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Tag: Elliot Page

  • The Odyssey’s Elliot Page on Returning for New Christopher Nolan Movie Post-Transition

    Elliot Page recently discussed what it was like working with Christopher Nolan again on the filmmaker’s upcoming epic The Odyssey. The two previously worked together on the 2010 sci-fi action heist feature Inception in one of the film’s most prominent supporting roles.

    The Odyssey star Elliot Page on collaborating with Christopher Nolan again

    Page made an appearance at the X-Men: Days of Future Past panel at the 2025 New York Comic Con and reflected on reuniting with director Christopher Nolan after roughly 15 years. “I loved working with him on Inception and loved being a part of that movie,” Page said. “I was just completely jazzed and excited, and [I] basically went and met with Chris and talked about the part, then sat in a room and read the script. It was such a joy to come back.” (via Variety)

    Page, who transitioned in 2020, underscored what made The Odyssey a “more enjoyable” experience. “To come back now, as you can imagine, being more comfortable in yourself makes these sorts of projects more enjoyable,” Page elaborated. “To get to have a Chris Nolan experience again now meant so much to me selfishly.”

    Besides directing, Nolan developed the screenplay for the movie as an adaptation of Homer’s ancient Greek epic of the same name. Page’s character in the movie remains under wraps. However, it has been revealed that the film’s cast also includes Matt Damon as Odysseus and Tom Holland as Telemachus, alongside Zendaya, Anne Hathaway, Lupita Nyong’o, Robert Pattinson, Charlize Theron, John Leguizamo, Jon Bernthal, Benny Safdie, and Himesh Patel.

    According to the official logline, the movie follows Odysseus as he “embarks on a long and perilous journey home following the Trojan War, chronicling his encounters with mythical beings such as the Cyclops Polyphemus, the Sirens, and the witch-goddess Circe.”

    The production for The Odyssey took place between early and mid-2025 and spanned across multiple continents. The movie debuts in theaters in IMAX and other formats on July 17, 2026.

    Tamal Kundu

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  • Umbrella Academy Season 3 Catch-Up Ahead of Season 4

    Umbrella Academy Season 3 Catch-Up Ahead of Season 4

    June 2022 was a long time ago, but it might feel even longer for Umbrella Academy fans who binged season three in a couple of sittings and then moved on to other pop-culture obsessions. The show is a lot of fun and season three was killer—but it’s been over two years since the Netflix series dropped new episodes. Are you ready to dive into its fourth and final season?

    We’ve already peeked at the “previously on” montage that kicks off season four, and frankly, it didn’t clear all that much up. So here’s a crash course in what you need to remember going into season four, which runs just six episodes and premieres August 8 on Netflix.

    What happened in season 3 of Umbrella Academy?

    © Netflix

    When Umbrella Academy—based loosely on the Gerard Way-Gabriel Bá Dark Horse Comic series about the super-powered and dysfunctional adopted Hargreeves siblings—kicked off its third season, the main characters were bouncing back from averting an apocalypse at the end of season two. (They did that in season one too.) Season two involved a lot of time travel, and it ended with the characters in 2019—but in an alternate reality where the Umbrella Academy, here called “the Sparrow Academy,” had mostly different members. One is a still-alive version of their deceased sibling, Ben (Justin H. Min).

    There’s instant hostility, and the Umbrella kids decamp to the quirky Hotel Obsidian. There are fights between the factions (and between the siblings), but also occasional outbursts of teamwork—and even a romance between Umbrella Luther (Tom Hopper) and Sparrow Sloane (Genesis Rodriguez). Throughout the season, characters grapple with the fallout of their time travel, both on a personal level (problematically, all of the Umbrella kids’ mothers died before they were born in this particular timeline) and on a more “the universe is freaking out due to all the anomalies” level, thanks to a powerful Kugelblitz in their midst.

    Notably, Umbrella Academy season three addressed leading actor Elliot Page’s coming out as a trangender man by simply having his character, Viktor, follow the same path; it was handled seamlessly within the story. The season also saw Klaus (Robert Sheehan) dying and returning to life, repeatedly; Five (Aidan Gallagher) meeting an older version of himself; Allison (Emmy Raver-Lampman) nearly succumbing to the grief of losing her daughter from the season two time-travel story; and Lila (Ritu Arya) and Diego (David Castañeda) almost figuring out how to be co-parents.

