The Monster Fucker Club
By A.V. Greene
This was on Apex, and I did not plan to read it, I was looking for something different by the same author but after yesterday's short story I knew I had to as soon as I read the noscript.
https://www.apexbookcompany.com/a/blog/apex-magazine/post/the-monster-fucker-club
CW: they did not put any! But I discuss the theme, see for yourselves.
Comment: so first thing, does this count as queer? I’d argue so. One of the girl is in a relationship with a she-werewolf for instance, and the main POV with a sentient swamp which is explicitly stated does not have a gender and which, in my opinion, indeed counts as queer. But more importantly, monstrosity, attraction to monstrosities and otherness has always been linked to the queer experience.
There were so many things, so many themes to think about. I like how short stories allow you to really hammer the nail in without it becoming syrupy. It was much more complex than what I initially thought, though.
There are actual monster in it, and they are treated as something unhealthy. A toxic relationship, an addiction, a maladaptive coping mechanism. But also there are real people and events that are equally horrifying: a school shooting, violent parents, abusive priests. There is also the way we try to justify to ourselves our unhealthy habits: the self otherization, the presumption we are different from everybody else.
By A.V. Greene
This was on Apex, and I did not plan to read it, I was looking for something different by the same author but after yesterday's short story I knew I had to as soon as I read the noscript.
https://www.apexbookcompany.com/a/blog/apex-magazine/post/the-monster-fucker-club
CW: they did not put any! But I discuss the theme, see for yourselves.
Comment: so first thing, does this count as queer? I’d argue so. One of the girl is in a relationship with a she-werewolf for instance, and the main POV with a sentient swamp which is explicitly stated does not have a gender and which, in my opinion, indeed counts as queer. But more importantly, monstrosity, attraction to monstrosities and otherness has always been linked to the queer experience.
There were so many things, so many themes to think about. I like how short stories allow you to really hammer the nail in without it becoming syrupy. It was much more complex than what I initially thought, though.
There are actual monster in it, and they are treated as something unhealthy. A toxic relationship, an addiction, a maladaptive coping mechanism. But also there are real people and events that are equally horrifying: a school shooting, violent parents, abusive priests. There is also the way we try to justify to ourselves our unhealthy habits: the self otherization, the presumption we are different from everybody else.
Apex Book Company
Strange. Beautiful. Shocking. Surreal. A small press publisher of science fiction, fantasy, and horror books in print and digital forms.
❤5👀3
Post noscriptum
Two problematic stories in a row, I see. It is not on purpose, but they are indeed very compelling. Maybe some less problematic ones will come? Jaybe not, idk, as long as i read I will choose to talk about what sticks.
Two problematic stories in a row, I see. It is not on purpose, but they are indeed very compelling. Maybe some less problematic ones will come? Jaybe not, idk, as long as i read I will choose to talk about what sticks.
👀3❤1🥱1
Queerdump
Post noscriptum Two problematic stories in a row, I see. It is not on purpose, but they are indeed very compelling. Maybe some less problematic ones will come? Jaybe not, idk, as long as i read I will choose to talk about what sticks.
Not me saying this opening a new story ft an octopus
❤1🌚1
“The Octopus Dreams of Personhood”
by Hannah Yang
Content note: Addiction, suicidal ideation, body horror
Published on: Diabolicalplots, the magazine that developed the incredible “submission grinder” that has nothing to do with its name
https://www.diabolicalplots.com/dp-122b-the-octopus-dreams-of-personhood-by-hannah-yang/
Comment: tired and maladaptively living. The story was good, was about addiction, nice body horror.
Passages like
What do you want? she says.
You know what I want, says the octopus. I’ve only ever wanted one thing.
It’s my body, says Shun. You don’t get to keep it.
Why not? You don’t like being a person anyway, and I do.
were honestly fire
Will try again tomorrow
by Hannah Yang
Content note: Addiction, suicidal ideation, body horror
Published on: Diabolicalplots, the magazine that developed the incredible “submission grinder” that has nothing to do with its name
https://www.diabolicalplots.com/dp-122b-the-octopus-dreams-of-personhood-by-hannah-yang/
Comment: tired and maladaptively living. The story was good, was about addiction, nice body horror.
Passages like
What do you want? she says.
You know what I want, says the octopus. I’ve only ever wanted one thing.
It’s my body, says Shun. You don’t get to keep it.
Why not? You don’t like being a person anyway, and I do.
were honestly fire
Will try again tomorrow
🔥9
Forwarded from P(r)ettyposting 💖🎀🍉
Eldritch Blueprints
Photo
I had decided I was not gonna post about Jonathan Joss but both this and the San Antonio Police Department statements are fucking vile so shit is in comments spoiled for violence and homophobia
💅17💯8
Idk man, spamming the comments of a queer channel while using the username of the Greek hero with the highest number of mentioned male lovers makes you look a bit like a dumdum
👀22💯6😁1
🦉Mail-Order Magic🦉
by Stephanie Burgis
Published here: https://www.sundaymorningtransport.com/p/mail-order-magic
This one is fluffyyyyy
This one deals with chronic illness and how communities protect its weaker members and give them the chance to flourish.
It also is about a very very very cute small gryphon!
I think that a year ago this would have delighted me much more than what it did now. It’s maybe a tad too fluffy? Who would’ve thought I could say something like this.
by Stephanie Burgis
Published here: https://www.sundaymorningtransport.com/p/mail-order-magic
This one is fluffyyyyy
This one deals with chronic illness and how communities protect its weaker members and give them the chance to flourish.
It also is about a very very very cute small gryphon!
I think that a year ago this would have delighted me much more than what it did now. It’s maybe a tad too fluffy? Who would’ve thought I could say something like this.
Sundaymorningtransport
Mail Order Magic
March comes to you with Sunday Morning Transport stories by Stephanie Burgis, Eric Smith, Sarena Ulibarri, and Leah Cypess.
❤3
Standardized Test
by SEOUNG KIM
At https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/standardized-test/
I love those pieces that make you ask: what is a story? What can be a story? Can a multiple choice test be a story? Short form allows a higher level of freedom and experimentation without it becoming too much of a mouthful. This was nice
by SEOUNG KIM
At https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/standardized-test/
I love those pieces that make you ask: what is a story? What can be a story? Can a multiple choice test be a story? Short form allows a higher level of freedom and experimentation without it becoming too much of a mouthful. This was nice
Lightspeed Magazine
Standardized Test - Lightspeed Magazine
DIRECTIONS: Fill in the correct letter with a #2 pencil on the answer sheet. Do not use ink or ballpoint pens. Questions left blank will be marked incorrect. Completely fill in each circle.