Butterfly Soup [free download]
My self-indulgent mess of a second game! It’s about gay asian girls playing baseball and falling in love.
Features:
- harold they’re lesbians
- About 2-3 hours long
- inspired by real life experiences!
- memes (sorry)
wlws:
why are wlw books so angsty and deep all the time like where is my casual wlw romcom or my fantasy lesbians, space bis and trans princesses like not every wlw has some lost love in some town in the middle of nowhere
I live for posts like this, because there are soooo many good f/f books out there that don’t get the attention they deserve because of the way wlw are marginalized. So!
Here are some recs for casual/feel-good f/f representation! All links are to my reviews.
Good Enough to Eat - super cute lesbian vampire rom-com
Promises, Promises - parody of LotR/D&D starring three lesbians on a quest for magical stuff
Everything Leads to You - Hollywood f/f YA about a young set designer who falls for a girl she meets under mysterious circumstances
The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet - ensemble-cast “crew of a spaceship” story. Mostly just random adventures, includes a f/f couple who survive the book.
Roller Girl - contemporary f/f romance about trans woman who joins a roller derby team
Not fluffy, but the angst is SFF-stress rather than “living under homophobia/biphobia” stress:
Ascension - queer disabled ladies fighting Big Pharma in space–you wanted space bi’s, come get your space bi’s (actually, if you want more space bi’s also check out the anthology Fierce Family.)
Chameleon Moon - review is of an earlier edition and I hear the new one has even more great representation. Trans woman superhero with two female partners living in a dystopian city that’s on lockdown from the government after everyone develops mutant powers in response to a wonderdrug.
Not Your Sidekick - in the future, what happens when your parents are superheroes but you never developed powers? You intern for the baddie, of course! MC is bi and ends up in a f/f relationship, and the sequel will star her trans bestie.
Hope this helps. Feel free to browse my “lesbian books” tag for more recs (there are bi/pan girls in some of those recs, too.)
*coughalsoeverythingshiraglassmanwritescough* *coughsuperfuntimescough*
I mean, this is basically true – f/f fluff is kinda the cornerstone of my body of writing :P (Thanks!)
All I Want For Christmas by Clare Lydon - Fluffy wlw romantic comedy (I know it’s not really in season at the moment but it’s so cute)
Gay Pride and Prejudice by Kate Christie - What it says on the tin. Elizabeth Bennett is a lesbian and the haughty Caroline Bingley is the last woman she could ever be prevailed upon to love.
Escape from B-Movie Hell by M.T. McGuire - Silly British sci-fi with a lesbian protagonist
Heart Trouble by Jae - A doctor gets shocked by a defibrillator while saving a woman’s life in the ER. Now they have a soul bond!
Finding Ms Write by Jae & Jove Belle - Collection of short stories about women who love women and also love books.
The Wind City by Summer Wigmore - Urban fantasy drawing on Maori mythology. Protagonist describes herself as “at least 60% gay” and falls in love with a monster girl.
Sword of the Guardian by Merry Shannon - Bi princess and lesbian bodyguard fall in love.
The Case of the Good-for-Nothing Girlfriend by Mabel Maney - Parody detective story about a gang of five lesbians who solve crimes.
A Woman Scorned by Rachel Frank about an assassin who falls in love with a noblewoman (lesbian)
Beauty & Cruelty by Meredith Katz about the evil with falling in love with sleeping beauty (lesbian)
High & Mighty by S.S. Skye - a princess stuck in a tower who is decidely Not Amused about it (lesbian)
Humanity for Beginners by Faith Mudge - Two friends and a halfway house for lesbian werewolves (lesbian)
Hunting a Lady by Cari Z. and Caitlin Ricci - a woman who needs money goes to rescue a kidnapped lady for the reward (lesbian)
Lies & Reverie by Camilla Quinn - A shopkeeper’s daughter who loves to day dream, and the beautiful woman who runs the town (lesbian)
Love Rampage by Alex Powell - a girl in love with her best friend, and the unicorn who helps her (lesbian, trans)
Modern Serpents Talk Things Through by Jamie Brindle - a modern dragon who falls in love with the human who invades her cave (lesbian)
Prom and Other Hazards by Jamie Sullivan - super cute story about a girl, her best friend, and the prom (lesbian, bisexual)
Slaying Dragons by Sasha L. Miller - a frustrated mage, some dragons, and the lovely new partner she’s stuck with (lesbian)
The Broken Forest by Megan Derr - a Huntress, and the beautiful witch she meets dealing with a troublesome forest (lesbian, bisexual, trans)
