Ayden LeRoux is a queer writer and critic from New England. Once upon a time she attended culinary school, worked as a cheesemaker on a goat farm, and

studied to become a sommelier. Now she writes fiction and nonfiction exploring embodiment, eroticism, and illness, in order to complicate narratives about caretaking, gender, sexuality, and family structures. She writes art and literary criticism regularly, often covering work that pertains to sexuality, disability, and the culinary world.
LeRoux's work can be found in
BOMB,
Bookforum,
Catapult,
Electric Lit,
Entropy,
Guernica,
Lit Hub,
Los Angeles Review of Books, and
The Rumpus, and was honored as Notable in Best American Essays 2021. She is the co-author of
Odyssey Works: Transformative Experiences for an Audience of One (2016).
At Electric Lit LeRoux tagged
seven notable books about authorship hoaxes, including:
The Plot by Jean Hanff Korelitz

Jacob Finch Bonner had a respectable start to his publishing career but has been struggling to write a second book for far too long. When a student of his comes along that is painfully arrogant but has a brilliant idea for a book, Bonner is jealous. The plot is undeniably juicy, and it seems only a matter of time that he will be eclipsed by a student, washed up and forgotten about. But the book never comes out and Bonner eventually discovers his student died. He decides to use the plot for his own next book (chapters of Bonner’s book are interwoven with the story so readers slowly come to see what exactly this atomic plot is). This thrilling read gets even more propulsive when someone who knows Bonner stole the story starts hunting him down to pay penance.
Read about
another entry on the list.
The Plot is among
Jane L. Rosen's nine books about book people,
Elyse Friedman's eight novels featuring schemers & opportunists,
E.G. Scott's five best books-within-books,
Kimberly Belle's four thrillers with maximum escapism, and
Louise Dean's top ten novels about novelists.
--Marshal Zeringue