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‘SOPHIE’ is a fitting farewell that might never feel like it is enough
Still from Will & Harper of Will Ferrell and Harper Steele taking a selfie in front of a "Welcome to Texas" sign
REVIEW: Will Ferrell and Harper Steele’s road trip doc demonstrates what standing by loved ones actually looks like
A man and child from behind in a classroom; the child carries a backpack. Behind this image is one of a "parental rights" rally. The full image is under a purple filter.
Christian Nationalists are encouraging parents to homeschool and avoid LGBTQ2S+-inclusive education
Where does Tim Walz stand on queer and trans issues?
Kamala Harris picked Minnesota governor Tim Walz as her vice-presidential candidate—and he has a long history with the LGBTQ2S+ community

The Latest

To combat transphobia, we need to engage with the people who spread it
OPINION: opening up a dialogue with those we disagree with is key if we want to achieve widespread social change
A hand putting a ballot with a question mark on it into a ballot box. The background is stars from a U.S. flag; below are trans flag coloured diagonal stripes.
ANALYSIS: Telling trans people to “just vote” isn’t helpful 
‘RuPaul’s Drag Race Global All Stars’ Episode 7 recap: Global Snatch
We get our first truly international Snatch Game—unfortunately, it’s the Snatch Game of Love
‘What I Know About You’ is a tale of the silence the repression of gay desire can wreak
Éric Chacour’s first novel is at turns gorgeously lush and frustratingly opaque
Side-by-side images of the book cover for Something, Not Nothing: A Story of Grief and Love and author Sarah Leavitt. Leavitt has dark curly hair, large dark glasses frames and a black t-shirt that says "Brooklyn Poets;" she faces the camera and is shown from the chest up. The book cover is a black and white drawing of Leavitt and her partner Donimo, with a creature with teeth coming in from one side. There are light purple bleeding hearts with green leaves and stems; the title of the book is hand-written, in light purple and white.
Sarah Leavitt’s graphic memoir about her partner’s death unpacks the emotional aftermath of a loved one receiving MAiD
‘Still Life’ captures the messiness of writing trans autofiction
Katherine Packert Burke’s novel explores how little one can really understand about one’s own life while in the middle of living it