Books tagged: lgbt fiction

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Found: 5 results

Something Like Summer    by Jay Bell
Price: $3.99 USD. 95050 words. Published on January 5, 2011. .

Love, like everything in the universe, cannot be destroyed. But over time it can change. The hot Texas nights were lonely for Ben before his heart began beating to the rhythm of two words; Tim Wyman. By all appearances, Tim had the perfect body and ideal life, but when a not-so-accidental collision brings them together, Ben discovers that the truth is rarely so simple.
Refuse    by Elliott  DeLine
You set the price! 80460 words. Published on April 8, 2011. .

‘Funny, cynical, tough, vulnerable, honest, deluded, sagacious, self-loving and self-loathing, Refuse is irresistible.’-Mark Simpson, author of Saint Morrissey.
The Leaving    by Gabriella West
Price: $5.99 USD. 85520 words. Published on May 30, 2011. .

At 15, Cathy is a complex teenager living in 1980s Dublin. She soon discovers that her charming older brother Stevie, who's gay, is falling in love with her classmate Ron, the one boy she likes. Cathy struggles with school, her dysfunctional family, coming to terms with her growing love for her best friend Jeanette, and leaving Ireland. The novel is a realistic look at adolescence and first love.
Twilight of the Immortal    by Marilyn Jaye Lewis
Price: $5.99 USD. 160920 words. Published on September 25, 2011. .

As the Great War tore through Europe in the spring of 1916, the privileged stars of Broadway still wore the height of Paris fashions, danced the tango and drank champagne––and ignited a great debate: Stick to the noble tradition of the theater? Or take the train west to a dusty crossroads called Hollywood and stake one’s fortunes in the new frontier of motion pictures?
Sagebrush & Lace    by J.D. Cutler
Price: $6.99 USD. 94360 words. Published by Banty Hen Publishing on April 26, 2012. .

1876: Time to throw away the corsets and draw down on the Old West. Society calls them Sapphists. Chief Sitting Bull calls them ‘Big Magic’. Buffalo Bill Cody and Wild Bill Hickok call them friends. Pinkerton’s detectives want them alive. Clarke Quantrill’s gang of outlaws want them dead. Two runaway women in a man’s world risk their very lives to be together.