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All Out: The No-Longer-Secret Stories of Queer Teens throughout the Ages Hardcover – February 27, 2018
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Seventeen young adult authors across the queer spectrum have come together to create a collection of beautifully written diverse historical fiction for teens.
From a retelling of Little Red Riding Hood set in war-torn 1870s Mexico featuring a transgender soldier…to two girls falling in love while mourning the death of Kurt Cobain…to forbidden love in a sixteenth-century Spanish convent…and an asexual girl discovering her identity amid the 1970s roller-disco scene, All Out tells a diverse range of stories across cultures, time periods, and identities, shedding light on an area of history often ignored or forgotten.
“Readers searching for positive, nuanced, and authentic queer representation—or just a darn good selection of stories—need look no further than this superb collection.”
—Kirkus Reviews, starred review
Featuring original stories from:
Malinda Lo
Mackenzi Lee
Robin Talley
Kody Keplinger
Elliot Wake
Anna-Marie McLemore
Shaun David Hutchinson
Dahlia Adler
Tess Sharpe
Kate Scelsa
Natalie C. Parker
Sara Farizan
Nilah Magruder
Tessa Gratton
Tehlor Kay Mejia
Alex Sanchez
Scott Tracey
Read the entire set of companion anthologies featuring queer teens in the past, present, and future!
All Out: The No-Longer-Secret Stories of Queer Teens throughout the Ages
Out Now: Queer We Go Again!
Out There: Into the Queer New Yonder (coming soon!)
- Print length368 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarlequin Teen
- Publication dateFebruary 27, 2018
- Grade level10 - 12
- Reading age13 - 17 years
- Dimensions5.79 x 1.21 x 8.45 inches
- ISBN-10133547045X
- ISBN-13978-1335470454
From #1 New York Times bestselling author Colleen Hoover comes a novel that explores life after tragedy and the enduring spirit of love. | Learn more
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Editorial Reviews
From School Library Journal
Review
"LGBTQIA story collections are scarce, but even if they weren't, this one would be essential." -Booklist
"The diversity is refreshing... well written...Give to those teens who don't read full novels but still long for LGBTQ representation. A strong choice for most collections." –School Library Journal
"Historical fiction has not been very common in queer YA, and All Out is here to change that. Queer people have so often been erased from history that it can feel as if we have no roots. All Out imagines the lives of queer teens throughout different time periods, often playing with genre (retellings, fairy tales, magical realism, fantasy) as well. Not only does this imagine queer histories, it imagines happy ones! It also features a range of identities, including trans, gay, lesbian, asexual, and aromantic characters." – Vulture
About the Author
Robin Talley studied literature and communications at American University. She lives in Washington, DC, with her wife, but visits both Boston and New York regularly despite her moral opposition to Massachusetts winters and Times Square. Her first book was 2014's Lies We Tell Ourselves. Visit her online at robintalley.com or on Twitter at @robin_talley.
TESS SHARPE (she/her) is the author of books for children, teens and adults, including Far From You and The Girls I've Been. She lives in the backwoods with a pack of dogs and a cabal of slightly feral forest cats.
Product details
- Publisher : Harlequin Teen; Original edition (February 27, 2018)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 368 pages
- ISBN-10 : 133547045X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1335470454
- Reading age : 13 - 17 years
- Grade level : 10 - 12
- Item Weight : 15.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.79 x 1.21 x 8.45 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #923,508 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #370 in Short Stories in Teen & Young Adult Literature
- #1,967 in Teen & Young Adult Coming of Age Fiction
- #10,844 in Short Stories Anthologies
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Saundra Mitchell has been a phone psychic, a car salesperson, a denture-deliverer and a layout waxer. She’s dodged trains, endured basic training, and hitchhiked from Montana to California. The author of nearly twenty books for tweens and teens, Mitchell’s work includes Edgar Award nominee SHADOWED SUMMER and Indiana Author Award Winner and Lambda Nominee ALL THE THINGS WE DO IN THE DARK. She is the editor of four anthologies for teens, DEFY THE DARK, ALL OUT, OUT NOW and OUT THERE. She always picks truth; dares are too easy.
Scott Tracey is the author of nine YA novels, including the WITCH EYES trilogy, which was called “A bewitching blend of paranormal romance and intrigue” by Kirkus Reviews. He lives near Lake Erie in Ohio, and spends far too much time watching the Hallmark Channel. SUBSCRIBE TO ME is his latest novel.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers enjoy the book's stories, with one highlighting its awesome Robin Hood retelling. Moreover, the writing quality receives positive feedback, with one customer noting how messages are expertly woven into the narrative. Additionally, customers appreciate the character development, with one review specifically praising the respectful portrayal of transgender characters. Customers find the book worth the purchase.
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Customers enjoy the stories in the book, particularly appreciating how new narratives are interwoven throughout. One customer specifically praises the retelling of Robin Hood, while another notes how the stories help readers understand their worth.
"...And the ending? I still feel absolutely gutted. But the heart of this story is about love; the love we have for others, but also the love that we..." Read more
"...The historical settings and time frames were a delight, and I loved the breadth of diversity we got here...." Read more
"...Asexual rep!!!! This was such a nice story with some cute interactions. Burnt Umber (Mackenzi Lee): ★★★★☆ This story made me soft...." Read more
"...Town in the 1950's, Seances, 1930's New Mexico, and many more amazing scenes. I learned several things about History, about Human nature, about love...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, describing it as well done and amazing, with one customer noting how the messages were expertly woven throughout the narrative.
