5 Queer Books I’m Reading for Halloween Month

5 Queer Books I’m Reading for Halloween Month

Books

Products You May Like

This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

It’s October, the one month of the year when I join the crowd of horror fans. Something about the weather cooling off, the leaves falling, and the approach of Halloween has me reaching for horror, thrillers, dark fantasy, and everything unsettling. I especially look forward to the October 24-hour readathon, which I’ve been doing every year for more than a decade. It’s the perfect time to read through a big stack of horror comics and novellas in one sitting!

An Education in Malice coverAn Education in Malice cover

Currently, my dresser is covered in stacks of horror books, most of them queer. I save them all year, and I place a bunch of library holds to come on October 1st, so I’m drowning in options. I’m reading An Education in Malice by S. T. Gibson at the moment, a sapphic vampire dark academia novel based on Carmilla, and I’m loving it so far. A Dowry of Blood is one of my favourite books, so that’s not a surprise. I’m also listening to the audiobook of If I Stopped Haunting You by Colby Wilkens, a bi4bi M/F romance between two Indigenous horror authors set in a haunted castle. I’m really enjoying it, partly because Penelope is one of the most stubborn woman main characters I’ve ever read, and I’m here for it.

As I mentioned, I have dozens of queer horror/Halloween books to choose from this month, but here are five of the titles on my TBR, from a queer monster anthology to a trans YA horror novel to an asexual romance set in a haunted house.

Content for paid subscribers continues below.

View original source here.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Digging Up the Scarecrow Horror Hidden Gem
New Mac Miller Album Balloonerism Announced
I Wish Tron: Ares’ Music Was Being Produced By Daft Punk, But The Director’s Latest Tease For The Soundtrack Has Me Hyped
Matthew McConaughey Explained Why His Roles In Rom-Coms Impacted His Decision To Leave Hollywood And Move To Texas
Will Fans Go See Both Wicked And Gladiator II? What Paul Mescal Has To Say About Wickediator