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Pride Month Reading List

This Pride Month, not only are we celebrating love but the power that Pride brings with it. How are we celebrating that? Well, you know it. With books and stories that have touched our heart. At the heart of Pride lies a spectrum of stories, tender, bold, defiant, and quietly transformative. And what better way to celebrate than through the pages of books that have moved us, challenged us, and lingered with us long after the last chapter? We felt deeply connected to the characters and all that they went through, whether it’s deep or on the lighter side of life. So, of course, we wanted to share our list of books with you.  

Here’s what we’re reading this month: 

 

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Boys’ Love follows the life of Jon, a Filipino gay man and his coming out of the closet in conservative and Catholic Philippines. He becomes a journalist and lives briefly in the United Kingdom and the United States, but returns home to a colourful country that is beginning to change. He forges friendships and alliances in gay Manila, meets and break ups with lovers, and lives with eyes wide open to the possibilities of hope.

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Inspired by Filipino mythology and folk tales but written with a Gothic take, My Lady Hiraya is a sapphic romance fantasy novel that follows Elise’s dogged pursuit of her lost love and the love she finds along the way. 

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In Worship the Body, an owner of a furniture workshop, Jaime drops by a restaurant to cool off with a glass of beer. Working in that restaurant, Jun waits on him in that random visit. Something happens between them as their eyes meet over the glass of beer which Jaime considers an accident and Jun considers luck. Their paths will once again cross, but in an unexpected way.  

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Have I Got Something To Tell You is collection of stories that explore the intersections and conflicts in family lives and sexuality that are typical in contemporary Asian societies, yet also universal. These stories are set from post-independent Malaysia to the early decades of the 21st century, the Covid-19 pandemic years – gay men’s love cannot be understood by their family or nation; and an endearing but heart-breaking love between two young men, one with hearing-impairment.  

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Riverrun is a rite-of-passage novel on the life of Danilo Cruz, a young gay man who grows up in a colourful and chaotic military dictatorship in the Philippines. The book is shaped  like a memoir, and glides from childhood to young adulthood.  

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The Dogs follows the story of Tian, a middle-aged man, moves into an old flat that had once belonged to his late father, to live out the rest of his life. As he goes about his days, he starts to reminisce about his childhood in a kampong in Singapore in the 1950s, and his friendship with Heng Chong, a schoolmate. As he looks back, he gains a deeper understanding of his own past.  

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The Zero Season takes us to 1949, where a young Etienne Legast is in trouble, estranged from his pious Catholic family, has fled a messy love affair with an older man at the end of the war, and returns home to Paris for a funeral – only to find himself quick drawn into a deadly debt and an unexpected romance with an orphaned Cambodian student radical. Though the two young men come from different worlds, they soon develop a bond that helps them transcend their respective tragedies.  

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Orchids of the Rainforest is a novel about reconciling identities with culture and heritage, while realising that acceptance is sometimes found in the unlikeliest of places. This book follows the lives of three cousins who are dealing with their personal troubles and trying to break the shackles of tradition. 

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In Death and the Maiden we meet Stella, a ghost boy in a skirt who lives in an abandoned tower in the middle of the capital. He calls himself the Eleventh Floor Theater Administrator. Every evening he wakes up to repeat the same routine, caring for lost children, watching a spectacular parade of the Defeated Gamblers. The boy wonders why the Reaper whom he lived with had not yet sent his soul away. 

Have you got the feels yet? Trust us when we say that you don’t want to miss out on these stories.  

Get your copies today.  

 

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