Alex Beecroft is an English author best known for historical and contemporary romantic fiction featuring gay characters. In 2010, they were called one of the premier and most beloved authors of male/male historical romances. They also write science fiction/fantasy fiction as Alex Oliver, and cozy mysteries under the pseudonym Robyn Beecroft.
Beecroft was born in Northern Ireland and grew up in the Peak District. As of 2010, they live near Cambridge and have two children.
Beecroft is agender and uses they/them pronouns.
Beecroft discovered slash fiction while searching for stories about Qui-Gon from '. Inspired by what they read, Beecroft began writing their own slash stories based on The Silmarillion and the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise. Beecroft says that they had been "telling these kinds of stories in my head since I was 11. I started writing and thinking up stories with two gay protagonists. I thought I was a single, solitary pervert. When I discovered slash, I thought, 'Oh, my God, I'm normal!'"
Beecroft also sees their stories as opportunities to play with and transcend traditional gender roles, stating "M/M romance can be used to examine relationships which don't suffer from the same sort of built in power imbalances and gender role constraints that make m/f romance such a minefield."
Beecroft won Linden Bay Romance's (now Samhain Publishing) Starlight Writing Competition in 2007 with their first novel, Captain's Surrender, making it their first published book. On the subject of writing gay romance, Beecroft has appeared in the Charleston City Paper, LA Weekly, the New Haven Advocate, the Baltimore City Paper, and The Other Paper. They are a regular reviewer for the blog Speak Its Name, which highlights historical gay fiction.
In 2010, Rolling Stone named Beecroft one of the "premier authors" of male/male historical romances alongside Erastes, Laura Baumbach and Donald Hardy. In a profile that year in Out, Beecroft was called "one of the most popular and beloved authors in the rapidly expanding male/male romance genre, a defining feature of which is explicit gay male sex."
In a starred review of Beecroft's Blue-Eyed Stranger, Publishers Weekly called the novel "note perfect from start to finish" and that it featured "two highly credible, intelligent characters are portrayed with humor and pathos in a narrative awash in English historical references and local color." In 2018, Publishers Weekly named Beecroft 's Contraband Hearts as one of the year's best romance summer reads.