Jae

Sapphic Slow-burn romances

character works in STEM

Character works in STEM (Sapphic Reading Challenge #48)

This week’s Sapphic Reading Challenge features sapphic books with a main character who works in STEM.

STEM is an acronym that stands for any job in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math. The character could be a software or web developer, statistician, chemist, physicist, biologist, astronomer, or healthcare professional, etc.

character isn't hollywood beautiful

Character isn’t “Hollywood beautiful” (Sapphic Reading Challenge #47)

This week’s Sapphic Reading Challenge features sapphic books with a main character who isn’t Hollywood beautiful–they don’t fit the beauty standards that Hollywood imposes on women, where only characters who are thin, toned, young, and have perfect hair are portrayed as beautiful. 

For this reading list, I’ve picked books with protagonists who don’t fit those standards. They might have love handles, like Denny, the main character in Wrong Number, Right Woman, or consider their nose to big, yet they will always be beautiful in the eyes of their love interest.

sapphic books trans character

Sapphic books with a trans character (Book Unicorn #11)

For this month’s Book Unicorn category, read a book with a main character who’s a sapphic trans woman.

Generally, the term “trans” (short for “transgender”) can be used in two different ways:

Trans or transgender is an umbrella term that encompasses a variety of gender identities. It includes everyone whose gender identity differs from the sex they were assigned at birth. Many nonbinary people consider themselves trans since they don’t (exclusively) identify as male or female.

Trans or transgender can also be used for a more specific identity under that umbrella. Trans women are women who were assigned male at birth. They may or may not have surgery and/or take hormones to bring their bodies into alignment with their gender identity.

Since books about nonbinary characters were already covered in an earlier post, pick a book with a protagonist who fits the latter definition of trans for this category of the Sapphic Reading Challenge: a book featuring a trans woman. 

While there are many books with trans supporting characters such as my novel Wrong Number, Right Woman, make sure you choose a book in which the trans character is the main character. Ideally, pick a book written by a trans woman.

character is a business owner

Character is a business owner (Sapphic Reading Challenge #44)

This week’s Sapphic Reading Challenge features sapphic books in which the main character is a business owner.

The character can be the CEO of a big, successful company, or she can own a small business without any employees.

The business she owns could be a major part of the plot, so we see the character at work a lot, or it can play only a minor role.

sapphic book series

Sapphic book that is part of a series (Sapphic Reading Challenge #43)

For this week’s Sapphic Reading Challenge, pick a sapphic book that is part of a series. 

It doesn’t have to be book 1; it can be a book later in the series. 

Some series have the same main characters in each book, while others are more loosely connected and feature a different protagonist in every book.

Most series will have the same author, but there are a few series that are a collaboration of different authors, e.g., Ylva Publishing’s Superheroine Collection or The Village Romance Series by T.B. Markinson, Clare Lydon & Harper Bliss. 

Some books aren’t even marketed as a series, even though they clearly are, e.g., my novels Just for Show and The Roommate Arrangement. When in doubt, contact the author and ask if the books are considered a series or not.