    Throughout the season, there’s a growing sense that Umbrella/Sparrow patriarch Sir Reginald Hargreeves (Colm Feore)—who’s actually an extraterrestrial being of unknown age from another dimension—is up to no good, even more than usual. It’s all tied into the Hotel Obsidian, the setting for Luther and Sloane’s wedding and where all the surviving characters gather as the Kugelblitz begins decimating reality around them.

    What happened at the end of Umbrella Academy season 3?

    Umbrella Academy Season 3 Reginald
    © Christos Kalohoridis/Netflix

    Reginald revealed that the Hotel Obsidian is really a machine in another dimension, built by whoever created the universe, and couching a portal that will reset that universe; there’s a mirror-image hotel called the Hotel Oblivion on the other side. The Hargreeves have to work together to figure out the machine’s elaborate puzzle, which (in typical fashion) is a trying task. At last, though, Allison manages to seemingly kill Reginald, who’s draining the super-powered life force from his “children” to power the machine, and start the reset process.

    At the very end of season three, we see that Allison’s daughter and her husband from season two are alive—as is Reginald, along with his long-deceased wife Abigail, who are bigwigs in this brand-new timeline. While other characters are restored to health (Five, who’d lost an arm along the way, is now healed), Luther is distraught to realize that Sloane, his new wife, is missing. Also: nobody has their superpowers anymore. Most are totally freaked out, and all scamper in different directions. In a mid-credits scene, we see Ben—the only remaining Sparrow—on a train in South Korea—perhaps the same train where he was shown being born in a flashback at the start of season three.

    What’s season 4 of Umbrella Academy going to be about?

    The Umbrella Academy Season 4
    © Netflix

    Here’s the word from Netflix: “The Hargreeves siblings have scattered after the climactic showdown at the Hotel Oblivion led to a complete reset of their timeline. Stripped of their powers, each is left to fend for themselves and find a new normal—with wildly varying degrees of success. Yet the trappings of their uncanny new world prove too hard to ignore for very long. Their father Reginald, alive and well, has stepped out of the shadows and into the public eye, overseeing a powerful and nefarious business empire.

    A mysterious association known as the Keepers holds clandestine meetings believing the reality they’re living in is a lie and a great reckoning is coming. As these strange new forces conspire around them, the Umbrella Academy must come together one last time—and risk upsetting the shaky peace they’ve all endured so much to secure—to finally set things right.” New characters this season will be played by Nick Offerman, Megan Mullally, and David Cross.

    When can I watch season 4 of Umbrella Academy?

    All six episodes arrive August 8 on Netflix.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Cheryl Eddy

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  • 10 Queer Books by Queer Authors to Read Before Pride Month Ends

    10 Queer Books by Queer Authors to Read Before Pride Month Ends

    Pride Month is almost over, but these must-read Queer books are worth picking up all year round. Courtesy the publishers

    June is Pride month, so what better time to add some queer books by queer writers to your must-read pile? We’ve rounded up a list of recommendations that spans setting and format but include a Folio Prize winner, an American Book Award winner and two Booker Prizes. This list will take you from an Indiana dream house to the statuesque homes of Notting Hill, from Giovanni’s Room to a funeral home in Pennsylvania. It includes both fiction and nonfiction: there are novels, memoirs, essay collections, even a graphic novel. What they have in common is that they are stories of bravery, love and community. Yes, they are stories of gender and sexuality, but they are really about the people who live those stories, and that’s what makes them so compelling. They are some of the best books out right now, and we hope they will keep you reading all month—or all year—long.

    In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado

    In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado. Graywolf Press

    With searingly intense prose, Machado writes about her experience in an emotionally and physically abusive relationship with another woman. The book’s point of view goes back and forth between “I”—the present-day Machado, eloquent and direct—and “you”—the victim Machado, trapped and struggling—creating a unique relationship between writer and reader that contributes to a sense of collective ownership over this story, and all the others like it. It’s not written chronologically, but rather comes together in fragments, mirroring the slow breakdown of the relationship. It’s heartbreaking, deeply emotional, and exquisitely written.