"...Overall, I loved this. And representation always matters, but it especially matters to kids that feel alone and feel like what they are feeling, or..." Read more
".../older historical settings, but honestly, even those were still really well done in my opinion...." Read more
"...and I admired the poetic lovingness capture by all of these incredible authors...." Read more
"...This was a beautifully written story and I was just enraptured by the storyline and the beauty of the writing...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, with one review highlighting its respectful portrayal of transgender characters and another noting its unapologetic approach to LGBTQIAP+ representation.
"...Beautiful, so beautiful. And this just was so unapologetically LGBTQIAP+ and it just raised me up, and made me feel so happy, and reminded me to..." Read more
"...I fell in love with each character and story and I admired the poetic lovingness capture by all of these incredible authors...." Read more
"...You could tell that this author really knows how to write a transgender character respectfully and I would love to see all transgender characters..." Read more
Customers find the book worth the purchase.
"...the title, to Pride & Prejudice, to skating, to the music, to the amazing rep; this was nothing but a joy to read. This was a gift sent from above...." Read more
"...LGBTQ+ books and was so pleasantly surprised with how wonderful for this book was. so many little short stories that all gave a little something...." Read more
"so good!!!!" Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2018This was a blessing to read. This is a historical literature short story collection, showcasing LGBTQIAP+ characters. And all of the authors that contributed to this collection are LGBTQIAP+ and that is something that I don’t even have words for. I am forever thankful that Saundra Mitchell curated this, that Harlequin published this, and that kids and teens everywhere are going to be able to pick this up and know that they are never alone and that they have never been alone, throughout history.
These stories also are set all over the world, even though the majority of them do take place in The United States. I do personally wish that we had a little more variety, but the stories themselves are super important and I feel very privileged that I was able to read them. My only other minor complaint is that I also wish that there was a pansexual character. I get no titles were used in many of these stories, but I still wish there were bigger hints and/or possibilities that would have personally made my pan heart happy.
My personal favorite was The Inferno & the Butterfly by Shaun David Hutchinson. It was so beautifully written, the messages were expertly woven in, and the characters are two that I won’t forget anytime soon. Roja by Anna-Marie McLemore and Every Shade of Red by Elliot Wake were super close to also being my favorite. And both of these stories are ones I will carry in my heart forever. And I truly believe, without a doubt, that these three short stories are worth the entire price of this anthology alone!
I'm going to break down each short story with my thoughts, opinions, and individual star rating!
➽ Roja by Anna-Marie McLemore - ★★★★★
“I wanted them to know that I was my abuela’s granddaughter, that carried the blood of poison girls.”
1870 Mexico - I wish every anthology that I will ever read for the rest of my life started with a story by Anna-Marie McLemore. The beauty, the power, the magic in her words. It is something I can’t find words for, but it makes me feel everything. Absolutely everything. This story centers around an ownvoices Latinx main character, who is trying to get her trans lover out of jail. This story discusses trans issues and does it so well, and even though I am cis, I was still blown away at what this author was able to accomplish with this masterpiece of a short story. And the w/w romance in this is so awe-inspiring and just so heartwarming. I loved it. And I loved this so very much. There is also so much beautiful magical realism in this, that deals with poison, and it has me super hyped to read more about it in Blanca y Roja this fall!
➽ The Sweet Trade by Natalie C. Parker - ★★★
“Clara Elizabeth Byrd had been married twice by the age of sixteen and she had decided she had no taste for it.”
1717 USA, Virginia - I enjoyed this one, I just didn’t love this one. Clara is a runaway bride, who is sailing away for a getaway, when she comes across another girl that is running from the same future that neither one of them envision for themselves. Obviously a really cute w/w relationship blooms, and both girls have hopes and dreams of ruling the seas together as pirate queens disguised as kings. And this makes me excited to read this author’s LGBTQIAP+ pirate story, Seafire, this summer!
➽ And They Don’t Kiss At the End by Nilah Magruder - ★★★★
“I like what I like and I don’t like what I don’t. I have nothing to apologize for.”
1976 USA, Maryland - This was so smartly created for this anthology. From the title, to Pride & Prejudice, to skating, to the music, to the amazing rep; this was nothing but a joy to read. This was a gift sent from above. This story features an ownvoices black main character, who is trying to figure out her sexual orientation, but she knows she’s on the ace spectrum. Hell, it’s hard enough for aro and ace kids to figure out their sexual ID even in 2018, and in the 70s there isn’t even a name for it. But this was the sweetest story, that even made me shed a few tears. Also, there was the Filipino boy in this who was a confirmed cinnamon roll. But, please, I want a full-length story of Dee!
➽ Burnt Umber by Mackenzi Lee - ★★★★
“I am the boy most accomplished at not becoming distracted by the first naked woman we draw. Which is something, I suppose.”
1638 Netherlands, Amsterdam - Okay, this one was actually super funny. I was having a dang giggle while reading this one. And I felt like the main character talked a lot like I would in his situation, and, Lord, help me, I loved it. This one stars a boy in a prestigious painting class and, from the quote above, you can probably tell what they’re painting next. There is minor bullying in this, and an important discussion on how dangerous coming out was back then (and still can be). But the story really gets started when the main characters crush is the next subject they are about to draw.
