My most recent novel is a fantasy novel. It deals with a transgender heroine (a prince transformed into a princess) who's married, so by definition we have a same-sex marriage as a major starting point of the book. Both in my publisher's opinion and my own it is just a fantasy novel, or perhaps a fantasy thriller. Reviewers have classified it as romantic fantasy, fantasy thriller, dark fantasy, fantasy mystery. I think this is because I try to present the love relationship as a very strong one, but not particularly as a lesbian relationship. The book was nominated for the Gaylactic Spectrum Award by some readers, but it didn't win or place. It was reviewed by Lambda Rising, but they felt the gblt content was minor, even though they went on to say the the love relationship between the two main characters was one of the best things about the book. A loving, married relationship between two women, though through the bulk of the book they are separated and struggling to get to each other. It finished as a finalist for the ForeWord Magazine's Book of the Year Award for science fiction, and a semi-finalist for the IPPY for science fiction/fantasy. I'm sure I have more non-gblt readers than I do gblt (though some tg folks read me just because I'm ts and I write for Transgender Tapestry). So, with all of that, my book still isn't considered gay/lesbian, nor is it. It's just a (great) fantasy tale that happens to have a a transsexual heroine. Confused yet?
diana