    On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong

    On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong. Penguin Press

    Another heartbreaking yet beautiful tale, Vuong’s epistolary novel centers around a young Vietnamese American boy nicknamed Little Dog. He writes to his abusive mother Hong, translated as Rose, who is barely literate, her education having ended at seven when her school collapsed after an American napalm raid in Vietnam. He knows she won’t read it, but the healing is in the exercise. Like In the Dream House, the book is a series of vignettes, and ultimately, a story emerges, about Little Dog’s challenges at home and at school, his relationships with his mother, who suffers from PTSD, and his grandmother, who has schizophrenia, and the boy he meets working on a tobacco farm one summer. Based largely on Vuong’s own life, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous is a profound and lyrical interrogation of how we process the events of our lives.

    Girls Can Kiss Now by Jill Gutowitz

    Girls Can Kiss Now by Jill Gutowitz. Simon & Schuster

    A lighter pick, Gutowitz combines reflections on her sexuality with a meditation on pop culture to write about how lesbian representation in the media and growing up in the early 2000s impacted her view of life and sexuality. It’s funny and bright, but through the essays, a vulnerable story emerges. Girls Can Kiss Now is well done because it’s not only cultural commentary; rather, it explores the ways in which the culture Gutowitz grew up in molded her. She writes about Orange is the New Black, Taylor Swift’s folklore and evermore albums, the media’s hyperfocus on Lindsay Lohan when she began dating Samantha Ronson, and a host of topics in between.

    Lesbian Love Story by Amelia Possanza

    Lesbian Love Story by Amelia Possanza. Catapult

    A unique blend of archival research and personal memoir, Lesbian Love Story is about seven lesbians and their life’s loves. In each chapter, Possanza tells the story of one of them while also reflecting on her own journey with her lesbian identity. Her choice to write about lesser-known lesbians, rather than the major historical figures we all know, works well here: readers learn something new, and she represents new voices. Her passion for this research is palpable, and wherever possible, she lets her characters tell their own stories, using quotes from diaries, memoirs, and oral history tapes. The result is characters that feel truly real and a retelling that feels honest and diligent.

    Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin

    Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin. Dial Press

    We would be remiss not to include the iconic Giovanni’s Room on this list. Baldwin, far ahead of his time in 1956, wrote about a young American man named David and the affair he begins with an Italian man, Giovanni, while his girlfriend is in Spain contemplating marriage. It raises discussions about representations of sexuality alongside masculinity and the public performance of gender, and is a timeless classic worth everyone’s attention.

    Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel

    Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel. Houghton Mifflin

    lison Bechel is best known for creating the Bechdel test, a method that asks whether a work of art (a book, a play, a film, a TV show, et cetera) features at least two female characters having a conversation that isn’t about a man. But she’s also a fabulously talented writer, and her graphic memoir Fun Home, later adapted into a hit Broadway musical, is a comical exploration of her life as a queer woman. She writes about her upbringing in a funeral home (which they call the “fun home”) and her dynamic with her family, including her closeted gay father who ultimately commits suicide. It’s a story of family, but it’s also a story of repressed sexuality, of embodied sexuality, of gender roles, of depression and suicide. Surprisingly funny and deeply heartfelt, with comics that make the narrative come alive, Fun Home is a can’t-miss.

    Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart

    Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart. Grove Atlantic

    Shuggie Bain takes us to 1981 Glasgow and deposits us in the decrepit home of Agnes Bain and her three children. Shuggie’s two older siblings escape as soon as they can, leaving Shuggie to deal with his alcoholic mother and the neighborhood kids who bully him for being “no’ right” (read: gay). The beauty of this narrative is in the understatedness of his sexuality; it’s not explicitly stated, but it comes out as the story progresses and Shuggie grows into himself in what is a beautifully realistic portrayal of the way queer identity blooms over time. Stuart writes poetically about the big feelings of childhood and Shuggie is a rich, developed character who burrowed his way into my heart and has not left. This book is full of sadness, but also full of hope.

