An ok lesbian second chances romance audiobook

This is a slow burn, lesbian second chances romance audiobook about Jacqueline and Casey who were a couple for thirteen years and now have been separated for eight.
A great Lesbian Military book sequel

This was the highly anticipated lesbian military book sequel to Noyes’ debut novel ‘Ask, Tell’. It’s a terrific love story and a brilliantly narrated audiobook.
Destined to be a great Lesbian Book Series

A very good addition to the lesbian book series ‘Oaktown Girls’ with a mix of romance, intrigue, angst, and even unrequited love. Click here to read more.
Review of ‘Decree absolute’ by W.A. Cooper.
When divorce lawyer Jessica Barron discovers that her husband is cheating on her with their children’s nanny, she throws them out of her home. In urgent need of a new nanny, she finds the perfect replacement in Renée Arden, an enigmatic French woman owner of a childcare company in need of a temporary home after […]
Passionate rivals by Radclyffe

An enjoyable slow-burn medical romance This is book 4 in the PMC Hospital romance series of standalone novels set in Philadelphia. For some reason, the author left a big gap between each book’s publishing date with the first one written in 2004. Fated love was the first of this series and one of my favourite lesfic […]
Review of ‘The shape of you’ by Georgia Beers.
This is not a typical lesfic romance and it won’t please everyone because it deals with infidelity which is a no-go zone for many romance readers. However, talking about infidelity and lesfic, author Clare Ashton said that lesfic genre could quickly come still if authors try to please the crowd all the time (LesDoBooks podcast […]
Review of ‘Does she love you? by Rachel Spangler.
I have to admit that I refused to read this book for a long time. A plot in which two lovers of the same woman discover her infidelity, slowly become friends and eventually get romantically involved had seemed a bit far fetched and endogamous for my taste. Of course infidelity happens a lot in real […]
Review of ‘An outsider inside’ by R. J. Samuel.
In the run-up to Ireland’s referendum on same-sex marriage, Irish-Indian lesbian activist Jaya Dillon has to confront her unresolved issues on bisexualty and her mixed-race origin. When she discovers a manuscript while tidying a rental house, she finds herself emotionally invested in search for its disappeared author. This is not a typical romance and definitely […]
Review of ‘The art of us’ by KL Hughes.
I don’t particularly enjoy angst in my books but I have to admit that ‘The art of us’ deals with it well. Around fifty percent of the plot is written as flashbacks but, instead of dividing the plot in halves, past and then the present, the author intertwined them cleverly. Past and present are not […]