Now Leaving Nowheresville
Now Leaving Nowheresville is a neo-Kafka-esque collection of short stories about the weirdness that is life in the U.S. It contains a novella about a collective of artists searching for transcendence while trapped in a Winesburg, Ohio not of their own making.
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Convulsive
"The stories of Convulsive dazzle and stun the reader with brutal beauty and surreal intensity. This collection's deftly subversive themes and stylistic complexity dare you to witness its unique and transgressive radiance." - Tiffany Morris, author of Havoc In Silence
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The Couvade
“That surreality might be my favorite thing Joe does with their stories, but also The Couvade is full of heart, a relationship that changes with the story's themes so that what's said becomes what's felt, thought turning to instinct. It happens subtly, and my head was swimming in every emotion and revelation by the end.”
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Invaginies
"Invaginies is Koch's nastiest and most formally daring collection yet, a glistening tangle of poetic viscera dragged out into the light and impossible to look away from." - Gretchen Felker-Martin, author of Manhunt
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Stories of the Eye
Edited by Joe Koch and Sam Richard, Stories of the Eye collects thirteen visions of modern horror that dissects the relationship between artist and model, exposing the spaces the eye is tricked into missing where we witness the beautiful and monstrous intricacies of making and being made.
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The Wingspan of Severed Hands
"I'm awestruck by Joe Koch's nonstop spellbinding, almost paralyzingly inventive and yet propulsive, ultra-focused prose. The Wingspan of Severed Hands is a truly amazing find." - Dennis Cooper (The Marbled Swarm, The Sluts)
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Origin Stories
“In the stories of Brigitte Lewis the sacred and the profane refuse tidy categories and instead erupt into messy, humorous, and profound elucidations about what it means to be in a body that loves other bodies. Here are stories that work like alchemy works—the mythical past and the uncertain present conjunct in an invitation to see ourselves anew.” —Selah Saterstrom, author of Ideal Suggestions and Slab.
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The Disintegrations: A Novel
"'I know nothing about death, absolutely nothing,' asserts the narrator of this inventive autobiographical novel. Yet he can't stop thinking about it..."
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The End of the World Book
“If I’ve read a more deeply impressive, beautiful, sweeping, mindful, and innovative first novel than Alistair McCartney’s The End of the World Book, I have no memory of it. McCartney is a writer of peerless, brilliant originality and pure, giant talent.” —Dennis Cooper, author of The Sluts and God Jr.
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Nopalito, Texas: Stories
"In Nopalito, Texas: Stories, David Meischen is attuned to the quiet crises upon which a person's life turns. In clear, poignant, and often poetic language, we see the residents of a small South Texas town--daughters, sons, mothers, fathers, neighbors, friends, outsiders--pushing against the limits of their lives. Stubbornness, devotion, confusion, pride, and anger see them through the internal upheavals and seismic shifts of loss and grief. And at the end, you'll sigh deep and long and wonder at having held so much life, so much humanity, in such a slender volume." - ire'ne lara silva, author of flesh to bone
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Stories of the New West
“In his third collection, Stories of the New West, Evan Morgan Williams covers elemental ground, mountains and deserts, cringe-worthy adolescent humiliation, sad adult failure, the lives of so-called refugees, so-called locals, creating a world of rogues who insist on making their own way, all the while yelling, “Hell no!” and throwing precious gifts into the fire, into the river, into the sky.” -Mary Rechner, author of story collection Nine Simple Patterns for Complicated Women and novella The Opposite of Wow
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Thorn: Short Stories
These stories portray hardships of characters who come from a variety of backgrounds, especially Native Americans and others from the Pacific Coast. With his vivid descriptions of these characters and their experiences, Williams explores their psyches and personal struggles, but common themes tie these stories together in ways that invite readers to see their own struggles and relationships in new ways.
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Laurel Everywhere
“Laurel Everywhere is a deeply moving, startlingly real examination of trauma, tragedy, and the indefatigable strength of the human spirit when confronted with a world that won’t stop turning in the face of loss.” - Ava Morgan, Resurrection Girls
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Kindred
The death of Holland Adler was unexpected, but time moves on in this coastal town - for some more than others. In the still of a Friday afternoon, Lena Khalil looks around Kindred Spirits + Coffee; a melancholic English teacher flips through essays, and the property owner's assistant talks to a muralist about the blank blue wall. Elsewhere, two sisters get ready for a night out, a woman helps her husband with his crossword puzzle, and a wayward traveler returns home. Life intersects at Kindred, just as Holland hoped it would - hosting various vignettes of love, loss, and what it's like to live in the aftermath.
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Crossing Paths
“At BookCrossing, books are registered and released with an individual tracking number. A good many drop off the radar and then turn up years later at the strangest of places. In Crossing Paths, the main character Jane disappears - for the other characters who are worried about her the clues to where she might be are on her BookCrossing bookshelf. Russell Dark, a book store owner and Jonathan Fairlight, a new age writer, begin to track her through the books she leaves behind. Within these pages eight people who cross paths with Jane Townsend will have their lives changed forever.”
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The Hermitage
“It is October 1937 and Vere, Roger and John all catch the 10am Taronga Zoo ferry, interested to see why they have been invited to stay at The Hermitage on Sydney Harbour. Despite the beauty of the Hermitage, Roger quickly discovers that no-one can leave and all three guests are having trouble with their memory. Vere, a lover of mysteries, decides they are trapped in a locked room mystery of their own, but can she solve it before it is too late?”
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Tomaree
“Tomaree is a World War II love story set in Australia. In 1942 Peggy Ashburn meets an American soldier, First Lieutenant Tom Lockwood, who is based at the Shoal Bay Country Club, Port Stephens. The attraction between them is immediate and intense and the couple enlist the help of Peggy's neighbour, Sarah Linden, to act as go-between. By 1972 when Peggy arrives back home from the US for the funeral of her estranged mother, her marriage is in tatters and she has a lot of soul-searching ahead of her. When she begins to go through her mother's house she discovers not only a letter that has been lost for thirty years but that her mother kept an incredible secret from her.”
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And Wind Will Wash Away
“WHAT IS BELIEF? What is it to believe in something, anything? And how far are you willing to go for that belief? Atlanta Police Detective Jonathan Wind believes in truth, but otherwise he doesn’t normally have time for questions like these; he has crimes to solve and killers to catch. But this case is different. This case will challenge everything he s ever thought or known. It s also personal.”
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The Death of the Cyborg Oracle
“Rothacker’s fresh take on ancient symbolism, cutting characters, and doomsday clock-like cadence strikes a death chord from genesis to cessation.” — Hillary Leftwich, author, poet, and founder of Al·che·my Author Services
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Gristle: weird tales
“Jordan A. Rothacker’s Gristle reads like episodes of The Twilight Zone if written by Krzysztof Kieslowski. There are moments that we think of as ordinary, detailing loneliness, intellectual frustration, unrequited love. But there is a spark of something in them, whether you want to call it divinity or magic, that brings a notion to the human condition, that these moments are not to be let to pass without knowing their weight. They are quiet, but not ordinary.” —Pam Jones
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