    The Line of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst

    The Line of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst. Picador Books

    Set in 1980s England, Hollinghurst explores his protagonist Nick’s sexuality through the lens of Margaret Thatcher’s prime ministership. The book, which also touches on the beginnings of the AIDS crisis, centers around Nick’s experience straddling two worlds, one of Conservative MPs and Oxford and the other of his sexuality and true self. It’s a captivating and intriguing story, a real look into another world delivered by Hollinghurst’s eloquent and mature writing style.

    Pageboy by Elliot Page

    Pageboy by Elliot Page. Flatiron Books

    After establishing himself as an actor in 2007 with his breakout role in Juno, for which he received an Oscar nomination, Page came out publicly as gay in 2014 and as trans in 2020. His memoir, Pageboy, is an intimate portrait of what it took to embrace his identity amid the backlash of Hollywood and its forceful pressure to conform. This is a forcefully introspective, well-written must-read memoir.

    Old Enough by Haley Jakobson

    Old Enough by Haley Jakobson. Penguin Random House

    Jakobson takes the campus novel and flips it on its coming-of-age head in Old Enough, a novel about college sophomore Sav, who’s torn between her new queer identity at college and her old best friend, Izzie, from home. Its first-person point of view adds authenticity and believability to a story that’s all too familiar for many, queer or not: a deepening divide between who you once were and who you’re becoming. The novel explores burgeoning sexuality with compassion, and treats the sexual assault Sav is still slowly processing with equal care. The result is a multifaceted exploration of what it means to come of age, with easy-to-love characters and a fast-paced narrative.

    10 Queer Books by Queer Authors to Read Before Pride Month Ends

    Madeleine Aitken

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  • The Umbrella Academy Unleashes One More Time Travel Mission for Its Final Season

    The Umbrella Academy Unleashes One More Time Travel Mission for Its Final Season

    Image: Netflix

    The Hargreeves clan will return for a final round of end of the world time travel hijinks in season four of The Umbrella Academy, Netflix’s acclaimed series based on the Dark Horse Comics series by Gerard Way and Gabriel Bá, and adapted for the platform by Jeremy Slater and Steve Blackman. Check out the first trailer!

    In season four, it looks like the team is getting ready for at least one more time loop for its final run; as per usual with the Umbrella Academy gang, things set off with more explosive action and sibling superhero shenanigans after last season’s unsettling reset and cliffhanger ending. With only six episodes in the final season—the previous entries have all had 10—the action will have to be more compacted, though from the looks of this trailer there’ll still be time for the weird stuff (three words: Footloose dance battle! Three more words: sentient telekinetic cube!) that makes The Umbrella Academy so fun to watch—this time more tentacles, Santa Claus, Klaus Cults 2: Electric Boogaloo, and Viktor powering up Super-Saiyan style.

    Here’s the official season four description from Netflix: “The Hargreeves siblings have scattered after the climactic showdown at the Hotel Oblivion led to a complete reset of their timeline. Stripped of their powers, each is left to fend for themselves and find a new normal—with wildly varying degrees of success. Yet the trappings of their uncanny new world prove too hard to ignore for very long. Their father Reginald, alive and well, has stepped out of the shadows and into the public eye, overseeing a powerful and nefarious business empire. A mysterious association known as The Keepers holds clandestine meetings believing the reality they’re living in is a lie and a great reckoning is coming. As these strange new forces conspire around them, the Umbrella Academy must come together one last time—and risk upsetting the shaky peace they’ve all endured so much to secure—to finally set things right.

    The Umbrella Academy stars Elliot Page, Tom Hopper, David Castañeda, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Robert Sheehan, Aidan Gallagher, Justin H. Min, and Ritu Arya. You can catch up on seasons one through three of The Umbrella Academy on Netflix before season four premieres August 8.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel and Star Wars releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about House of the Dragon and Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power.

    Sabina Graves

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  • Sleeping with Elliot Page — An Unconventional Review of Pageboy: A Memoir

    Sleeping with Elliot Page — An Unconventional Review of Pageboy: A Memoir

    Usually, I’m a hard-copy kind of gal. The feeling of pages between my fingers, the occasional paper cut drawing bright crimson across a page, the scent and weight of the volume itself — these are tangible and hugely enjoyable markers of reading an actual, honest-to-goodness book.


    The pandemic changed that. The amount of time I spent on-screen rose to new heights and my eyes begged for rest. So, I transitioned into an audiobook phase.