➽ The Dresser & The Chambermaid by Robin Talley - ★★★
“Susanna was accustomed to creeping about the palace in the dark.”
1726 England, London, Kensington Palace - This wasn’t my favorite story in the anthology, but I loved the setting so much. At this point, I think Robin Talley is the queen of atmosphere, and she proves it again in this short story. This is about two girls who are both servants to a very demanding young princess. One has lived her entire life in the castle, and the other is brand new and needs the assistance of the other to know how the princess likes her hair. This is a cute w/w romance, and I’d love to read more. Also, this was super sex positive, and I always appreciate that!
➽ New Year by Malinda Lo - ★★★★
“Tommy Andrews, the male impersonator, brings something different in nightclub entertainment…”
1955 USA, California, San Francisco- This is a story about a (ownvoices) Chinese-American girl discovering who she is, and what her sexuality is, growing up in Chinatown. It also happens to be the Chinese New Year, and someone catches her eye when they walk into her friend’s restaurant. And I need this full story now! Ahhh, especially with that ending! But this was a great read, even though it was romance free, and it discussed so many important topics about immigration, and deportation, and how badly we treat immigrants, even in 2018. It also was a very feminist and empowering short story, and I loved the author’s note at the end of this one. I desperately need to read more by Malinda Lo.
➽ Molly’s Lips by Dahlia Adler - ★★
“She’ll never love me like she loves a man she’ll never meet.”
1994 USA, Washington, Seattle - This had everything that I should have loved. I love everything 90s, especially grunge music, and the entire aesthetic just seemed like something I’d enjoy, as morbid as that probably sounds. This is a story about two girls grieving the death of Kurt Cobain, in the place where grunge music was born. And I loved the writing style, I just thought the story left a lot to be desired. I love me a good w/w best friends to lovers story, and I love the message that music truly has healing powers, but this one was just a bit boring for me. Which kind of breaks my heart, because I do really love Nirvana.
➽ The Coven by Kate Scelsa - ★★
“It was Gertrude Stein who first introduced us to the coven.”
1920s France, Paris - This is about a girl grieving the loss of her brother and dealing with the depression that no doctor is able to diagnose. She then finds a coven with her girlfriend, that helps young girls like her. And I guess the w/w romance was cute, but this one just read so very boring for me personally.
➽ Every Shade of Red by Elliot Wake - ★★★★★
“If I must lie to the world to be true to my heart, then I’ll lie. I’ll cheat, I’ll steal and I’ll do it with a smile. Love is the only higher power I answer to, and my love is no less for being chaste.”
1300s England | - I thought this was going to be good, but it ended up being perfect. This is an awesome Robin Hood retelling. And Robin in this story is a trans boy, who is in love with our main protagonist, who ran away from a father that didn’t accept him. And this m/m romance had me swooning. Also, our main protagonist is hearing impaired and seeing him sign on page was something so magical to me. And the ending? I still feel absolutely gutted. But the heart of this story is about love; the love we have for others, but also the love that we must find in accepting ourselves for who we are. This was so brilliantly done and was honestly perfection in every way, and I loved it more than any combination of words I can come up with.
➽ Willows by Scott Tracey - ★★
“That is the secret to survival. Teach fear to those who taught you to be afraid.”
1732 USA, Massachusetts | - This just didn’t work for me in the slightest. Maybe it was me and my reading comprehension, but this felt so incohesive to me and was super hard to follow. But it had witches in it? And being scared because of the way witches were dealt with back in the 1700s Massachusetts. But it was sort of like an exploration of a person that has been different people in different lives, while exploring gender, too. And in the end, they are in a relationship with a guy, and they run away together. But this just was so not for me in any way.
➽ The Girl with the Blue Lantern by Tess Sharpe - ★★★★★
“And I am yours […] always.”
1839 USA, Northern California | - This was everything I wanted. This was whimsical, this was lyrical, and this was perfect. I would buy and read anything, and everything set in this world, and in those woods. Also, this is one of the few stories in the anthology that felt like a full story. This was beyond words good, and I had full body goosebumps at the very end of the story. This story centers around a young girl, with an abusive father, that lives in a town that fears going into the woods. Well, one day, after her dog escapes into said woods, the girl ventures in to find him and meets a girl who is not human (and there is no confirmation, but I want to yell at you all “FAE GIRL!”) And I was so invested in this tale. And I was so into the friendship, turned into something more between these very different girls, who both bond over feeling alone. This is easily one of my favorites in this entire collection.
➽ The Secret Life of a Teenage Boy by Alex Sanchez - ★★★★
“…Ready to tell Mom and Dad the thing they already know.”
1969 USA, Virginia | - This is about a boy who loves his family dearly but doesn’t know how to let them know that he is not straight. Him and his sister are really close, which I love, because my brother has always and will always be my best friend. And one day, a car breaks down outside their home, and our main character spends time with the young driver, while waiting for someone to repair the vehicle. Okay, I really liked this one, because even though this was set twenty years before I was born, I still remember a lot of the homophobia that went on in this story. And just seeing this boy finally seeing someone that is happy and confident with their sexuality, and wanting to run away and be that too? That evoked some emotion from me. And this just felt like such accurate representation of all the thoughts you have when you’re young and discovering your sexuality (at least for me, personally) and I really enjoyed this one.