The Mercenary by Annabelle Kitch - a peasant girl, the princess she loves, a quest to win her princess’s hand in marriage (lesbian)
The Persephone Star by Jamie Sullivan- a proper lady working in the post office, a notorious criminal set on revenge, and a bit of kidnapping (lesbian)
The Secret of Mermaid Cove by Megan Derr - an improper lady, an unwanted engagement, and an island full of secrets
Witch, Cat, and Cobb by J.K. Pendragon - a princess fleeing an arranged marriage, a witch, and a cat (lesbian, trans)
Zombies in the East End by Roxanne Dent - steampunk, zombies, and two tough ladies
California Skies by Kalya Bashe - bandits in the wild west, a hunt for jewels, stubborn people (bisexual, genderqueer)
Green Toes by Avery Flanders - gardens, a hint of magic shoes, and people falling in love (bisexual, genderqueer)
i wish there were some famous ya books like the raven cycle, the foxhole court, ari and dante, the song of achilles, pjo, the mortal instruments, i’ll give you the sun but with f/f for instance………. it gets so tiring, like i love the rep but it’s exhausting that there’s literally no f/f rep in popular ya lit
made a tiny picture book for class. i wanted to challenge the idea that girls loving other girls is somehow adult/inappropriate

welcome!!!!!! this is long overdue. i’ve been promising myself i’d made this forever. so here it is - the ultimate masterpost of wlw (women loving women) books. not all characters are lesbians, some are bi or pan, though all books feature f/f relationships and/or themes. there are 150+ recommendations, so enjoy!
YOUNG ADULT CONTEMPORARY:
- the miseducation of cameron post by emily m. danforth
- keeping you a secret by julie anne peters
- grl2grl by julie anne peters
- lies my girlfriend told me by julie anne peters
- far from xanadu by julie anne peters
- rubyfruit jungle by rita mae brown
- annie on my mind by nancy garden
- kissing kate by lauren myracle
- everything leads to you by nina lacour
- dare truth or promise by paula boock
- gravel queen by tea benduhn
- her name in the sky by kelly quindlen
- tell me again how a crush should feel by sara farizan
- no one needs to know by amanda grace
- my best friend, maybe by caela carter
- dirty london by kelley york
- ask the passengers by a.s. king
- empress of the world by sara ryan
- pages for you by sylvia brownrigg
- waiting in the wings by melissa brayden
- breathing underwater by lu vickers
- hood by emma donoghue
- between you & me by marisa calin
- starting from here by lisa jenn bigelow
- about a girl by sarah mccarry
- the flywheel by erin gough
- the necessary hunger by nina revoyr
- the house you pass on the way by jacqueline woodson
- about a girl by joanne horniman
- gravity by leanne lieberman
- another life altogether by elaine beale
- great by sara benincasa
- the gravity between us by kristen zimmer
- taking flight by siera maley
- the road to her by k.e. payne
- the summer i wasn’t me by jessica verdi
- unspeakabe by abbie rushton
- beauty of the broken by tawni waters
- read me like a book by liz kessler
- starring kitty by keris stainton
- holding back by mila kerr
- cam girl by leah raeder
- not otherwise specified by hannah moskowitz
- an unstill life by kate larkindale
- look both ways by alison cherry
- a story of now by emily o’beirne
- my summer of love by helen cross
- marionette by t.b. markinson
- the difference between you and me by madeleine george
- the bermudez triangle by maureen johnson
- girl walking backwards by bett williams
FANTASY/PARANORMAL/SCIENCE FICTION:
- the dark wife by sarah diemer
- twixt by sarah diemer
- the witch sea by sarah diemer
- sugar moon by sarah diemer
- far by sarah diemer
- carmilla by joseph sheridan le fanu
- ash by malinda lo
- huntress by malinda lo
- adaption by malinda lo
- the traitor baru cormorant by seth dickinson
- karen memory by elizabeth bear
- bleeding earth by kaitlin ward
- lady knight by l.j. baker
- the second sister by rae d. magdon
- wild by meghan o’brien
- santa olivia by jacqueline carey
- everafter by nell stark
- iron & velvet by alexis hall
- silver kiss by naomi clark
- with her body by nicola griffith
- ammonite by nicole griffith
- the windup girl by paolo bacigalupi
- a harvest of ripe figs by shira glassman
- seven by jennifer diemer
- braided by elora bishop
- crumbs by elora bishop
- labyrinth by pearl north
- the drowning girl by caitlin r. kiernan
- the red tree by caitlin r. kiernan
- the big lie by julie mayhew
- the first twenty by jennifer lavoie
- the girl in the road by monica byrne
- every dark desire by fiona zedde
CRIME/MYSTERY/THRILLER:
- black iris by leah raeder
- dangerous girls by abigail haas
- far from you by tess sharpe
- slow river by nicola griffith
- the blue place by nicola griffith
- stay by nicola griffith
- vanished by e.e. cooper
- keepers of the cave by gerri hill
