flowery language designed to appeal to other women. To that

    Yes, this is the third noun of the series and I highly recommend the first two. They&#;re great. I&#;m highlighting The Ship of the Dead for a very specific reason, however: the way Riordan handles Magnus deciding whether or not he&#;s going to enter into a romantic relationship with Alex Fierro.

    Their story is an enemies-to-lovers classic: Child of Loki meets Child of Frey while Loki is trying to murder said golden boy so shady deity can start Ragnarok (I signify, it&#;s a classic in my world, I don&#;t know about yours). Loki, as some of you may know, is a shapeshifter. In Riordan&#;s reimagining, his child Alex is gender fluid. Cool.

    Magnus, however, has always considered himself straight. Because he loves Alex, he doesn&#;t need them to change and always wants them to manifest the self that makes them happiest. He doesn&#;t know, however, if he&#;s prepared to be physically intimate with Alex in their male body.

    Before everyone gets real mad at Magnus, this isn&#;t anti-gender fluidity or transphobia. This isn&#;t about Alex. Magnus wants Alex to be their best and