➽ Walking After Midnight by Kody Keplinger - ★★★
“I’m never gonna see the world or do anything people will remember.”
1952 USA, New York | - This one was super adorable, I just didn’t fall in love with it the same way I did some of the other stories in this collection. This is about an actress, that is starting to feel past her prime, and she misses her train connection in a small town. A girl who is closing up a nearby diner see’s the girl and offers her somewhere to stay. This is a cute story about knowing your worth, and knowing what you want from life, and not letting anyone tell you differently. Also, I believe the main character could possibly be on the ace spectrum, so that’s awesome too! But I wish we could have seen both of these characters a year from when they first met.
➽ The End of the World As We Know It by Sara Farizan - ★★★★★
“...to think that on the eve of the apocalypse, I’m wasting my last hours watching Carson Daly in Times Square awkwardly burgeoning pop star Mandy Moore the most banal of questions.”
1999 USA, Massachusetts, Boston | - You all, this one made me feel so… old… but so seen. Holy moly, so seen. Okay, I was a lot younger than the main protagonist in 1999, but I remember it. I was still in elementary school, but everyone was freaking out and I remember my parents being freaked out about the banks and them stocking up on bottled water and things like that! Also, me and my friends thought we were the absolute coolest, and we would always rush home after school to watch TRL, because we had to know if Blink 182 would actually beat Britney or Christina to number 1 that day. Also, this story mentions Aaliyah, who me and my best friend were obsessed with. Like, so obsessed with that she made it her daughter’s middle name when she was born a few years ago. And I also remember Matthew Shepard and what happened to him, and it being one of the first tragedies I actually remember happening. And it shook me, even as a little kid, to my very core. This is about a girl who is a senior in high school, and she is home on New Year’s Eve with her parents. Well, until her best friend who she hasn’t spoken to recently comes over. And a cute w/w romance brews. TL;DR – I’m giving this five stars because 1.) I loved it with my whole heart, but 2.) this was my very early adolescence, and around the time I started to realize that I wasn’t straight, so this story just really spoke to me.
➽ Three Witches by Tessa Gratton - ★★★★★
“The ease with which s beautiful girl can seduce Violante has been the core of her troubles all her life.”
1519 Spain, Burgos, Castile | - Tessa Gratton is such a talented writer, and when I read her writing it feels truly like I’m reading art. This story is a bit of a darker one, because it’s about a girl in conversion therapy that is being administered by the Catholic church. And we get to see a relationship with our main character, Violante, and one of the nuns. This was powerful, this was haunting, and it truly is something I won’t be able to get out of my head. And I will always choose love, and I hope you all do too.
➽ The Inferno & the Butterfly by Shaun David Hutchinson - ★★★★★
“And it was in that moment that I understood what it meant to be loved.”
1839 London | - The last sentence of this story. God, I’m still weeping. This was such a masterpiece. I loved this with the sum of my entire being. This was the first thing I’ve ever read by Shaun David Hutchinson, and I promise it won’t be the last. This is a short story about two rivaling magician assistances, both learning to live with the pain from their pasts. Their paths cross, and they start to see that life doesn’t have to be all pain, and that everyone is worthy of love. I want more. No, I need more. I feel so in love with this world, this magic, and these two boys who completely captivated me and stole my heart. This was my favorite in the entire collection. This story alone makes the entire collection worth the purchase.
➽ Healing Rosa by Tehlor Kay Mejia - ★★★★★
“Rose was a summer girl, and I was a winter girl, but that fall we made magic.”
1933 USA, New Mexico | - This one was very powerful! This is an ownvoices latinx short story about a girl, whose grandmother was believed to be a bruja, and another girl who she can’t help but show her feelings for, regardless of what the girl’s father thinks, and regardless of what the demon inside her feels. And the magical realism in this was a blessing to my eyes and my soul. Beautiful, so beautiful. And this just was so unapologetically LGBTQIAP+ and it just raised me up, and made me feel so happy, and reminded me to never feel shame. God, I just loved this one so much. And these two girls were my favorite couple in the entire anthology.
Overall, I loved this. And representation always matters, but it especially matters to kids that feel alone and feel like what they are feeling, or who they are, is wrong. LGBTQIAP+ isn’t a trend, or a theme, and it sure and the hell isn’t anything new. And no matter how much history books want to pretend we didn’t exist back then, they will always be wrong.
5.0 out of 5 starsThis was a blessing to read. This is a historical literature short story collection, showcasing LGBTQIAP+ characters. And all of the authors that contributed to this collection are LGBTQIAP+ and that is something that I don’t even have words for. I am forever thankful that Saundra Mitchell curated this, that Harlequin published this, and that kids and teens everywhere are going to be able to pick this up and know that they are never alone and that they have never been alone, throughout history.5/5
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2018
These stories also are set all over the world, even though the majority of them do take place in The United States. I do personally wish that we had a little more variety, but the stories themselves are super important and I feel very privileged that I was able to read them. My only other minor complaint is that I also wish that there was a pansexual character. I get no titles were used in many of these stories, but I still wish there were bigger hints and/or possibilities that would have personally made my pan heart happy.
