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Books like those and Andrea Stewart’s The Bone Shard Emperor (Orbit, Nov.) are normalizing queer relationships and exploring them in a really nuanced, multifaceted way.” Clarke, The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri, and She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan) being joyfully celebrated with fan art and memes. Just get on Twitter or BookTok and you’ll see the ‘Sapphic Saffron Trifecta’ ( The Unbroken by C.L. Brit Hvide, senior editor at Orbit, opined that “while LGBTQ+ stories are not new to the genre at all, I feel like we’re in a true golden age of LGBTQ+ sff. Sff publishers are excited and enthusiastic about the increased visibility of authors’ intersectional identities, which is showcased in the characters and stories they create. The works mentioned in this article are available in a downloadable spreadsheet. All told, we have selected myriad works to represent the genres over the next six months. On top of these highlights there are debuts to order now, stand-alones to note, new series launches, and big titles on the way. In addition, we have noted several trends to watch for when building collections and working with readers, including the growing popularity of retelling fairy tales and archetypal stories, and books about families-blood or otherwise-many of which center marginalized voices and experiences. Among our findings, the genres are enjoying an upswell of works by LGBTQ+ authors of many racializations, and we offer a bevy of titles that confirm what authors, readers, and librarians have been celebrating for some time.

Through interviews with publishers, librarians, and a best-selling author, as well as examination of forthcoming titles, we identified movements in the genre that mark its ongoing development. In our annual survey of the state of science fiction and fantasy, LJ explores the landscape of possible worlds far into the future and lands born of endless imagination.