- hunter’s way by gerri hill
- child of doors by j.s. little
- scars by cheryl rainfield
- trust me, i’m trouble by mary elizabeth summer
- out of order by casey lawrence
- reconstructing amelia by kimberly mccreight
- vicious little darlings by katherine easer
HISTORICAL:
- the paying guests by sarah waters
- tipping the velvet by sarah waters
- affinity by sarah waters
- the night watch by sarah waters
- fingersmith by sarah waters
- the price of salt by patricia highsmith (also known as carol)
- wildthorn by jane eagland
- silhouette of a sparrow by molly beth griffin
- lies we tell ourselves by robin talley
- patience & sarah by isabel miller
- the hours by michael cunningham
- the well of loneliness by radclyffe hall
- mrs dalloway by virginia woolf
- the world unseen by shamam sarif
- map of ireland by stephanie grant
- hild by nicole griffith
- honey girl by lisa freeman
- letters never sent by sandra moran
- fall on your knees by ann-marie macdonald
- the last nude by ellis avery
- the teahouse fire by ellis avery
- olivia by dorothy strachey
- the friendly young ladies by mary renault
- moon at nine by deborah ellis
- the marriage recital by katharine grant
- the crimson ribbon by katherine clements
- the other typist by suzanne rindell
- days of grace by catherine hall
- desert of the heart by jane rule
ADULT FICTION:
- sing you home by jodi picoult
- and playing the role of herself by k.e. lane
- i can’t think straight by shamim sarif
- stone butch blues by leslie feinberg
- curious wine by katherine v. forrest
- the color purple by alice walker
- jericho by ann mcman
- oranges are not the only fruit by jeanette winterson
- gut symmetries by jeanette winterson
- why be happy when you could be normal? by jeanette winterson
- written on the body by jeanette winterson
- where we belong by catherine ryan hyde
- at the water’s edge by harper bliss
- behind the green curtain by riley lashea
- 96 hours by georgia beers
- all that matters by susan x. meagher
- give me a reason by lyn gardner
- ice by lyn gardner
- my last season with you by s.v.c. ricketts
- taking the long way by lily r. mason
- nightwood by djuna barnes
- living at night by mariana romo-carmona
- choices by nancy toder
- cassandra at the wedding by dorothy baker
- landing by emma donoghue
- stir-fry by emma donoghue
- pitifully ugly by robin alexander
COMICS BOOKS/GRAPHIC NOVELS:
- blue is the warmest colour by julie maroh
- fun home by alison bechdel
- dykes to watch out for by alison bechdel
- honor girl by maggie trash
- skim by mariko tamaki
- potential by ariel shrag
- strangers in paradise by terry moore
NON-FICTION:
- odd girls and twilight lovers by lillian faderman
- surpassing the love of men by lillian faderman
- chloe plus olivia by lillian faderman
- to believe in women by lillian faderman
- sapphistries by leila j. rupp
- inseparable by emma donoghue
- passions between women by emma donoghue
- dear john, i love jane by candace walsh
- a woman like that by joan larkin
- aimee & jaguar by erica fischer
- the femme mystique by leslea newman
- boots of leather, slippers of gold by elizabeth lapovsky kennedy
- different daughters by marcia m. gallo
- between women by sharon marcus
- charity and sylvia by rachel hope cleves
- lesbian culture: an anthology by julia penelope
- alice + freda forever by alexis coe
- behind the mask by matthew dennison
“Were there any straight people in this period of history?”
“Well…obviously speaking, there must have been some people that nowadays we would describe as ‘straight’, but we have to be very careful about applying modern standards of sexuality to the past. I’m sure if you asked anybody at the time if they were straight, they would have been very confused. And there’s something quite dangerous about forcing identities onto people who might not consider themselves that way. You also need to keep in mind that some things that today would seem ‘straight’ to us - like getting married, having children, etc. - were just the way things were back then. Nobody would have thought twice about doing that, including non-straight people. And there were plenty of people who undoubtedly got married, had very intensely emotional connections with their spouse, but then went off to go see their lover. Again, sexuality is a very complex thing, so I wouldn’t presume to state definitively that anybody was ‘straight’, and especially not without good, solid evidence that they were exclusively heterosexual. To presume otherwise would not only be making a lot of assumptions, it might even just promote harmful, overdone stereotypes about what makes someone ‘have’ to be straight, you know? So, yes, technically speaking there were, but I don’t see any reason to specifically consider straight people historically.”