My personal favorite was The Inferno & the Butterfly by Shaun David Hutchinson. It was so beautifully written, the messages were expertly woven in, and the characters are two that I won’t forget anytime soon. Roja by Anna-Marie McLemore and Every Shade of Red by Elliot Wake were super close to also being my favorite. And both of these stories are ones I will carry in my heart forever. And I truly believe, without a doubt, that these three short stories are worth the entire price of this anthology alone!
I'm going to break down each short story with my thoughts, opinions, and individual star rating!
➽ Roja by Anna-Marie McLemore - ★★★★★
“I wanted them to know that I was my abuela’s granddaughter, that carried the blood of poison girls.”
1870 Mexico - I wish every anthology that I will ever read for the rest of my life started with a story by Anna-Marie McLemore. The beauty, the power, the magic in her words. It is something I can’t find words for, but it makes me feel everything. Absolutely everything. This story centers around an ownvoices Latinx main character, who is trying to get her trans lover out of jail. This story discusses trans issues and does it so well, and even though I am cis, I was still blown away at what this author was able to accomplish with this masterpiece of a short story. And the w/w romance in this is so awe-inspiring and just so heartwarming. I loved it. And I loved this so very much. There is also so much beautiful magical realism in this, that deals with poison, and it has me super hyped to read more about it in Blanca y Roja this fall!
➽ The Sweet Trade by Natalie C. Parker - ★★★
“Clara Elizabeth Byrd had been married twice by the age of sixteen and she had decided she had no taste for it.”
1717 USA, Virginia - I enjoyed this one, I just didn’t love this one. Clara is a runaway bride, who is sailing away for a getaway, when she comes across another girl that is running from the same future that neither one of them envision for themselves. Obviously a really cute w/w relationship blooms, and both girls have hopes and dreams of ruling the seas together as pirate queens disguised as kings. And this makes me excited to read this author’s LGBTQIAP+ pirate story, Seafire, this summer!
➽ And They Don’t Kiss At the End by Nilah Magruder - ★★★★
“I like what I like and I don’t like what I don’t. I have nothing to apologize for.”
1976 USA, Maryland - This was so smartly created for this anthology. From the title, to Pride & Prejudice, to skating, to the music, to the amazing rep; this was nothing but a joy to read. This was a gift sent from above. This story features an ownvoices black main character, who is trying to figure out her sexual orientation, but she knows she’s on the ace spectrum. Hell, it’s hard enough for aro and ace kids to figure out their sexual ID even in 2018, and in the 70s there isn’t even a name for it. But this was the sweetest story, that even made me shed a few tears. Also, there was the Filipino boy in this who was a confirmed cinnamon roll. But, please, I want a full-length story of Dee!
➽ Burnt Umber by Mackenzi Lee - ★★★★
“I am the boy most accomplished at not becoming distracted by the first naked woman we draw. Which is something, I suppose.”
1638 Netherlands, Amsterdam - Okay, this one was actually super funny. I was having a dang giggle while reading this one. And I felt like the main character talked a lot like I would in his situation, and, Lord, help me, I loved it. This one stars a boy in a prestigious painting class and, from the quote above, you can probably tell what they’re painting next. There is minor bullying in this, and an important discussion on how dangerous coming out was back then (and still can be). But the story really gets started when the main characters crush is the next subject they are about to draw.
➽ The Dresser & The Chambermaid by Robin Talley - ★★★
“Susanna was accustomed to creeping about the palace in the dark.”
1726 England, London, Kensington Palace - This wasn’t my favorite story in the anthology, but I loved the setting so much. At this point, I think Robin Talley is the queen of atmosphere, and she proves it again in this short story. This is about two girls who are both servants to a very demanding young princess. One has lived her entire life in the castle, and the other is brand new and needs the assistance of the other to know how the princess likes her hair. This is a cute w/w romance, and I’d love to read more. Also, this was super sex positive, and I always appreciate that!
➽ New Year by Malinda Lo - ★★★★
“Tommy Andrews, the male impersonator, brings something different in nightclub entertainment…”
1955 USA, California, San Francisco- This is a story about a (ownvoices) Chinese-American girl discovering who she is, and what her sexuality is, growing up in Chinatown. It also happens to be the Chinese New Year, and someone catches her eye when they walk into her friend’s restaurant. And I need this full story now! Ahhh, especially with that ending! But this was a great read, even though it was romance free, and it discussed so many important topics about immigration, and deportation, and how badly we treat immigrants, even in 2018. It also was a very feminist and empowering short story, and I loved the author’s note at the end of this one. I desperately need to read more by Malinda Lo.
➽ Molly’s Lips by Dahlia Adler - ★★
“She’ll never love me like she loves a man she’ll never meet.”
1994 USA, Washington, Seattle - This had everything that I should have loved. I love everything 90s, especially grunge music, and the entire aesthetic just seemed like something I’d enjoy, as morbid as that probably sounds. This is a story about two girls grieving the death of Kurt Cobain, in the place where grunge music was born. And I loved the writing style, I just thought the story left a lot to be desired. I love me a good w/w best friends to lovers story, and I love the message that music truly has healing powers, but this one was just a bit boring for me. Which kind of breaks my heart, because I do really love Nirvana.