    Some audiobooks were more successful than others. I attribute this to the readers.

    No, I couldn’t make it through Robert A. Caro’s ThePower Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York (Random House Audio 2011) which details the monumental role Moses played in developing NYC. Should be fascinating, right? Not with Robertson Dean’s soporific narration. After four chapters I was seriously afraid of nodding off at the wheel. So, for the safety of all, I gave up with a whopping 62 hours and 28 minutes left to go.

    As the pandemic faded, I entered a hybrid phase, switching between hard copies and audio and discovered my sweet spot as a listener: authors who narrate their own work. I ecstatically plugged into Audible’s Words & Music imprint and started in on Broken Horses (Random House Audio) the 2021 must-listen memoir by Brandi Carlile (I loved it when she broke out her guitar and sang solo renditions of songs featured in the book). Next up was Smarty Girl: Dublin Savage (Simon & Schuster Audio 2012), Honor Molloy’s autobiographical novel about growing up in 1960s Dublin, read with the glorious lilt of the Irish storyteller. And I must mention Guinevere Turner’s When the World Didn’t End (Penguin Random House Audio 2023). Turner’s harrowing yet hopeful memoir about her childhood in a cult and with an abusive family member. After these three golden audio nuggets, I was ready to return to hard copy land…but COVID had other plans, as it often does.

    Only a few weeks ago, I landed in quarantine for five days. Pageboy — written and narrated by Canadian actor Elliot Page — called my name. Published earlier this year, Page’s powerful and poignant memoir tracks the actor’s transition from Ellen to Elliot. It’s a major contribution to non-binary and trans awareness and advocacy, a New York Times Bestseller, and a story we need to hear in an age when hateful anti-trans legislation rages across the USA.

    I first noticed Page in his Oscar-nominated title role in Juno (2007). He narrates his memoir in a youthful, raspy voice. He sounds calm, even when emotions run high. You feel like you’re sitting in his living room on that overstuffed chair featured in Juno. Elliot Page was often mistreated and misunderstood for his identity. Transphobia is infuriating, and hearing Page tell his own story in his own voice makes his fury palpable.

    “Do you have a fever? Brain fog?” a friend asked over the phone. “How are you?”

    “Much better today,” I said. “I’ve been sleeping with Elliot Page.”

    Okay, that’s not funny — but it’s accurate as far as it goes. Pageboy’s filled with raunchy revelations about who Elliot’s slept with. (Spoilers: a secret relationship with Kate Mara! His Juno co-star Olivia Thirlby — in the trailer during shooting!) But I slept with Elliot in the most platonic of ways, drifting off on the couch in a mild Covid-haze.

    Dozing off while reading a hard copy can be dangerous. The book slips from your hands and wakes you with a start. With any luck, you don’t lose your place. And if you do, you have to hunt for the place where consciousness ceased.

    In contrast, my Audible Book versions go on without me. Pageboy skips around chronologically in a stream-of-consciousness style, mirroring how memory works. It also makes it tough to find precisely where I left off.

    There’s something to appreciate in the way language, reader, and listener can meld when the gates of consciousness are left ajar. As I listened half-asleep, Page’s disclosure about his gender dysphoria merged with my own journey as a queer woman who views gender as a continuum rather than as a binary. How deeply? In ways I will never fully know.

    Thank you, Elliot Page. Pageboy was wonderful company for 8 1/2 hours — more, if you count the times when I tumbled into dreamland and had to rewind!

    Check out the Close To You teaser for the film that opened September 10th and is the “complete highlight of my [Elliot’s] career.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVVgIp3qSHQClose To You Trailer 2023 | Elliot Page | Hillary Baack | Close To You Trailer | Close To You Teaserwww.youtube.com

    Popdust Staff

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  • Elliot Page Wanted To ‘Kill’ Himself When Having To Wear Feminine Clothes In Movie Role

    Elliot Page Wanted To ‘Kill’ Himself When Having To Wear Feminine Clothes In Movie Role

    By Emerson Pearson.

    Elliot Page once declined a big movie role to prioritize his mental health.

    In his new memoir, Pageboy, the 36-year-old Canadian actor, who came out as transgender in 2020, revealed that he wanted to “kill” himself when he was tasked with wearing feminine clothes on the movie set.

