Discover our top guide to the best selling LGBTQ books and add them to your reading list!
A century ago, LGBTQ+ writers could only hint at non-heteronormative relationships and identities. In the last few decades, their voices and perspectives have at last become a respected part of the literary world. In the early years, gay characters were often converted in the plot or met with tragedy.
Table of Contents
Open Table of Contents
- Here Are The Best Selling LGBTQ Books
- 1. The Price of Saltby Patricia Highsmith, 1952
- 2. Giovanniâs Roomby James Baldwin, 1956
- 3. Annie on My Mindby Nancy Garden, 1982
- 4. Fun Home: A Family Tragicomicby Alison Bechdel, 2006
- 5. Call Me By Your Nameby André Aciman, 2007
- 6. The Miseducation of Cameron Postby Emily Danforth, 2012
- 7. Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universeby Benjamin Alire SĂĄenz, 2012
- 8. Red, White, and Royal Blueby Casey McQuiston, 2019
- 9. Detransition, Baby by Torrey Peters, 2021
Here Are The Best Selling LGBTQ Books
1. The Price of Saltby Patricia Highsmith, 1952
Patricia Highsmith via Wikipedia, Public Domain
In Patricia Highsmithâs pioneering tale of lesbian romance, The Price of Salt, a young department store clerk, Therese, has a chance encounter with a disillusioned housewife named Carol. Their meeting sparks a taboo romance, a cross-country chase, and an impossible choice. The novel was immediately met with the LGBT communityâs acclaim because, unlike virtually all previously published gay fiction, this love story does not end in the conversion or tragic death of its queer protagonist. The 2016 film adaptation was nominated for six Academy Awards.
âI feel I stand in a desert with my hands outstretched, and you are raining down upon me.â
Patricia Highsmith, The Price of Salt
2. Giovanniâs Roomby James Baldwin, 1956
James Baldwin via Wikipedia, Public Domain
Itâs the 1950s in Paris, and a young man, David, has just proposed to his girlfriend. While sheâs away, he finds himself in a Bohemian bar, inexplicably drawn to the bartender, a gay man named Giovanni. As Davidâs story unfolds, one of Americaâs most beloved writers, James Baldwin, explores the shortcomings of conventional morality, the complexities of discovering oneâs own identity, and the difficulties of navigating the human heart. Giovanniâs Room was and remained one of Baldwinâs most provocative and powerful works.
âPeople canât, unhappily, invent their mooring posts, their lovers, and their friends, anymore than they can invent their parents. Life gives these and also takes them away and the great difficulty is to say Yes to life.â
James Baldwin, Giovanniâs Room
3. Annie on My Mindby Nancy Garden, 1982
Perhaps no book has done more for young adult LGBT fiction than Nancy Gardenâs groundbreaking Annie on My Mind. Two teenage girls from very different backgrounds in New York City meet at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and form an instant bond that soon blossoms into something more.
Unlike the typical queer cautionary tales of the era, this is a hopeful story about the intoxicating sweetness of first love. This must-read book was banned, burned, and eventually at the center of a federal censorship case. Still, it has endured and become a beloved classic.
âDonât punish yourselves for peopleâs ignorant reactions to what we all are. Donât let ignorance win. Let love.â
Nancy Garden, Annie on My Mind
4. Fun Home: A Family Tragicomicby Alison Bechdel, 2006
Alison Bechdel via Wikipedia, Public Domain
Alison Bechdelâs father was a third-generation mortician running the family funeral home (fun home!) in Beech Creek, Pennsylvania. He was also gay, but Alison wouldnât learn this until she had gone away to college and come out herself. A few weeks later, her father passed away, leaving Alison with more questions than answers.
Equal parts graphic novel, and memoir, Fun Home is Bechdelâs funny, endearing, deeply personal exploration of her relationship with her late father. The book was on the New York Times Bestseller list for two weeks, was made into a Broadway musical, and has received numerous awards, including the LAMBDA Literary Award and the Stonewall Book Award.