➽ The Coven by Kate Scelsa - ★★
“It was Gertrude Stein who first introduced us to the coven.”
1920s France, Paris - This is about a girl grieving the loss of her brother and dealing with the depression that no doctor is able to diagnose. She then finds a coven with her girlfriend, that helps young girls like her. And I guess the w/w romance was cute, but this one just read so very boring for me personally.
➽ Every Shade of Red by Elliot Wake - ★★★★★
“If I must lie to the world to be true to my heart, then I’ll lie. I’ll cheat, I’ll steal and I’ll do it with a smile. Love is the only higher power I answer to, and my love is no less for being chaste.”
1300s England | - I thought this was going to be good, but it ended up being perfect. This is an awesome Robin Hood retelling. And Robin in this story is a trans boy, who is in love with our main protagonist, who ran away from a father that didn’t accept him. And this m/m romance had me swooning. Also, our main protagonist is hearing impaired and seeing him sign on page was something so magical to me. And the ending? I still feel absolutely gutted. But the heart of this story is about love; the love we have for others, but also the love that we must find in accepting ourselves for who we are. This was so brilliantly done and was honestly perfection in every way, and I loved it more than any combination of words I can come up with.
➽ Willows by Scott Tracey - ★★
“That is the secret to survival. Teach fear to those who taught you to be afraid.”
1732 USA, Massachusetts | - This just didn’t work for me in the slightest. Maybe it was me and my reading comprehension, but this felt so incohesive to me and was super hard to follow. But it had witches in it? And being scared because of the way witches were dealt with back in the 1700s Massachusetts. But it was sort of like an exploration of a person that has been different people in different lives, while exploring gender, too. And in the end, they are in a relationship with a guy, and they run away together. But this just was so not for me in any way.
➽ The Girl with the Blue Lantern by Tess Sharpe - ★★★★★
“And I am yours […] always.”
1839 USA, Northern California | - This was everything I wanted. This was whimsical, this was lyrical, and this was perfect. I would buy and read anything, and everything set in this world, and in those woods. Also, this is one of the few stories in the anthology that felt like a full story. This was beyond words good, and I had full body goosebumps at the very end of the story. This story centers around a young girl, with an abusive father, that lives in a town that fears going into the woods. Well, one day, after her dog escapes into said woods, the girl ventures in to find him and meets a girl who is not human (and there is no confirmation, but I want to yell at you all “FAE GIRL!”) And I was so invested in this tale. And I was so into the friendship, turned into something more between these very different girls, who both bond over feeling alone. This is easily one of my favorites in this entire collection.
➽ The Secret Life of a Teenage Boy by Alex Sanchez - ★★★★
“…Ready to tell Mom and Dad the thing they already know.”
1969 USA, Virginia | - This is about a boy who loves his family dearly but doesn’t know how to let them know that he is not straight. Him and his sister are really close, which I love, because my brother has always and will always be my best friend. And one day, a car breaks down outside their home, and our main character spends time with the young driver, while waiting for someone to repair the vehicle. Okay, I really liked this one, because even though this was set twenty years before I was born, I still remember a lot of the homophobia that went on in this story. And just seeing this boy finally seeing someone that is happy and confident with their sexuality, and wanting to run away and be that too? That evoked some emotion from me. And this just felt like such accurate representation of all the thoughts you have when you’re young and discovering your sexuality (at least for me, personally) and I really enjoyed this one.
➽ Walking After Midnight by Kody Keplinger - ★★★
“I’m never gonna see the world or do anything people will remember.”
1952 USA, New York | - This one was super adorable, I just didn’t fall in love with it the same way I did some of the other stories in this collection. This is about an actress, that is starting to feel past her prime, and she misses her train connection in a small town. A girl who is closing up a nearby diner see’s the girl and offers her somewhere to stay. This is a cute story about knowing your worth, and knowing what you want from life, and not letting anyone tell you differently. Also, I believe the main character could possibly be on the ace spectrum, so that’s awesome too! But I wish we could have seen both of these characters a year from when they first met.
➽ The End of the World As We Know It by Sara Farizan - ★★★★★
“...to think that on the eve of the apocalypse, I’m wasting my last hours watching Carson Daly in Times Square awkwardly burgeoning pop star Mandy Moore the most banal of questions.”
1999 USA, Massachusetts, Boston | - You all, this one made me feel so… old… but so seen. Holy moly, so seen. Okay, I was a lot younger than the main protagonist in 1999, but I remember it. I was still in elementary school, but everyone was freaking out and I remember my parents being freaked out about the banks and them stocking up on bottled water and things like that! Also, me and my friends thought we were the absolute coolest, and we would always rush home after school to watch TRL, because we had to know if Blink 182 would actually beat Britney or Christina to number 1 that day. Also, this story mentions Aaliyah, who me and my best friend were obsessed with. Like, so obsessed with that she made it her daughter’s middle name when she was born a few years ago. And I also remember Matthew Shepard and what happened to him, and it being one of the first tragedies I actually remember happening. And it shook me, even as a little kid, to my very core. This is about a girl who is a senior in high school, and she is home on New Year’s Eve with her parents. Well, until her best friend who she hasn’t spoken to recently comes over. And a cute w/w romance brews. TL;DR – I’m giving this five stars because 1.) I loved it with my whole heart, but 2.) this was my very early adolescence, and around the time I started to realize that I wasn’t straight, so this story just really spoke to me.
