Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

NINE LGBTQ BOOKS TO READ FOR PRIDE MONTH BY GLENNON DOYLE, CAMERON ESPOSITO AND MORE

- BY BARBARA VANDENBURG­H

June is Pride Month, celebratin­g LGBTQ lives and honoring those who stood up for equality at the 1969 Stonewall riots in Manhattan. These nine recently published books celebrate, examine and champion gay lives:

‘Untamed’ by Glennon Doyle

Dial Press, nonfiction, $28

In this inspiratio­nal memoir, motivation­al speaker Glennon Doyle tells the story of divorcing her husband, coming out to her family and finding love with U.S. world Cup soccer star and now-wife Abby Wambach.

‘Good Boy’ by Jennifer Finney Boylan

Celadon Books, nonfiction, $26.99

A memoir (subtitled “My Life in Seven Dogs”) from The New York Times opinion columnist Jennifer Finney Boylan covering her gender transition through her relationsh­ip with seven beloved dogs who were with her at pivotal moments. “Everything I know about love,” Boylan writes, “I learned from dogs.”

‘Save Yourself’ by Cameron Esposito

Grand Central Publishing, nonfiction, $27

Cameron Esposito, the queer standup comic and actress, finds the humor in the fraught, tackling sexuality, gender and equality in this memoir about growing up gay in a devout Catholic home.

‘Something That May Shock and Discredit You’ by Daniel M. Lavery

Atria Books, nonfiction, $26

The co-founder of feminist literary site The Toast and Slate advice columnist — writing here as Daniel Mallory Ortberg — puts his wit and humor on display in a “memoir-adjacent” collection of essays touching on topics as wide-ranging as Lord Byron, the Bible and “House Hunters” in his exploratio­n of self as a transgende­r man.

‘Real Life’ by Brandon Taylor

Riverhead Books, fiction, $26

Wallace — an extremely introverte­d gay black graduate student from Alabama with a history of trauma — is a biochemist­ry student at a Midwestern university that’s rife with racism and homophobia. Everything about him is at odds with his surroundin­gs, and, over the course of an intense weekend, things come to a head.

‘All My Mother’s Lovers’ by Ilana Masad

Dutton, fiction, $27

Maggie’s mother, who was never comfortabl­e with her queer daughter’s sexual orientatio­n, dies in a car crash, leaving behind five sealed envelopes addressed to men the daughter has never heard of. Maggie goes on a road trip to deliver each letter personally — and discover what these men meant to her mother.

‘Once a Girl, Always a Boy’ by Jo Ivester

She Writes Press, fiction, $16.95

When Jeremy Ivester was born, his parents thought they had a daughter. But, over the years, it became clear they’d had a son. This intimate portrait (written by his mother) charts Jeremy’s journey from childhood through transition to his emergence as an advocate for the transgende­r community.

‘Under the Rainbow’ by Celia Laskey

Riverhead Books, fiction, $27

A small town in Kansas, labeled the most homophobic town in the United States, is thrown into turmoil when a group of LGBTQ social activists move there on a crusade to change hearts and minds.

‘Shuggie Bain’ by Douglas Stuart

Grove Press, fiction, $27

Sweet, lonely Shuggie grows up in 1980s Scottish public housing in this heartbreak­ing work of addiction, identity, sexuality and love. The only person who truly loves and accepts him is his mother Agnes, but her allconsumi­ng alcoholism eclipses everything.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Glennon Doyle, the author of “Untamed.”
GETTY IMAGES Glennon Doyle, the author of “Untamed.”
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