Skip to main content

Books of Acceptance

If you've been paying any attention to U.S. politics in the past few days, you know that He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named has won the presidency for the next four years. (Well, technically not yet, but we're not going to discuss that possibility seriously because it gets my hopes up way too much.) He's hateful, bigoted, unqualified, and dangerous. I've been kind of at a loss for what to do, but then I saw Jess @ Curiouser and Curiouser make a post about Books to Encourage Acceptance and Equality, and I absolutely loved it. Here's mine.

(Note: I have more books for most of these categories - I'm just including my favorites or the ones that I think tackle relevant issues particularly well.)

BOOKS WITH CHARACTERS OF COLOR


THE WRATH & THE DAWN DUOLOGY by Renée Ahdieh - Persian-inspired fantasy; almost all major characters are of color (read my review here)
OUTRUN THE MOON by Stacey Lee - set around the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, focusing on a Chinese-American girl trying to get a good education
THE LARA JEAN TRILOGY by Jenny Han - cute, fluffy contemporaries with a biracial protagonist (half Korean, half white)

BOOKS WITH LGBTQ+ CHARACTERS


I'LL GIVE YOU THE SUN by Jandy Nelson - contemporary in which one of two protagonists is gay
SILHOUETTE OF A SPARROW by Molly Beth Griffin - set in the 1920s, with multiple queer female characters, no labels (read my review here)
BEAUTIFUL MUSIC FOR UGLY CHILDREN by Kirstin Cronn-Mills - contemporary, trans guy protagonist

BOOKS WITH CHARACTERS FROM RELIGIOUS MINORITIES


MS. MARVEL SERIES by G. Willow Wilson - main character (and family) are Muslim  
THE BOOK THIEF by Markus Zusak - set in WWII Germany, with a major Jewish character

BOOKS WITH DISABLED CHARACTERS


WHEN WE COLLIDED by Emery Lord - one of two protagonists has bipolar disorder
THIS IS NOT A TEST by Courtney Summers - protagonist has depression

MULTIPLE CATEGORIES


LIES WE TELL OURSELVES by Robin Talley - set in the 1950s; both protagonists are queer women (no labels used), one is black, many black supporting characters
SIMON VS THE HOMO SAPIENS AGENDA by Becky Albertalli - cute, fluffy contemporary; gay protagonist, multiple supporting queer characters (including a minor bisexual character), multiple black supporting characters, Jewish character
THE DIVINERS SERIES by Libba Bray - set in the 1920s; Jewish character, black character, gay character, and two disabled characters, one of whom is biracial (half Chinese, half white), all in the group of major characters


BEEN HERE ALL ALONG by Sandy Hall - cute, fluffy contemporary; one main character is bisexual, the other is Jewish and gay, supporting characters of color and Jewish character (read my review here)
IRON CAST by Destiny Soria - set immediately before Prohibition; one of two main characters is biracial (half black, half white), multiple queer supporting characters (no labels, likely both gay), black supporting character (read my review here)
THE GAME OF LOVE AND DEATH by Martha Brockenbrough - set in the 1930s; one of two main characters is black, lots of black supporting characters, gay supporting character


RUN by Kody Keplinger - contemporary; one of two main characters is disabled (blind), the other is bisexual
THE STEEP AND THORNY WAY by Cat Winters - set in the 1920s; biracial protagonist (half black, half white), major gay character, minor (possible) Jewish character (read my review here)

UPCOMING BOOKS


THE HATE U GIVE by Angie Thomas - black protagonist, black supporting characters
HISTORY IS ALL YOU LEFT ME by Adam Silvera - multiple major queer characters, one of whom has OCD 
How are you doing today? One of the best things to come out of this past week for me has been everybody checking in on each other, and I want to check in on you. How have you been taking care of yourself lately?

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ten Books I Need More People to Love

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly feature at The Broke and Bookish. This week's theme: Top Ten Underrated/Hidden Gem Books You've Read in the Past Year or So. One of my favorite things to do is get other people to read books I love. That way, I can discuss the boo ks with them, and if I know their tastes well enough, I know I'm givin g them something that they'll love! Unfortunately, I can't do this with the entire world. And that means that there are books that I've really enjoyed t hat just aren't widely loved. Why ? I don't know. And that's why I spend so much time trying to get other people to read them. Here are ten books I've read some what recently that I think really deserve some m ore lo ve. IRON CAST by Destiny Soria: I'll never get tired of diverse books, I 'll never get tired of historical fiction, and I'll never get tired of positive female friendships. When you pu t those all together, they ma ke a book tha

Most Anticipated Reads: First Half of 2017

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly feature at The Broke a nd the Bookish . This week's theme : most an ti cipated reads for the first half of 2017. Wow, it's been ages since I've done a most anticipated list! In case you were wondering, my excitement for upcoming books is a s high as ever. It was so hard narrowing this list down to just ten, but I think I figured out the ten books that I'm most excited for in the first half of next year! I have a good mix of sequels and standalones (but onl y one debut, so there won't b e a lo t of overlap wi th the de buts TTT in a few weeks). Here are some of the books that I just can't contain my excitement about : OUR OWN PRIVATE UNIVERSE by Robin Talley - January 31: I love Robin Talley, and this book sounds like it's going to be so good! And it's going to have so much intersectionality! And the colors on that cover are just so aesthetically pleasing. DREAMLAND BURNING by Jennifer Latham - February

In Which I Consider My Ideal Post Length

I seem to be constantly going back and forth between having too many post ideas and not having enough. The thing is, though, that when I don't have a lot of ideas, it usually just means that I don't think I have enough to say about anything to actually make a post. Which poses an interesting question: how long do posts need to be? In particular, I'm thinking about discussion posts. I have a lot of bookish things I want to discuss, and discussion posts seem like one of the best ways to share my thoughts. But sometimes, my thoughts aren't fully-formed, or aren't that complex. I usually shy away from writing about those ideas because I don't think I have enough material to justify a post. But why don't I think I have enough? I've been a little behind on wr iting posts in advance, so it seem ed like I was running into th is question more and more often. And after a while of thinking about that, I had m y little breakthrough : I'm thinking a