➽ Three Witches by Tessa Gratton - ★★★★★
“The ease with which s beautiful girl can seduce Violante has been the core of her troubles all her life.”
1519 Spain, Burgos, Castile | - Tessa Gratton is such a talented writer, and when I read her writing it feels truly like I’m reading art. This story is a bit of a darker one, because it’s about a girl in conversion therapy that is being administered by the Catholic church. And we get to see a relationship with our main character, Violante, and one of the nuns. This was powerful, this was haunting, and it truly is something I won’t be able to get out of my head. And I will always choose love, and I hope you all do too.
➽ The Inferno & the Butterfly by Shaun David Hutchinson - ★★★★★
“And it was in that moment that I understood what it meant to be loved.”
1839 London | - The last sentence of this story. God, I’m still weeping. This was such a masterpiece. I loved this with the sum of my entire being. This was the first thing I’ve ever read by Shaun David Hutchinson, and I promise it won’t be the last. This is a short story about two rivaling magician assistances, both learning to live with the pain from their pasts. Their paths cross, and they start to see that life doesn’t have to be all pain, and that everyone is worthy of love. I want more. No, I need more. I feel so in love with this world, this magic, and these two boys who completely captivated me and stole my heart. This was my favorite in the entire collection. This story alone makes the entire collection worth the purchase.
➽ Healing Rosa by Tehlor Kay Mejia - ★★★★★
“Rose was a summer girl, and I was a winter girl, but that fall we made magic.”
1933 USA, New Mexico | - This one was very powerful! This is an ownvoices latinx short story about a girl, whose grandmother was believed to be a bruja, and another girl who she can’t help but show her feelings for, regardless of what the girl’s father thinks, and regardless of what the demon inside her feels. And the magical realism in this was a blessing to my eyes and my soul. Beautiful, so beautiful. And this just was so unapologetically LGBTQIAP+ and it just raised me up, and made me feel so happy, and reminded me to never feel shame. God, I just loved this one so much. And these two girls were my favorite couple in the entire anthology.
Overall, I loved this. And representation always matters, but it especially matters to kids that feel alone and feel like what they are feeling, or who they are, is wrong. LGBTQIAP+ isn’t a trend, or a theme, and it sure and the hell isn’t anything new. And no matter how much history books want to pretend we didn’t exist back then, they will always be wrong.
Images in this review
- Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2021So unsurprisingly I loved this anthology a ridiculous amount. The historical settings and time frames were a delight, and I loved the breadth of diversity we got here. I look forward to seeing even more diverse queer folks in the later books in this anthology series, but for a first installment, it was off to a great start.
As always, I am drawn a bit less to the more contemporary settings without fantasy elements than I was to the others/older historical settings, but honestly, even those were still really well done in my opinion. Everything had a great perspective, and I wasn't really unsatisfied by any of the stories which is always a challenge with a short story collection.
There will always be standouts to a collection though, and this time I think they were "Roja" by Anna-Marie McLemore, "The Dresser and the Chambermaid" by Robin Talley, "Willows" by Scott Tracey, and "Healing Rosa" by Tehlor Kay Mejia!
- Reviewed in the United States on October 1, 20193.5 stars! Read this during pride month and enjoyed it.
**•̩̩͙✩•̩̩͙*˚˚*•̩̩͙✩•̩̩͙*˚*-**•̩̩͙✩•̩̩͙*˚˚*•̩̩͙✩•̩̩͙*˚*-**•̩̩͙✩•̩̩͙*˚˚*•̩̩͙✩•̩̩͙*˚*
Roja (Anna-Marie Mclemore): ★★★★☆
A red riding hood retelling??? Sign me the heck up. I loved the premise of this story so much.
The Sweet Trade (Natalie C. Parker): ★★★★★
LESBIAN PIRATES!!!!!! GOOD CONTENT!!!!!
And They Don’t Kiss in the End (Nilah Magruder): ★★★☆☆
Asexual rep!!!! This was such a nice story with some cute interactions.
Burnt Umber (Mackenzi Lee): ★★★★☆
This story made me soft. We love gay artist boys.
The Dresser & The Chambermaid (Robin Talley): ★★★★☆
I'm really enjoying all these great lesbian stories. The media really does lesbians dirty with rep in movies so this book is really satisfying.
New Year (Malinda Lo): ★★★☆☆
Gay awakenings but make it wholesome.
Molly's Lips (Dahlia Adler): ★★★☆☆
Nirvana and lesbians.... Good.
The Coven (Kate Scelsa): ★★★☆☆
WILD.
Every Shade of Red (Elliot Wake): ★★★★☆
Trans Robin Hood!!!!!!!!! WHAT A CONCEPT I LOVE IT.
Willows (Scott Tracey): ★★★☆☆
I enjoyed the Salem trials-esque feel this story had.
The Girl with the Blue Lantern (Tess Sharpe): ★★★★☆
This reminded me of the fables my mom used to tell me before bed, except more gay.
The Secret Life of a Teenage Boy (Alex Sanchez): ★★★★☆
Should be called the not so secret life of a teenage boy cuz his whole family knew he wanted to run off with that boy.
