My latest works are kind of moving toward a transgender sensibility as I get settled and parse the experience of my transition with the kind of hindsight I can write about.
Currently, my books are more about the initial shock of discovering I was trans, and they do it more by way of allegory; my books are all about competing narratives of identity and reality, or about reincarnation, since both seem to really capture the mind-warping experience of a late-onset trans case.
The only thing readers here might not like is the fact that I write most lucidly about gay male characters since I lived as a gay man for 8 years and I've only been actively transitioning for 2 years.
My latest and greatest is a science fiction story called "The Vimana Incident." It's got elements of time slip, alternate history, reincarnation, and some classic space opera elements as well. It begins in the West Country of England an alternate 1939 where the second world war has been pre-empted by a space race and jumps to 2606 on an off-world colony, 1153 in France, 1946 in postwar England, and 2039 in northern California. It's been compared to Nevil Shute's work. The protagonist is faced with a true identity not merely as himself, but as an entity reborn in continuous phases throughout time and with a universe that, like gender, is infinitely more complex than it appears.
It can be purchased here:
http://www.amazon.com/The-Vimana-Incident-Rose-LaCroix/dp/1614502277And here is a review of the book:
http://clawandquill.net/2015/03/the-vimana-incident/