
9 of My Favorite Queer Beach Reads
Today, Book Riot has announced our picks for the Best Beach Reads of All Time. So, I’ve picked out a few of the queer books included there to highlight, along with seven more of my favorite queer beach read recommendations. We’ve got M/M, F/F, and nonbinary romance; sapphic cozy fantasy; a bisexual YA Sliding Doors story; a trans thriller; and more. (Though my picks do lean more towards the sapphic.)
And if you’re looking for more books to bring to the beach, check out Book Riot’s full list of the Best Beach Reads, including picks in every genre.
Be sure to scroll to the end for 30 new queer books out this week as a bonus for All Access members!
3 of the Book Rioters’ Favorite Romance Beach Reads
An Island Princess Starts a Scandal by Adriana Herrera
Don’t let the historical setting fool you: this romance is one of the steamiest I’ve ever read, and it kept me turning pages for hours on my last beach day. It follows Manuela as she plans to spend one last debaucherous sapphic summer in 1889 Paris before she is a married woman. There, she meets Cora, a wealthy lesbian — think Anne Lister vibes — who wants to buy a property off of her. Manuela agrees, but only if Cora shows her the underground queer scene. As the heat between them intensifies, it gets harder and harder for Manuela to imagine leaving. This is such a fun, escapist read that belongs in the beach bag of any romance fan. —Danika Ellis
Red, White, and Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston
Beach reads and contemporary romance are almost synonymous in my mind, and when I think of great contemporary romance, I think Red, White & Royal Blue. The rivalry between a prince and the son of the U.S. president causes an international incident. But when they’re forced to get to know each other, their growing chemistry almost causes an international incident of a very different kind. McQuiston’s writing is fun and witty, full of the kind of quick banter I love in a romance. A good beach read should leave you smiling and recommending the book to everyone you know, and this book will have you doing both before it’s through. —Rachel Brittain
The Pairing by Casey McQuiston
Any of Casey McQuiston’s novels would be welcome under your beach umbrella, but I think this is the obvious best choice. It’s about two exes who accidentally reunite on a food and wine tasting tour across Europe. Both bisexual, they make a bet about who can sleep with someone first in each city they visit, but they can’t deny the heat building between them again. The descriptions of food and drink, plus the beautiful locales, make this feel decadent. It’s steamy and sweet at the same time, with a heavy dose of yearning. If you, like me, are always reaching for queer beach reads, I’ll add that I loved the bi and nonbinary representation, too. —Danika Ellis
7 of My Favorite Queer Beach Reads
Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree
Romance is a great choice for beach reading, but I’m also particular to feel-good stories in other genres, like this cozy fantasy. Legends & Lattes is a very gentle, slow-paced fantasy novel about an orc hanging up her sword to start a coffee shop in a town where no one has even heard of coffee. It has low stakes, a found family element, and a slow-burn F/F romance. The prequel, Bookshops and Bonedust, is just as good, but set in a rundown bookstore. And it has an owl/pug gryphet named Potroast!
Falling In Love With Hominids by Nalo Hopkinson
I always find it a little harder to be a cynic when the sun is shining, so beach reading is a perfect time to pick up a more optimistic book. The first line of the introduction to this book is “I didn’t used to like people much.” From there, we’re led into fantasy stories that allow us to also (maybe) fall in love with humanity again. There are several queer stories, including the novella. One of my favorites is about a gay couple who are trying to track down their missing fire-breathing chickens.
Hot Dog Girl by Jennifer Dugan
Look at that cover and tell me it doesn’t belong on a beach towel. I love a queer YA book as beach reading material, and this one is set during a summer working at a theme park. Lou convinces her best friend, Seeley, to fake date her in order to make her crush jealous, but it doesn’t exactly go to plan. This is a messy love pentagon. It does a great job of being a light read with just enough drama and angst to keep you flipping the pages.
This is What it Feels Like by Rebecca Barrow
This isn’t quite as light as the romances on this list, but it still has summer vibes. Hanna, Dia, and Jules used to be inseparable and had a band together. But then Hanna’s alcoholism landed her in the hospital at the same time that Dia’s boyfriend died—and she found out she was pregnant with his baby. They walked away from each other, but years later, their city is holding a battle of the bands with a $15,000 prize. Can they get the band back together and win it? This also has a very cute F/F romance with Jules and her coworker Autumn.
Going Bicoastal by Dahlia Adler
There’s a beach right on the cover of this one! Like Hot Dog Girl, Going Bicoastal is also set during a summer. Natalya is deciding whether to spend the summer with her dad in NYC or her mom in LA. Sliding Doors-style, we get to see what happens either way, with chapters switching back and forth between them. This is such a bisexual book, even down to the structure: it refuses to make a binary choice, instead letting us have both. And in each, she has a romance: in NYC with the mysterious girl she’s been crushing on, and in LA with the frustrating guy she’s interning with. It’s a fun, light read that has serious sunshine energy.
