How to Build Your Queer Summer Reading List
Jun 2, 2026, 8:30am
The founder of a popular New York City LGBTQ+ book clubs talks queer literature, book clubs, and what she’s reading this summer for Pride Month.

“Itβs so important for everyone to be reading queer books by queer authors,” Joey Lobel said.Β Envato/Cage Rivera/Rewire News Group
In late 2022, Joey Lobel was frustrated.
An avid reader, Lobel, a 31-year-old butcher in Brooklyn, was struggling to find queer books that didnβt have sad endings.
βI went on a little spiral and I thought, Iβm sure other people are feeling the same way,β she said.
So Lobel decided to make a queer book club page on the social networking website Meetup, hoping to build community around LGBTQ+ reads. She wasnβt sure if people would show up. But βworst case scenario,β she recalled thinking, βIβm sitting at a bar with a book, which is completely fine.β
But people did show up. And in the nearly four years since the Queer Book Club started, Lobelβs book club has become a staple in New York Cityβs LGBTQ+ communityβwith monthly meetups at the Brooklyn bar Young Ethelβs and an average of between 15 and 30 participants. The book clubβs one-off events, like book swaps, are popular and see upward of 60 attendees.
As summer gets underway, Lobel spoke to Rewire News Group about the importance of LGBTQ+ literature, generating a top-notch list of reads for Pride Month, and building community through books.
The following conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
What makes a book queer?
A book is queer if itβs written for queer people by queer people. There are so many books out there that have zero queer characters, or one passing queer character. And to me, thatβs not necessarily considered a queer book. But any book written for us, with us in mind, I want to read.
Do you have an all-time favorite queer book or queer character?
Thatβs so hard. My all-time favorite queer book is In The Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado. β¦ I read a lot of books. And a lot of times, I sort of forget immediately. Like, youβre out of that world and youβre back in your world, and you forget what happened. But In the Dream House has always stuck with me.
Is queer literature for everyone?
I definitely believe queer literature is for everyone. You can learn from anyone. You can be entertained by anyone. And itβs important that weβre able to look at viewpoints other than our own. The amount of straight books that Iβve read in my life that Iβve enjoyed is vast. I just feel like itβs so important for everyone to be reading queer books by queer authors.
And to remind publishers that queer authors are authors people want to read.
Thereβs such a big audience out there. There are so many queer shows right now being canceled. There are such audiences for them, and theyβre still being cancelled. We have to support queer media. And straight people have to support queer media. Itβs enjoyable for everyone.
How do you approach building a queer summer reading list?
The reason I love the book club for figuring out what youβre going to read is that Iβm always reading books that I would never choose on my own. If it was up to me, weβd be reading cute little rom-coms where everyone falls in love at the end. I love those, and thereβs definitely space in my reading list for thoseβa big, big chunk of space.
I also like being able to read books that other people recommend to me. I look at a lot of Instagram recommendations.
Thereβs just so many books out there, itβs hard to choose. I also read so much more in the summer. So I try and hoard all of the books that I want to read until it gets warm. And then Iβm outside just reading all day.
Speaking of, what are three books on your summer reading list?
I read this book previously, and I definitely want to reread it. It was incredible. Itβs called Fracineβs Spectacular Crash and Burn by Renee Swindle. Itβs so good. Itβs about a young woman who loses her mom. And thereβs a really interesting relationship dynamic in there with her mom who has passed, and with this young boy that she meets that sheβs protecting, and someone that she starts dating. Thereβs so many layers to it that I want to reread it, because I know Iβm going to get more of it the second time.
Right now, Iβm reading Nevada by Imogen Binnie. Thatβs Juneβs book club pick. Iβm halfway through, and itβs a really great book. Itβs so different from the way that I see the world. From this characterβs perspective, itβs a little darker and a little chaoticβmore chaotic than Iβm used toβwhich I think makes for an interesting dynamic to read about.
I also want to read Mac Craneβs new book, A Sharp Endless Need. Their last book, I Keep My Exoskeletons To Myself, was hauntingly beautifulβand not something I would gravitate toward because itβs not the rom-com, two girls falling in love. But we read it for book club and I was entranced. And thatβs why Iβm so glad that I get to read books that arenβt just my normal go-tos.
But one that is my normal go-to, which I havenβt read yet, is Puck by Samantha Allen. Itβs been pitched to me as a Midsummer Nightβs Dream spinoff with reality TV. And Iβm already invested.
What advice do you have for people who are unsure about whether book clubs are for them?
Thereβs a lot of reasons why people might be a little nervous to join a book club. I was worried that I would have to always public speak, which is a little tough when youβre not feeling up to it. I was also worried that it would be tough finishing a book on a timelineβit does remind me a little bit of school, in that way. (Editorβs note: Lobelβs club has a rule that not finishing the monthly book is totally fine, so long as youβre βfine with spoilers.β)
But book clubs are very welcoming. You can just go in, and talk to people.
Whatβs the worst that can happen? Youβre surrounded by other queer people who love books.