Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2022 Read Harder Challenge
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#11. Read a book with an asexual and/or aromantic main character.
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Book Riot
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Dec 10, 2021 11:16AM

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I’m super excited to see what other Ace and/or Aro books are out there that people recommend, as someone who happens to be in that little community.

Some other options are Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger or Heartsong by T.J. Klune.

book:Tash Hearts Tolstoy|29414576]
The Bone People
How to Be a Normal Person
But All Systems Red has been on my list for ages, and if that fits I might do that instead. Thanks Elizabeth!

book:Tash Hearts Tolstoy|29414576]
The Bone People
How to Be a Normal Person
But All Systems Red has been on my list for..."
I hear good things about The Bone People, but wanted everyone to know there is severe physical abuse of a child depicted repeatedly throughout the book, and the way other characters respond to this may also be triggering.
The Murderbot books are amazing!

Some other options a..."
Heartsong is #3 in a series. Can you read it as a standalone or must you read books 1 and 2 first?

Claudie Arseneault
Claudie Arseneault
Elin Annalise
Also you can find more on a dedicated database: https://www.aroacedatabase.com/

So..."
I would say you could read it as a standalone, but it would definitely make more sense as part of the series.

I also recently read and adored The Love Hypothesis in which the character speculates she is on the asexual spectrum


If this is the case, I'm definitely going to be reading this for this prompt too.

Books I've read and also recommend
Little Thieves (actually TWO asexual protagonists)
Every Heart a Doorway (which has already been recommended but I honestly can't recommend it enough)
A Pale Light in the Black
No Gods, No Monsters (this is told from like a dozen perspectives, so it's hard to pin down a main character, but one of the perspective characters is ace, and this is the only horror novel that I'm aware of for this category)
Books I want to read with ace and/or aro rep
A Natural History of Dragons
Baker Thief
Tash Hearts Tolstoy
Archivist Wasp
Beyond the Black Door

The Complete Adventures and Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, by Arthur Conan Doyle

I also recently read and adored The Love Hypothesis in which the character speculates she is on the asexual spectrum"
I loved Every Heart so much.

https://bookriot.com/asexual-books/"
Thanks for posting! <3


I don't see it. The female lead thinks she might be ace at the beginning, but it is only because she had not yet found the right partner. That said I loved this book and definitely recommend it.

I listed this one for the political thriller category...the blurb feels like it fits there, can anyone verify? Thanks!

I did read this, but I honestly found the ace/aro rep to be a little disappointing. If you've never heard of asexuality or aromanticism, it does explain things well, especially why it is difficult to be ace and aro. However, there is definitely loads of amatonormativity and even some questionable consent issues so I would advise ace and/or aro readers to look elsewhere for something more affirming.

The protagonist in the book is Alice, a black college student who identifies as bi and asexual, and is comfortable and confident with those points. The book starts with Alice promptly getting dumped by someone who doesn’t understand asexuality. I’m not far along but it’s charming so far and I appreciate this particular POV in a YA book.
Update: I'm about 13% in and I'm going to finish the book but I'm really not enjoying the writing. The protagonist's ways of describing her feelings keeps making me cringe, no better than Anastasia Steele's "inner goddess" in 50 Shades (my apologies for bringing up 50 Shades).

I listed this one for the political thriller category...the blurb feels like it fits there, can anyone verify? Thanks!"
You might be able to describe it as a political thriller, but it would be a bit of a stretch. It deals with corrupt politicians, but in more of a Western way then a political thriller way. I would describe the genre overall as Western meets Zombie Apocalypse (that being said, it definitely works for this prompt)



I don't see it. The female lead thinks she might be ace at the ..."
Just because someone finds a partner and has sex with them doesn't mean they are not asexual. Asexual by definition is not feel sexual attraction and has nothing with the actual act of sex. It is absolutely valid to be sex favourable and still be asexual. Also demisexual is under the aspec umbrella - not feeling sexual attraction until the emotional bond is formed.
Hope that helps!





I haven't read Vicious, but the author did confirm Victor Vale is asexual though it's not outright stated in the text itself. I think if you want to count it, you could - but there are a ton of great books out there that fit this prompt too!

Does this have a character older than 40 that falls in love?

Oh, if this is the case, it's going to be hard for me to choose between this and Loveless!

A Lady's Guide To Petticoats and Piracy is also an alternative that isn't really SFF or romance. It's mostly a historical fiction adventure story, although there are still some fantasy elements.


Books mentioned in this topic
Every Heart a Doorway (other topics)It Sounds Like This (other topics)
Elatsoe (other topics)
It Sounds Like This (other topics)
All Systems Red (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Talia Hibbert (other topics)Arthur Conan Doyle (other topics)
Claudie Arseneault (other topics)
Elin Annalise (other topics)