How Far the Light Reaches: A Life in Ten Sea Creatures by Sabrina Imbler
Call me literal, but I also like a ocean-themed book for a beach read. This gets into some dark topics, but it’s fascinating and absorbing. It weaves together facts about aquatic animals with related stories from the author’s own life, comparing queer life with sea creatures. Part memoir, part science writing, How Far the Light Reaches is a thought-provoking and moving read.
Compound Fracture by Andrew Joseph White
Now, let’s throw out all the rules for beach reads. Because the last time I went to the beach, I brought a curated stack of fluffy books to flip through. And yet, I had to put them all to the side in favor of Compound Fracture, a brutal and gory trans YA thriller. I read this squinting at a tablet in direct sun because I couldn’t put it down. So, I couldn’t put together a list of queer beach reads without including it, despite the clash in tone.
Looking for more? Check out Queer Beach Reads for Every Kind of Seaside Reader and 15 of the Best LGBTQ Beach Reads of 2024. And don’t forget to check out our full list of the Best Beach Reads of All Time.
30 New Queer Books Out This Week: May 27, 2025
As a bonus for All Access members, here are 30 new queer books out this week, including Disappoint Me by Nicola Dinan, a trans woman literary novel; Amplitudes: Stories of Queer and Trans Futurity edited by Lee Mandelo, a speculative anthology; Love in Focus by Lyla Lee, an F/F romance; Costumes for Time Travelers by A. R. Capetta, a nonbinary YA sci-fi book; and Forest Euphoria: The Abounding Queerness of Nature by Patricia Ononiwu Kaishian, a queer essay collection.
Exclusive content for All Access members continues below.
The South by Tash Aw (M/M Fiction)
The Life of Those Left Behind by Matteo B. Bianchi, translated by Michael F. Moore (Queer Fiction)
Slum Boy by Juano Diaz (Gay Fiction)
Disappoint Me by Nicola Dinan (Trans Woman Fiction)
The Default World by Naomi Kanakia, narrated by Nicky Endres (Trans Woman Fiction) (Audiobook release)
One Summer in Miami by Amber Rose Gill (F/F Romance)
Amplitudes: Stories of Queer and Trans Futurity edited by Lee Mandelo (Queer and Trans Speculative Anthology)
Bears & Bakeries by Dylan Drakes (M/M Romance)
Falling for Her Miami Rival by Luana DaRosa (F/F Medical Romance)
Love in Focus by Lyla Lee (Bi F/F Romance)
Flirty Dancing by Jennifer Moffatt (M/M Romance)
Copper Script by KJ Charles (M/M Historical Romance)
Ballad of Sword and Wine: Qiang Jin Jiu (Novel) Vol. 4 by Tang Jiu Qing (M/M Historical Military Romance)
Time After Time by Mikki Daughtry (F/F YA Contemporary)
Summer Girls by Jennifer Dugan (F/F YA Contemporary)
And They Were Roommates by Page Powars (Trans M/Cis M YA Contemporary)
All-Nighter by Cecilia Vinesse (F/F YA Contemporary)
These Vengeful Gods by Gabe Cole Novoa (Nonbinary YA Fantasy)
Costumes for Time Travelers by A. R. Capetta (Nonbinary YA Science Fiction)
Going Overboard by Caroline Huntoon (Nonbinary Middle Grade Contemporary)
Hick: The Trailblazing Journalist Who Captured Eleanor Roosevelt’s Heart by Sarah Miller (Queer Woman YA Nonfiction)
Generation Queer: Stories of Youth Organizers, Artists, and Educators by Kimm Topping and illustrated by Anshika Khullar (Queer YA Nonfiction)
The Other Jay & Eve by Emma Jayne and Ashanti Fortson (Sapphic Sci-Fi Graphic Novel)
DC Pride: To the Farthest Reaches (LGBTQIA+ Superhero Comics Anthology)
I Can’t Get Through the Night Alone by Yoh Matsumoto (M/M Historical Manga)
Night Sky with Exit Wounds by Ocean Vuong, narrated by Keong Sim (Queer Poetry) (Audiobook release)
Maybe This Will Save Me: A Memoir of Art, Addiction and Transformation by Tommy Dorfman (Trans Woman Memoir)
Let Us Play: Winning the Battle for Gender Diverse Athletes by Harrison Browne and Rachel Browne (Trans Nonfiction)
Thank You For Calling the Lesbian Line by Elizabeth Lovatt (Lesbian Nonfiction)
Forest Euphoria: The Abounding Queerness of Nature by Patricia Ononiwu Kaishian (Queer Nonfiction)