    “I would imagine myself in a woman’s costume from the mid-nineteenth century. The dress, the shoes, the hair, flashed before my eyes. It was too much after having put on the mask for awards season,” said the “Umbrella Academy” star.


    READ MORE:
    Elliot Page On Secret Relationship With Closeted Co-Star: ‘It Wasn’t Sustainable, The Lying, The Anxiety, The Disgust’

    “I understood that if I were to do it, I would want to kill myself.”

    The movie was apparently based on a “famous book,” and Page was set to play a “sought-after” character. Ultimately, the feminine role proved to bee “too much” for Elliot, as he hadn’t transitioned yet and felt like his “personal life was suffocating [him] already.”

    “I pushed myself to dispel the truth for fear of banishment, but I was despondent, trapped in a dismal disguise. An empty, aimless shell,” Page continued.


    READ MORE:
    Elliot Page Says He Had Sex With ‘Juno’ Co-Star Olivia Thirlby ‘All The Time’ During Filming

    “It wasn’t easy to explain to my reps that I couldn’t take on a role because of clothing. A face would scrunch up and tilt sideways, ‘But you’re an actor?’ Wardrobe fittings for films ripped at my insides, talons gashing my organs.”

    Variety reported in 2008 that Page had been enlisted in the adaptation of Charlotte Brontë’s Janye Eyre, but the role eventually went to Mia Wasikowska.

    Emerson Pearson

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  • 39 New Books We Can’t Wait to Read this Summer

    39 New Books We Can’t Wait to Read this Summer

    We may earn commission from links on this page, but we only recommend products we back.

    Homebodies by Tembe Denton-Hurst

    Homebodies by Tembe Denton-Hurst

    Credit: Harper

    First up, we have New York Magazine writer Tembe Denton-Hurst’s debut novel Homebodies. The protagonist, a young Black writer named Mickey, returns to her hometown after being fired from her New York City media job. Things begin to take an interesting turn when she publicly calls out the racism that she experienced at her former workplace. —Juliana Ukiomogbe

    Out on May 2.

    Hula by Jasmin Iolani Hakes

    <i>Hula</i> by Jasmin Iolani Hakes

    Hula by Jasmin Iolani Hakes

    Credit: HarperVia

    Set in Hilo on the Big Island of Hawai’i, Jasmin Iolani Hakes’ debut is a proud, vibrant coming-of-age tale, in which a young woman competes to win the Miss Aloha Hula competition. But as she whittles this generations-old craft, so she gets a sharper, unflinching view into her own family history and the tensions eating at her island community. —Lauren Puckett-Pope

    Out on May 2.

    You Are Here by Karin Lin-Greenberg

    <i>You Are Here</i> by Karin Lin-Greenberg

    You Are Here by Karin Lin-Greenberg

    Credit: Counterpoint

    Look at this gorgeous cover. If that doesn’t immediately entice you, perhaps the premise might: In a small town, a popular shopping mall—once home to bustling businesses—is scheduled to be shut down. You Are Here brings together a diverse group of friends and strangers as they reckon with their ever-changing environment. —JO

    Out on May 2.

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    August Blue by Deborah Levy

    <i>August Blue</i> by Deborah Levy

    August Blue by Deborah Levy

    A new Deborah Levy novel is cause for celebration. August Blue takes place in picturesque Athens, Greece, and follows a pianist named Elsa as she travels around Europe in search of herself. —JO

    Out on May 4.

    Oh My Mother! by Connie Wang

    <i>Oh My Mother!</i> by Connie Wang

    Oh My Mother! by Connie Wang

    Credit: Viking

    In Chinese, the expression oh my god is translated to wo de ma ya, which literally means, oh my mother. In this part-memoir, part-essay collection, the journalist Connie Wang immortalizes the life of her mother as she reminisces on their favorite moments together. Think: taking edibles in Amsterdam and seeing a Magic Mike strip show in Las Vegas. —JO

    Out on May 9.

    A Life of One’s Own by Joanna Biggs

    <i>A Life of One's Own</i> by Joanna Biggs

    A Life of One’s Own by Joanna Biggs

    In A Life of One’s Own, author Joanna Biggs, a recent divorcée, clings to the lives of her favorite writers as she navigates her newly single life. Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurston, and Elena Ferrante are just a few of the women that she turns to for solace and inspiration. —JO

    Out on May 11.

