![]() ![]() It’s the excitement of getting to experience a well-loved trope, in a way which feels personalised and inviting. It feels good to get excited about storylines which could otherwise be stale. Books like Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, Tell Me Again How a Crush Should Feel, and the upcoming graphic novel Check, Please! make use of romcom tropes which are somehow new and surprising when the characters aren’t straight. ![]() LGBT rom coms are just as exciting on the page as they are on the screen. ![]() If the reception of Love, Simon tells us anything about queer narratives, it may be that the community is ready for old tricks done by a new dog. They are the same classic stories we’re used to, in a fresh and more relatable package. ![]() LGBT fairytale retellings – and other types of LGBT book retellings, for that matter – can give us something we’ve always been missing. And authors rewriting the tales as old as time are doing more than just zhuzhing them up a bit. A gay film version of Romeo and Juliet seems fresh and new. Singers who don’t change pronouns are fighting the good fight, for sure. For a lot of people, the cover is even better if it comes out queer. Sometimes the cover is better than the original. ![]()
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