âI suppose that a lifetime spent hiding oneâs erotic truth could have a cumulative renunciatory effect. Sexual shame is in itself a kind of death.â
Alison Bechdel, Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic
5. Call Me By Your Nameby André Aciman, 2007
André Aciman via Wikipedia, Public Domain
AndrĂ© Acimanâs Call Me By Your Name is the tale of a sultry summer romance between precocious 17-year-old Elio and Oliver, a 24-year-old graduate student. Set in the Italian Rivera, this coming-of-age story is an achingly real deep dive into the intense passion and heartbreak of first love. Many have expressed concern about the age difference between the characters. Yet, the novel has been internationally lauded as a classic. The 2017 film adaptation of the novel received a standing ovation at both the Sundance Film Festival and the New York Film Festival and was nominated for four Academy Awards.
âIf I could have him like this in my dreams every night of my life, Iâd stake my entire life on dreams and be done with the rest.â
André Aciman, Call Me by Your Name
6. The Miseducation of Cameron Postby Emily Danforth, 2012
When Emily Danforth was 25, a gay teenager named Zach Stark was in the news because his parents had sent him to a religious-based conversion therapy camp against his will. The incident inspired Danforth to write The Miseducation of Cameron Post, a young adult novel about a teenage girl whose family sends her to a similar camp after discovering her lesbian relationship. The book was made into a film that debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in 2018. There it won the festivalâs highest honor, The U.S. Grand Jury Prize.
âMaybe I still havenât become me. I donât know how you tell for sure when you finally have.â
Emily M. Danforth, The Miseducation of Cameron Post
7. Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universeby Benjamin Alire SĂĄenz, 2012
Benjamin Alire SĂĄenz via Wikipedia, Public Domain
Image description: A book cover with an illustration of a vintage red truck parked in a grassy field at dusk. In the dark sky above the truck are script letters that read âAristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe,â surrounded by drawings of hieroglyphics, stars, sun, moon, and other small symbols and geometric patterns.
In Benjamin Alire SĂĄenzâs Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, two teenage boys, who initially seem to have nothing in common but their parentâs affinity for classical names, develop a powerful, beautiful bond. The boys must endure tragedy, heartbreak, and all the complexities of discovering oneâs identity, but what makes this book remarkable is that they have the support of their families along the way. The book won critical acclaim and numerous awards, including the Stonewall Book Award for LGBT fiction. The film adaptation premiered in September of 2022 in Toronto.
âI bet you could sometimes find all the mysteries of the universe in someoneâs hand.â
Benjamin Alire SĂĄenz, Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe
8. Red, White, and Royal Blueby Casey McQuiston, 2019
Casey McQuiston via Wikipedia, Public Domain
Casey Mcquistonâs debut novel, Red, White, and Royal Blue is a hilarious, touching rom-com that became an instant bestseller. The presidentâs son has it all, good looks, charm, and popularity. Still, he also has a nemesis - the equally dashing Prince Henry. When the two are photographed having an altercation, their families attempt to repair the public relations snafu by concocting a made-for-social-media friendship. Little do they know that it will become so much more. The novel made the New York Times Bestseller list in June 2019. Production on the film adaptation concluded in late 2022, and a 2023 release is expected.
âStraight people, he thinks, probably donât spend this much time convincing themselves that theyâre straight.â
Casey McQuiston, Red, White & Royal Blue
9. Detransition, Baby by Torrey Peters, 2021
Torrey Peters via Wikipedia, Public Domain
Image description: A book cover with abstract illustrations of female faces overlapping one another in shades of pink, yellow, blue, and green. The words âNational Bestseller - Detransition, Baby- A Novel - Torrey Petersâ are printed over the faces.
In 2021, Torry Peters became the first openly transgender woman to publish with one of the âbig fiveâ American publishing houses with her novel, Detransition, Baby. The story follows three women grappling with what it means to be female. Reese and Amyâs long-term relationship is falling apart because Amy has recently de-transitioned and become Ames. Ames grapples with the pain of losing Reese by having an affair with his boss, Katrina.
Although a baby was all Reese had hoped for, Katrina was not sure she wanted to continue the pregnancy. Can they find a way to form a modern family? Detransition, Baby was named one of the yearâs best books by more than 20 national publications, including NPR, Time, Vogue, and Esquire.
âMany people think a trans womanâs deepest desire is to live in her true gender, but actually it is to always stand in good lighting.â
Torrey Peters, Detransition, Baby