Walking After Midnight (Kody Keplinger): ★★★☆☆
These people need to stop inviting strangers into their houses. Like this is cute for the story but I'm worried that bad things are gonna happen to some of them.
The End of the World as We Know It (Sara Farizan): ★★★☆☆
Ex-friends turned lovers. I dig it.
Three Witches (Tessa Gratton): ★★★☆☆
Just eh, it wasn't a really appealing story to me.
The Inferno and the Butterfly (Shaun David Hutchinson): ★★★★☆
Magicians, espionage & gay shenanigans. An excellent story.
Healing Rosa (Tehlor Kay Mejia): ★★★☆☆
Good content!!!
- Reviewed in the United States on August 2, 2019From the very beginning to the end, I loved this book. I fell in love with each character and story and I admired the poetic lovingness capture by all of these incredible authors. Alone in my bedroom during this month of July I was transported to King George's castle, a band of lost boys, the turn of the twentieth century, China Town in the 1950's, Seances, 1930's New Mexico, and many more amazing scenes. I learned several things about History, about Human nature, about love. Identity. Cruelty. The pleasure of having one's lips against yours. I thank God and the pen and the minds of these wondrous people who combined their imaginations and experiences together to produce such a delightful Anthropology. Thank you so Much. I needed this dearly. ALL OF YOU MUST READ THIS!
Top reviews from other countries
- RhiannonReviewed in Canada on March 18, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars A Quick, Good Read
I loved almost all of the stories in this book and constantly talk about them to anyone who will listen. Seriously I love it so much. Not all of them are the same quality but none of them are terrible, some just shone brighter than others. A quick read!
-
SylexlibrisReviewed in Italy on January 12, 2019
3.0 out of 5 stars 3.3 🌟
Roja: 3.9 🌟
The Sweet Trade: 3.8 🌟
And They Don't Kiss at the End: 3 🌟
Burnt Umber: 5 🌟
The Dresser & the Chambermaid: 3.3 🌟
New Year: 2.9 🌟
Molly's Lips: 3.5 🌟
The Coven: 3.9 🌟
Every Shade of Red: 4.5 🌟
Willows: 2.9 🌟
The Girl with the Blue Lantern: 3.5 🌟
The Secret Life of a Teenage Boy: 3.3 🌟
Walking After Midnight: 3 🌟
The End of the World As We Know It: 2.5 🌟
Three Witches: 2.8 🌟
The Inferno & the Butterfly: 4.8 🌟
Healing Rosa: 2.9 🌟
In generale mi è piaciuta abbastanza come raccolta, niente da dire, ho apprezzato molto come sono state descritte alcune delle mie epoche preferite e alcuni temi di cui sono appassionata (la magia, Kurt Cobain, le streghe) però purtroppo il libro ha una grossissima pecca a parer mio.
So che il lesbismo non viene trattato moltissimo nella letteratura contemporanea e sono la prima a dire che andrebbe approfondito e fatto vedere di più, però se un libro viene venduto come raccolta di novelle queer e che quindi spaziano molto tra gli orientamenti sessuali, io mi aspetto di trovare una certa varietà.
Non dico che ogni novella avrebbe dovuto affrontare un orientamento diverso, ma praticamente quasi tutte avevano come protagoniste delle "semplici" ragazze omosessuali cisgender.
Avrei preferito una diversità maggiore anche se alla fine non è che le novelle non mi siano piaciute, a parte qualcuna.
La migliore ovviamente è stata quella di Mackenzi Lee ♡
E quella su Robin Hood mi ha fatto venire un infarto, non si finiscono così le novelle 😭😭
- Hannah ThetfordReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 21, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars This is a wonderful collection of stories about
This is a wonderful collection of stories about, as it says on the tin, queer teens throughout the ages - and not just white, abled, cisgender, allosexual teens either. I’m white and abled and allocishet so I can’t speak for any of the rep, but rep does exist for:
Sexuality: f/f relationship or lesbian/sapphic MC x10, m/m relationship or gay MC x5
Ace-spec: Ace MC (heteromantic), Ace LI (homoromantic), AroAce side character
Gender: Trans boy LI x2, genderfluid(?) MC (this one is a bit ambiguous)
Race: Latinx MC x3, Black MC, Filippino LI, Chinese MC, Turkish American MC, various POC side characters (some of which are also queer)
Disability: deaf MC
I’d have liked a little more diversity in the settings (one story is set in Mexico and the others are all in the USA or western Europe) but I really enjoyed the stories themselves. A number of them have fantasy elements which I wasn’t expecting, but it worked for me so no complaints here!
If I was just averaging out how I felt about each story I’d give this collection 4 stars but as a whole I’m giving it five because there are definitely some 5 star stories in there and because we need more books like this one. (I found out via Saundra Mitchell’s twitter page that not only is every author who contributed queer, but so is the editor and the agent and practically everyone else involved with the book, and that’s just awesome.)
One person found this helpfulReport - SantaReviewed in Germany on September 3, 2021
4.0 out of 5 stars lovely stories
Some of the stories were better than others, and sometimes it was hard to understand what was happening exactly, but all in all, it was a nice book. I woudnt say that all the stories were amazing, but some of them really made me wish for a full book of not just a short fragment.
- Martin EscalanteReviewed in Mexico on April 21, 2025
3.0 out of 5 stars ok
ok