Tag: romance

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Rainbow Reading List: The Best WLW Books to Add to Your 2023 TBR

In this article, we will highlight some of the best WLW books to read in 2023, offering a range of recommendations for readers of all tastes and interests.

The Settled Homeless by Rover V

The Settled Homeless is really an amazing book to read since it is inhabited by a plethora of excellent characters, and everyone of them is well-developed and fascinating in their own unique ways. In many ways, when described, they sound like ordinary book characters, but they are each fresh and fully realized, fully human.

Lies Look Like Love by Bijaya Kumar Mishra

Lies Look Like Love is a mind-bending whirligig of a novel that is fiendishly smart and full of twists and turns. It's a hall of mirrors where everything, even the people who live there, is a distorted image of themselves.

The Mistakes I Never Forget by Karthick Hemabushanam

This story was vulnerable, dramatic, romantic and honest. The characters were well developed and easy to form relationships with, the plot line was smooth and strong. I liked the subtle hints of romance that didn’t take over the story and left it sweet and tender. I also enjoyed how the romance was slowly built up over the course of the novel and how it just brought everything together.

Messily Married by Abhishek Bhattacharya

Told in alternating timelines, we see how Shreya and Abhinav meet, fall in love and ultimately find their marriage falling apart. What happens when love is no longer enough? Messily Married tells the story of two soul mates who met, fall in love and built a future together. A future which led to marriage and starting a family.

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Molka by Monika Kim

Molka by Monika Kim is the brutal Korean horror novel about voyeurism, ghosts, and overdue revenge. What works, what stumbles, and who should read it.

Blood Bound by Ellis Hunter

Blood Bound by Ellis Hunter is the debut high-stakes fantasy about a witch princess and a dragon heir trapped in a centuries-old duel. Honest praise, fair critique, and similar reads inside.

We Burned So Bright by T.J. Klune

In We Burned So Bright by T.J. Klune, Don and Rodney drive west across a dying America to keep one last promise. A quieter, sadder Klune novel about parenting, grief, queer love, and whether your best is ever enough.

King of Gluttony by Ana Huang

Ana Huang's sixth Kings of Sin book gives Sebastian Laurent and Maya Singh the rivals-to-lovers stage they have been waiting for. A forced collaboration, sharp banter, lush food writing, and a careful slow burn make King of Gluttony a satisfying read, even if a familiar third-act beat and a saggy middle keep it from full marks.

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