Suzanne

Suzanne

Recent Posts

Review: Fortunate Beasts (Letters for Lucardo, Book 2)

[fa icon="calendar'] Mar 26, 2019 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in review

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

If you read our review of the first volume, you can probably guess at how eagerly I've been anticipating this second installment. I won't go too much into the overarching plot in this review, so if you want to know about the vampires and how the main couple met, go check that first review out.

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

Review: Blossoms in Autumn, by Zidrou and Aimee de Jongh

[fa icon="calendar'] Mar 20, 2019 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in review

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

This comic is a solid C grade from me, taking the average of a lot of bits I absolutely loved and several that I would like to remove entirely.

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

Guest Post: On the Evolving Need for Queer Comics, Romance, and Adventure

[fa icon="calendar'] Mar 18, 2019 12:30:00 PM / by Suzanne posted in guest post

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

Hello there, my lovely Love in Panels reader! My name is Zora Gilbert, and I would like to preach to your wonderful choir. I’m one of the editors of Dates! An Anthology of Queer Historical Fiction (Volume 3 now on Kickstarter!), which means I’ve been living and breathing queer comics in various forms for the time it takes to self-publish three volumes of an anthology while being a young adult with a day job, which it turns out is about four years (and, of course, for some time before that, but that’s harder to count).

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

Review: A Quick & Easy Guide to Queer & Trans Identities

[fa icon="calendar'] Mar 14, 2019 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in review

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

In one sentence: This book should be in every library, school, and Human Resources office. If you care about creating an inclusive space for your students, employees, and/or customers but don't know where to start with understanding all of the terms and definitions used by the queer community, this is the book for you. It is exactly what it says on the cover.

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

Review: Strange Someone, by Kel McDonald and Melissa Curtin

[fa icon="calendar'] Mar 7, 2019 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in review

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

Sometimes Comixology tags things as romance and I get the idea that I should buy them. And then they sit on my iPad for a year. And then when I finally read the thing... I wonder why I did.

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

Comics Kickstarters You Might Wanna Get in On

[fa icon="calendar'] Feb 28, 2019 9:41:15 AM / by Suzanne

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

Quick! Back these projects for all the romancey queer goodness you need in your life! Okay, it's optional... but one of them ends tonight, so get it while you can.

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

Chronin: Vol. 1, by Alison Wilgus - Excerpt and Exclusive Interview

[fa icon="calendar'] Feb 19, 2019 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in interview

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

As readers, we use stories as mirrors (seeing ourselves) and windows (seeing others), but often forget about how the act of creating those stories can impact the artist. This is especially true of underrepresented creators, who may uncover pieces of their identity while writing about someone else. In today's post, we're highlighting graphic novelist Alison Wilgus, creator of a new graphic novel duology, Chronin.

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

Review: The Prince & The Swan

[fa icon="calendar'] Jan 24, 2019 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in review

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

The Prince & The Swan is a gay retelling of The Swan Princess, complete with two princes and a curse. As I write this, the story is just starting Chapter 10, at a rate of 1 page per week. That means it's been several years in the making, and it shows.

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

Review: Sincerely, Harriet, by Sarah Winifred Searle

[fa icon="calendar'] Jan 8, 2019 9:47:33 AM / by Suzanne posted in review

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

Sincerely, Harriet is the sort of book I would have loved to read as a teen. The story follows Harriet Flores, a thirteen year old white Latinx girl who begins the book by writing postcards to her friends at camp. She isn't at camp, for reasons that become clear as the story progresses. Instead, she's essentially trapped in the two-family home her family shares with an older Black woman, who lives on the first floor. Harriet's journey is subtle but nuanced, and I adored this book. (Even though it made me cry.)

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]

We're on Patreon!

[fa icon="calendar'] Dec 18, 2018 3:25:38 PM / by Suzanne posted in announcement

[fa icon="comment"] 0 Comments

The post title pretty much says it all, but yeah! We're on Patreon!

Read More [fa icon="long-arrow-right"]