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    Quietly Hostile by Samantha Irby

    <i>Quietly Hostile</i> by Samantha Irby

    Quietly Hostile by Samantha Irby

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    Credit: Vintage

    The bestselling author of We Are Never Meeting in Real Life and Wow, No Thank You. is back with her new essay collection, Quietly Hostile. Jia Tolentino said that it’s a “stay-up-all-night, miss-your-subway-stop, spit-out-your-beverage out” type of funny. Consider that sentiment co-signed. —JO

    Out on May 16.

    The Three of Us by Ore Agbaje-Williams

    <i>The Three of Us</i> by Ore Agbaje-Williams

    The Three of Us by Ore Agbaje-Williams

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    Credit: G.P. Putnam’s Sons

    What’s more dramatic than the weird tension—cough, hatred—between a husband, his wife, and her best friend? Told over the course of one day, The Three of Us is split into three parts—signifying each main character—and investigates the inherent drama of their domestic life. —JO

    Out on May 16.

    Dances by Nicole Cuffy

    <i>Dances</i> by Nicole Cuffy

    Dances by Nicole Cuffy

    Credit: One World

    In her debut novel, Nicole Cuffy follows a 22-year-old ballerina named Cece. When she’s promoted to principal at the New York City Ballet, she becomes the first Black ballerina in the company’s history. As her new celebrity status sends her into a frenzy of imposter syndrome, she also attempts to reclaim the parts of herself that she’s desperately tried to leave behind. —JO

    Out on May 16.

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    Yellowface by R.F. Kuang

    <i>Yellowface</i> by R.F. Kuang

    Yellowface by R.F. Kuang

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    Credit: William Morrow

    Known for her brilliant, artfully constructed works of fantasy including Babel and The Poppy War, R.F. Kuang is turning her attentions closer to home in this summer novel. Yellowface follows authors June Hayward and Athena Liu. One is white, the other is Asian; one’s drowning in obscurity, and the other’s writing hits. When Athena dies unexpectedly, June snaps up her peer’s manuscript to pass off as her own, even adopting an ethnically (and, uh, ethically) ambiguous pen name. Drama ensues. —LPP

    Out on May 16.

    A Renaissance of Our Own by Rachel E. Cargle

    <i>A Renaissance of Our Own</i> by Rachel E. Cargle

    A Renaissance of Our Own by Rachel E. Cargle

    Credit: Ballantine Books

    In her memoir and manifesto, Rachel E. Cargle charts her transformation from a small-town Christian wife to a well-known queer feminist activist. If you’re unfamiliar with her work, her Instagram account—followed by 1.6M and counting—is a good place to start while you wait for the May release. —JO

    Out on May 16.

    The Late Americans by Brandon Taylor

    <i>The Late Americans</i> by Brandon Taylor

    The Late Americans by Brandon Taylor

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    Credit: Riverhead Books

    A story about lovers and friends will always be on our TBR list. In Iowa City, a group of loosely connected artists and blue-collar workers—including Seamus, Ivan, Fatima, and Noah—weave through one another’s familiar haunts. The core foursome eventually embark on a cabin trip to officially say goodbye to their former lives as they now try to find themselves in a new world. If you love novels about chosen families, you’ll really enjoy this one. —JO

    Out on May 23.

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    The Art of Ruth E. Carter by Ruth E. Carter

    <i>The Art of Ruth E. Carter</i> by Ruth E. Carter

    The Art of Ruth E. Carter by Ruth E. Carter

    Now 10% Off

    As the only Black woman who’s won two Academy Awards, Ruth E. Carter certainly has a story to tell. In this new deluxe art book, the award-winning costume designer shares her sketches, mood boards, and various memories of dressing some of the most iconic actors of all time, including Chadwick Boseman, Angela Bassett, Halle Berry, and Eddie Murphy. —JO

    Out on May 23.

