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Meet the LGBTQ+ Authors Who Are Revolutionizing YA Literature

Meet the LGBTQ+ Authors Who Are Revolutionizing YA Literature

Queer authors part oneQueer YA is having a moment. Walk into any Barnes & Noble and you’ll find an array of bestselling LGBTQ+ novels on the shelves. Books like I’ll Give You the Sun and Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe have won Printz honors and resonated with readers across the world, and a number of highly anticipated YA novels are releasing in 2016.  
Though queer YA is still overwhelmingly white and gay, we’re beginning to see novels that represent more than just the first two letters of the LGBTQIAP acronym. There are now YA novels with prominent characters who identify as bisexual, as pansexual, as intersex, and as asexual. While YA novels with transgender protagonists have existed, many of the best-known have been accused of problematic representation. Recently, however, publishers have given trans YA authors the chance to tell their own stories in novels like Lizard Radio and If I Was Your Girl
That is not to say an overwhelming victory in representation has been won. But it’s worth celebrating the strides we have made—and, in particular, the incredible authors who have shaped the growing genre. 
Today, we’re featuring three such authors; next week, in part two of this series, we’ll highlight three more. All have LGBTQ+ YA novels forthcoming or on the shelves, and all are important activist voices, with stories and identities as diverse as the queer community itself.
A big thank you to our first three featured authors—Fox Benwell, Anna-Marie McLemore, and Erica Cameron.

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Fox Benwell

Fox Benwell 

Fox Benwell is known around Twitter for his tireless queer and disability activism, his dog and cat photos, and his impeccable taste in ties. The author of The Last Leaves Falling (published under the name Sarah Benwell), he is genderfluid transmasculine and has Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/fibromyalgia. Because of the marginalization he has faced, he is committed to creating safe, intersectional spaces for people like him. “It’s important to me to try to be the kind of visible role model I wish I’d always had—to do what I can to make things better for the next generation.”
Growing up, Benwell embraced adventure, whether it was by reading books, climbing trees, or walking through the countryside. He always felt uncomfortable with his perceived gender, but until recently he lacked the language to explain why.
Two years ago, he found the label genderfluid, an umbrella term describing someone who experiences changes in their gender identity. It’s a term that can be “radically different from person to person.” Though he is generally more comfortable in the masculine end of the gender spectrum, it is rare for him to feel wholly male—“there are parts of the male experience I don’t usually identify with.” 
Benwell believes that the most harmful misconception about genderfluid people is the notion that they are confused. Though a non-binary gender “can be a confusing, terrifying thing to navigate,” Benwell says, “we’re very, very aware of our bodies and minds and the way we feel, and we’re as sure of ourselves as anyone else.”
Beyond his gender, Benwell is also disabled, a fact that colors the way he interacts with the queer community. He has Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/fibromyalgia—different doctors have dealt different diagnoses. He is almost always sore and tired, though the severity varies by the day. “Sometimes my limbs don’t work quite the way they should and I’m super clumsy, unsteady, or my fingers won’t type. And sometimes I get brain fog, so tired that I just can’t think.”
He finds that, as a trans, disabled person, he constantly has to request accommodations; he has to correct pronouns and names, or ask for a chair and for breaks. As a society, we often fail to make room for him and for others in both the transgender and disabled communities. This problem is not exclusive to privileged groups, either; Benwell has found that even in marginalized spaces, there isn’t always a place for him. “Finding somewhere that all parts of you can comfortably get along is hard: queer spaces may not be accessible, disabled spaces may not be queer friendly.” To fix this, he points to the need for diverse representation, which will fuel discussions and, hopefully, create broader awareness of the plights of people like him.
This Benwell has already begun to do in his own writing: his debut novel, The Last Leaves Falling, examines ableism in our society.

The Last Leaves Falling

Sarah Benwell

Hardcover

$17.99

Ships in 1-2 days.

Deadly Sweet Lies (Dream War Saga Series #2)

Erica Cameron

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4.7

Paperback

$9.95

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None of the Above

I. W. Gregorio

4

Hardcover

$17.99

Ships in 1-2 days.