There are few things I love more than a good romance. Or even a bad romance. One of those things? A good (or bad!) holiday romance. Anyone who knows me knows I’m a sucker for a cheesy Hallmark Christmas rom-com. Yes, they’re predictable, but that’s the charm of them! My biggest issue? Not enough sapphic holiday rom-coms.
And that’s where books come in! While TV networks are slow to catch on that sapphics want to see our love stories on-screen, books are willing to keep up with the demand. These stories make you want to curl up on the couch in a thick sweater with a mug of your favorite hot chocolate while sitting next to your twinkling Christmas tree.
Because what is the holiday season about if not a little romance? (I say this as a person who got engaged on Christmas!)
Make My Wish Come True by Rachael Lippincott & Alyson Derrick
Teen actress Arden James is more well-known for her party girl persona than her acting abilities. So when a picky director won’t give her a role because of her off-screen antics, Arden and her publicist make up a lie. They say that she’s from a small town (technically not a lie) and that she’s dating her childhood best friend Caroline (huge lie), which she can prove when she goes home for Christmas.
Caroline isn’t interested in anything having to do with Arden James. She’s been out of sight, out of mind for years. But when Arden shows up on her doorstep promising her an article in Cosmopolitan in exchange for pretending to be her girlfriend for 12 days, Caroline knows that it’s the journalistic opportunity she needs. What could possibly go wrong?
I’ll Be Gone for Christmas by Georgia K. Boone
If you wished that holiday classic The Holiday had a sapphic element, you’re in luck with this new holiday romance.
Bee Turner needs to get away from San Francisco. Everything is too much. So when her best friend suggests she list her sleek apartment on popular house swapping site Vacate, Bee jumps at the chance to escape. Meanwhile, Clover Mills has been having a year. Between losing her mother and ending things with her fiancé as a result, she needs to get out of her small Ohio town. When she hears about Vacate, her bags are packed faster than you can say cable car.
When she gets to San Francisco, Clover can’t seem to avoid Bee’s sister Beth, while Bee keeps finding herself in the presence of Clover’s ex, Knox. Maybe holiday magic is a real thing after all.
It’s important to mention that only one of these storylines is sapphic, featuring a late-in-life coming out story.
Make the Season Bright by Ashley Herring Blake
Ashley Herring Blake sapphic holiday romance? Say less, I’m already in.
Charlotte Donovan is living the dream as a violinist in New York City. Nevermind the fact that she was left at the altar five years ago and she never hears from her single mother. She’s ready for Christmastime in the city when her ensemble mate Sloane invites everyone to Colorado for the holiday.
The group aren’t the only ones in Colorado for Christmas — Sloane’s sister has brought home her friend Brighton, who just happens to be Charlotte’s ex. Now the two women have to pretend that they don’t know each other. Except that gets increasingly harder as their past comes back to them with a vengeance.
I’ll Get Back to You by Becca Grischow
There is something about a holiday romance that just begs for a fake dating storyline. Technically, this is a Thanksgiving story, but honestly, it’s all the holiday season in my mind!
All Murphy wants is to get out of her small Illinois town and start her life somewhere else. Instead, she’s stuck working in the same coffee shop she’s been working at since she was sixteen, and she doesn’t think she’ll ever be able to pass that pesky community college class that’s keeping her from graduating.
Murphy’s string of bad luck could potentially change thanks to former classmate Ellie Meyers. Ellie’s mom just happens to be the same professor whose class Murphy keeps failing. Ellie and Murphy realize that they are each other’s best bets for the next step in their goal lists, so they hatch a fake dating plan. Except the dating quickly feels not so fake…
This Christmas by Georgia Beers
No-kill animal shelter Junebug Farms decide to sponsor their town’s annual Christmas parade as a way to bring more attention to the shelter. And they will use the parade’s king and queen to create videos to ensure that all their pups are delivered to their forever homes on Santa’s sleigh.
What they don’t know is that the parade is going to have two queens this year. That is if longtime dog walking volunteer (and resident matchmaker) Mia Sorenson has her way. Mia rigs the voting so that her granddaughter Samantha and her friend Keegan get the gig. But will the two women overcome years of beating around the bush and the public embarrassment to make true love real?
Make You Mine This Christmas by Lizzie Huxley-Jones
Haf hasn’t had the best year, and all she wants to do is go to a Christmas party and have a good time. But her good time gets a little too festive: she gets drunk and kisses Christopher under the mistletoe while his ex-girlfriend just happens to be watching.
Suddenly, a drunken kiss turns into a fake relationship, with Haf joining Chrisopher’s family for the holiday season so he can save face. But word to the wise Haf, don’t fall in love with your fake boyfriend’s sister…
Most Wonderful by Georgia Clark
The Belvedere siblings’ lives are all falling apart when they show up to celebrate Christmas in the Catskills with their singer/actress mother Babs. Oldest daughter Liz has become a showrunner who can’t figure out season two of her hit show, and also can’t get a handle on her crush on the show’s star Violet. Her comedian middle sister Birdie is chasing skirts more than she’s chasing gigs, causing her to fear that she will be a flash in the pan. And then there’s their little brother Rafi, who proposed to his coworker girlfriend in front of the whole office and got turned down.
During their time in the mountains, each of the siblings learns a lot about themselves, their eccentric mother, and each other. And of course, there’s also a little holiday romantic sparkle.
The Christmas Swap by Talia Samuels
The last thing newly single businesswoman Margot wants is a holiday romance. But when sweet Ben needs a girlfriend to spend Christmas with him and his family, she can’t say no. She knows that nothing will happen — she’ll get a couple weeks away from London, Ben gets his family off his back. It’s a win-win situation.
