The great, the good, and the prize winners, much ignored by a preoccupied media.

FICTION
John Rechy,
After the Blue Hour
. The 86-year-old's thirteenth novel, in which a 24 year-old writer named John Rechy visits a libertine super-fan and his sexually-charged family.
Abdellah Taia,
Another Morocco
. Selected stories from a young lion of gay Arab lit.
Ali Smith,
Autumn
. Booker finalist. The first of her seasonal quartet exploring the current state of the UK, this one through the friendship of a gayish 101 year-old songwriter and his former neighbor girl, now a 32 year-old woman.
Martin Poussan,
Black Sheep Boy
. Winner, 2017 PEN Center USA Award for Fiction. Bayou rouges and renegades.
Sebastian Barry,
Days Without End
. Winner, Costa Book of the Year (the only writer to have won it twice); Booker longlist. In the American frontier, a young Irishman finds love, fights in the Civil War, and with his partner starts a family with Sioux girl.
Christopher McCormick,
Desert Boys
. Winner, Stonewall Book Award.
Christopher Bollen,
The Destroyers
. Male bonding thriller aiming for Highsmith chills in hot Greece.
Roxanne Gay,
Difficult Women
. Hard stories from the much-praised author of Bad Feminist and Hunger.
Danez Smith, Don't Call Us Dead
. National Book Award finalist. Essential dispatches.
Edouard Louis,
The End of Eddy
. Goncourt first novel finalist. The French sensation about growing up gay in brutal circumstances.
Laura Kaye, English Animals. For years to come you'll remember wry Mirka, a Slovak lesbian doing taxidermy in rural Britain.
Andre Aciman,
Enigma Variations. From author of
Call Me By Your Name, another boyhood gay crush in Italy leads to a straight romance at college and bi adulthood in New York.
Umberto Saba, Ernesto
. NYRB reissue of this 1957 knockout about 16 year-old Ernesto's secret affair with an older man.
John Boyne,
The Heart's Invisible Furies
. Dedicated to John Irving, this big-hearted, ham-handed novel relies heavily on coincidence in covering sixty years of a gay Dubliner's life.
Colm Toibin,
House of Names.

The best part is the first section, told by Clytemnestra. The most touching part is Orestes' secluded romance with Leander and his slow understanding when the older, hotter, wiser youth is finished with him.
Abdellah Taia,
Infidels
. A prostitute's son, Jallal, comes of age in contemporary Morocco.
Martin Duberman,
Jews Queers Germans
. Historical novel about three gay men in Germany: Magnus Hirschfeld, Prince Philipp von Eulenburg, and Count Harry Kessler.
Andrew Sean Greer,
Less
. Carnegie Medal longlist. Facing fifty, fleeing his ex-boyfriend's wedding invite, Arthur Less hopscotches around the globe, all missteps and mishaps, until he finds just what he needs.
Gengoroh Tagame,
My Brother's Husband
. Not porn! S&M king Tagame this time tells the affecting story of a Canadian man visiting his dead husband's surprised family in Tokyo.
Pajtim Statovci,
My Cat Yugoslavia. Inventive but overstretched tale of a gay Yugoslav, Bekim, living in Finland, with a big snake and a talking cat, trying to make sense of his violent family's and country's past.
Ross Raisin,
A Natural. Unfamous gay soccer player under pressure.

Paul LaFarge,
The Night Ocean.
Possession-esque literary sleuthing about HP Lovecraft

and his gay obsession.
Rakesh Satyal,
No One Can Pronounce My Name
. After the intimacy of
Blue Boy, a big ambitious book about several generations of an Indian American family living in suburban Cleveland.
Rahul Mehta,
No Other World. First novel from the author of the much-loved story collection
Quarantine about Kiran Shah, a young gay man navigating the 80s and 90s in America and India.
Damian McNicholl,
A Son Called Gabriel
. In the spirit of
At Swim, Two Boys, the story of a gentle gay Ulster kid bullied by his peers.
Alan Hollinghurst, The Sparsholt Affair
. What poetry was to
The Stranger's Child, painting is to this splendid gay novel spanning WWII to the present.
Neel Mukherjee,
A State of Freedom
. Immigration and dislocation through five narratives from India and beyond.
Gabe Habash,
Stephen Florida
. Vividly told account of damaged college wrestler's final season in Oregsburg, North Dakota.
Keezy Young,
Taproot
. Life is hard for a dead guy in love with his best friend, who, luckily, can see ghosts.
Cathleen Schine,
They May Not Mean To, But They Do
. Winner, 2017 Ferro-Grumley award. A smart, funny look at the current state of wifehood, from a lesbian couple in Los Angeles to the newly widowed matriarch of a Jewish family in Manhattan.
Chavisa Woods,
Things to Do When You're Goth in the Country
. Rural queerdom in eight stories with shades of Shirley Jackson.
Jane Easton Hamilton,
Weekend
. The fraught overlap between two queer couples who each built a vacation cottage on a small island.