    Sing Her Down by Ivy Pochoda

    <i>Sing Her Down</i> by Ivy Pochoda

    Sing Her Down by Ivy Pochoda

    Credit: MCD

    A haunting noir thriller stretching from Arizona up to the California coast, Sing Her Down follows prison cellmates Florida and Dios, and the dark truths Dios hopes to draw from her new friend. When both women are released, Dios chases Florida to Los Angeles in this hot, propulsive new book from the author of These Women. —LPP

    Out on May 23.

    Deep as the Sky, Red as the Sea by Rita Chang-Eppig

    <i>Deep as the Sky, Red as the Sea</i> by Rita Chang-Eppig

    Deep as the Sky, Red as the Sea by Rita Chang-Eppig

    Now 10% Off

    Credit: Bloomsbury Publishing

    An refreshingly vivid adventure tale, perfect for long days by the ocean’s edge, Deep as the Sky, Red as the Sea follows Chinese pirate queen Shek Yeung as she builds her empire on the water following the death of her husband. As her new family—and her own name—become increasingly notorious on land and sea, Shek Yeung must carefully weigh her roles as leader, mother, and legend. —LPP

    Out on May 30.

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    Pageboy by Elliot Page

    <i>Pageboy</i> by Elliot Page

    Pageboy by Elliot Page

    Now 15% Off

    Credit: Flatiron Books

    Celebrity memoirs are inescapable these days, but this is one likely to live up to the hype. In Pageboy, Elliot Page finally shares his truth as he interrogates Hollywood, love, and queerness. —JO

    Out on June 6.

    All the Gold Stars: Reimagining Ambition and the Ways We Strive by Rainesford Stauffer

    <i>All the Gold Stars: Reimagining Ambition and the Ways We Strive</i> by Rainesford Stauffer

    All the Gold Stars: Reimagining Ambition and the Ways We Strive by Rainesford Stauffer

    Credit: Hachette Go

    A clever, informative, even—dare I say—life-altering twist amongst the ever-growing pile of self-help books, All the Gold Stars is journalist Rainesford Stauffer’s guide (and plea) to help us come to terms with reality: Work will not love us back. Ambition is a, not the, motivator. And “success” will never be enough. Perhaps we know these things intuitively, but Stauffer’s well-articulated anecdotes and arguments pave the path for real, lasting recognition of their truth. —LPP

    Out on June 6.

    The Whispers by Ashley Audrain

    <i>The Whispers</i> by Ashley Audrain

    The Whispers by Ashley Audrain

    Now 10% Off

    Credit: Pamela Dorman Books

    The author of The Push returns this summer with The Whispers, a twisted family tale that begins on one fateful late-summer evening. At a catered barbecue of polished suburbanites, a woman screams at her disobedient child; soon after, that child takes a supposedly accidental tumble through a window. What exactly happened that night, and who is really at fault? —LPP

    Out on June 6.

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    Open Throat by Henry Hoke

    <i>Open Throat</i> by Henry Hoke

    Open Throat by Henry Hoke

    Credit: MCD

    The premise alone makes Henry Hoke’s startling achievement worth the purchase: A queer mountain lion makes their home in the Hollywood hills, where they protect a nearby homeless encampment until a wildfire pushes them into the streets of Los Angeles. Philosophical and heartfelt, Open Throat is the ultimate immersion into the mind of an unlikely protagonist. —LPP

    Out on June 6.

    Nightbloom by Peace Adzo Medie

    <i>Nightbloom</i> by Peace Adzo Medie

    Nightbloom by Peace Adzo Medie

    Now 18% Off

    Credit: Algonquin Books

    Taking place in Ghana and the United States (and, necessarily, in between), Nightbloom chronicles the love and tension between best friends and cousins Selasi and Akorfa. When the former grows suddenly, inexplicably distant and the latter moves to Pittsburgh to become a doctor, their relationship is cut off at the root. It’s only when secrets are examined under the light that the two are finally able to meet—and to see each other clearly—once again. —LPP

    Out on June 13.

    Headshot of Juliana Ukiomogbe

    Juliana Ukiomogbe is the Assistant Editor at ELLE. Her work has previously appeared in Interview, i-D, Teen Vogue, Nylon, and more.  

    Headshot of Lauren Puckett-Pope

    Culture Writer

    Lauren Puckett-Pope is a staff culture writer at ELLE, where she primarily covers film, television and books. She was previously an associate editor at ELLE. 

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