There is something that Margot didn’t anticipate when making the deal: Ben’s sister Ellie. She has Margot majorly rethinking the whole holiday romance thing.
A Holly Jolly Christmas: A Second Chance Lesbian Romance by Emily Wright
Everything you need to know about this story is right there in the title. If there’s another trope I love for a holiday romance, it’s second chance.
Holly hasn’t been home in the two years since her brother died. Her family is still grieving, her ex won’t stop calling, and everything gets worse when she bumps into her first love, Vicky Castleton.
While Holly is trying to heal the broken parts of herself, her family and best friend keep pushing her to confront her past. And as she spends more time with Vicky, it’s clear that Holly has never gotten over her. Is Christmas the perfect time for her to risk it all for love?
It’s a Fabulous Life by Kelly Farmer
A sapphic It’s a Wonderful Life you say? Love it!
Bailey George is ready to bid adieu to Lanford Falls and finally leave her responsibilities behind for a vacation in New York City. But then the person taking over her leadership position for the town’s Winter Wonderfest gets sick, and obligation keeps Bailey from following through with her plans. While she’s pretty bummed about being stuck in Lanford Falls, things get a little better when her crush Marla agrees to help her out.
Unfortunately for Bailey, things just keep going wrong. Then one night, she finds herself under the town’s old bridge. When she wishes that she had never been born, a drag queen named Clara Angel shows her that Lanford Falls wouldn’t be better off without her. And holiday magic can make any dreams come true.
How to Excavate a Heart by Jake Maia Arlow
Shani didn’t mean to hit May with her mom’s Subaru. It was just another part of the curse of Winter Break, including the way Shani got dumped. But she’s going to push all that aside and focus on her month-long paleoichthyology internship. After all, that’s why she’s in D.C.
But when a dog walking gig serendipitously brings May back into Shani’s life, it’s easy to forget about fish fossils and heartbreak. Especially when they get snowed in together on Christmas Eve. Things were never supposed to turn out this way. Will Shani be able to accept that sometimes plans change?
Season of Love by Helena Greer
When artist Miriam Blum’s great aunt Cass dies and leaves her the family Christmas tree farm, she has to face parts of her past that she really doesn’t want to. All she wants to do is sit shiva (yes, there is something ironic about a Jewish woman running a Christmas tree farm), avoid her parents and get as far away from the farm as she can. But of course, life has other plans.
The business is about to go under, and to save it, Miriam must work together with Noelle, the farm’s grumpy manager. The chemistry between them is enough to burn the trees to the ground, but will that help them save the farm?
In the Event of Love by Courtney Kae
LA event planner Morgan’s life has blown up after a work-related scandal, and she’s forced to head home to Fern Falls for the holidays. But Fern Falls isn’t the idyllic holiday haven she wants it to be. Mainly because her former best friend turned crush Rachel is there. Rachel, who has now become a sexy lumberjane thanks to working at her family’s Christmas tree farm.
Soon, Morgan learns that Rachel’s tree farm is the only thing keeping Fern Falls from being sold to a seedy developer. So Morgan decides to put her party planning to good use and create the ultimate holiday experience. But just because she’s helping Rachel’s farm doesn’t mean they’re going to fall in love. Right?
I have read (or listened to) several of these selections and they’re so much fun. Shout out to Season of Love – it has a thick, butch lead and both of those characteristics are sorely lacking in most lesbian fiction.
And as a devotee of It’s a Wonderful Life, It’s A Fabulous Life is delightful. Thank you for this list!
Great list! Just a heads up though, the link for How To Exacavate a Heart is accidentally linked to A Fabulous Life 🫶🏿
Yay, more romance recs from Sa’iyda <3.
I have to shout out my very favorite Sapphic holiday romance – Kiss Her Once for Me by Alison Cochrun. It's a very, very loose retelling of the movie While You Were Sleeping – without the coma but with lots of humor and pathos and love.
I really enjoyed How to Excavate a Heart, although it was different than I expected from the blurb. Here's a bit from my StoryGraph review.
4.5 stars. Delightful Sapphic romance between two first-year college students spending winter break in Washington DC.
It’s told from the first person POV of Shani, a nerdy, anxious Jewish lesbian. I think your enjoyment of the book will depend on whether you can handle her anxious, overthinking narration. Read the sample.
Your enjoyment may also depend on whether you can handle the stress of reading such an accurate portrayal of what it's like to be 18 years old – complete with poor impulse control and crazy mood swings. (This may just be me and my middle aged sensibilities). I had to put this down a couple times when I got stressed about both Shani and May making (age appropriate) poor choices. But I did really enjoy their relationship and personal growth – it was satisfying and believable.
Content notes: sexual assault (in the past, off page).
I loved Kiss Her Once For Me as well!!
FYI anyone who might try out the Christmas Swap, I made it a ways into it before the fact that the book ignores that bisexuality exists made me put it down. Everyone’s like, she was a dating a man, she couldn’t possibly date a woman now 🙄
Thank you for this round up! My TBR just got bigger.
An aside: How about everyone talking about romance strikes “cheesy” from adjectives when we talk about romance of any kind. The larger literary community regularly dunks on romance as “cheap, unpleasant, and blatantly inauthentic” which is what “cheesy” means.
How about “cozy” or “lighthearted” instead? I believe that’s the intent in this article’s opening. Those are words used for other genres when the story is, well, cozy and lighthearted.
I also loved the M/F bi for bi rep in Wishing on Winter. More fake dating! It also features older queer characters and a fat main character, and is generally cute and delightful
My favourite of this genre (and one of my faves in the romance genre in general) is Kiss Her Once For Me by Alison Cochrun. Highly recommend!
my favorite way to escape from my family during the holidays is to download a lesbian holiday romance and read it on my kindle while they watch movies about explosions so this list is very appreciated