Author Spotlight: Paranormal Ecohorror author S.M. Mack

S.M. Mack (she/her) is a 2019 MFA recipient in popular fiction from USM Stonecoast, the 2017 first place winner of the Katherine Patterson Prize for Young Adult Writing, and a Clarion 2012 grad. Her short fiction has been published in Fireside Fiction, Vine Leaves Literary Journal’s “Best of 2015” anthology, and the Clarion class of 2012’s seven Rainbow Anthologies, among others. Her novella Death Valley Blooms is part of Neon Hemlock’s 2025 Novella Series.

AUTHOR LINKS:

Website: whatsmacksaid.com

Bluesky: @whatsmacksaid.bsky.social
Instagram: @what_smacksaid

Death Valley Blooms Links

Neon Hemlock Publishing
Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Kobo

READ A SAMPLE: Amazon Look Inside Feature

PITCH FOR READERS/BOOK CLUBS:

Every decade or so, vast quantities and varieties of wildflowers bloom all at once in Death Valley. But unbeknownst to the wider world, these super blooms are powered by a woman’s life. Mar’s mother was called a decade ago, pulled underground to be used like a battery, and she herself has begun to feel Death Valley’s presence. Mar has an ace up her sleeve, though: neither she nor her brother will ever have children. Is it enough for the desert to release its grip on her family?

Death Valley Blooms is out with Neon Hemlock. Cover illustration by Rose Meyer. Cover design by dave ring.

What was the seed for your novella, Death Valley Blooms, and how did this sprout into the novella published by Neon Hemlock?

My Clarion class put out seven charity anthologies to help raise money for attendee scholarships.

Clarion lasts for six weeks from June to August, so we challenged ourselves to write a story from scratch each year, focusing on a different color of the rainbow.

My Yellow Volume story started at the (erroneous) assumption that all dirt in the southern Californian deserts is yellow, or at least yellow-ish.

From there, I did some daydreaming about how the ground might interact with people; I went from “skinning your hands and knees when you fall down” to “what if the blood spilled from a minor injury isn’t enough? What if blood isn’t enough? What if the ground eats you whole? Why would it do that?”

By the end of the first draft I knew I had something special, but I also knew I’d never be able to tease out the subtleties hiding in there under our short timeline. So I set it aside for a few years, and picked it back up during grad school.

Within the novella are themes of consent and autonomy, but also the futility of people’s actions against a landscape that will outlast them. Where did these themes come from, and why explore them here?

One of my childhood refrains was “I can do it myself!” even when that was not objectively true. It insists on boundary-setting for both consent and autonomy—anyone who overrides one will inevitably override the other.

Death Valley Blooms’ main character, Mar, is very much a product of that mentality. She is determined to break her family’s curse, even though generations of women have succumbed to Death Valley’s call. She fights for her autonomy and nurtures a lifelong grudge against the curse for stealing her ability to consent. Because, of course, that’s what curses do: render those trapped under its power unable to protect their emotional, mental, and physical selves.

I also spent a lot of time thinking about climate change versus an individual’s effect on their environment. The physical world does not care how frightened or overwhelmed you and I are by wildfires, flash floods, or water scarcity. But if one small part of the world—Death Valley, in this case—reached out and demanded payment or help from an individual, how could we possibly say no? Even culpability and guilt aside, how could a single family of individuals possibly resist nature’s force? They can’t.

What to you was psychologically interesting about a family dealing with constant absences and returns? 

I had a lot of undiagnosed anxiety when I began writing Death Valley Blooms, and one of the things I obsessed over was my parents’ ages. I have a good relationship with both, and for a year or more I just could not see past the knowledge that I’d outlive them, and that that was somehow the best outcome.

One of the more tragic ideas I couldn’t shake was the prospect of losing time—losing years—that could be spent in one another’s company: how much better would it be to “only” lose your mother (or sister, or aunt) for twenty years, rather than forever? Furthermore, how difficult would it be to accept and move through the resulting grief, then have those feelings and growth invalidated when the missing loved one returns? What does that do to a close-knit family when it happens over and over again?

What LGBTQIA+ rep can readers expect to find in this novella, and why is this rep important to you to include?

There’s no reason not to make characters queer in one way or another—or rather, there’s no more reason to make them queer than to make them straight. A story doesn’t hinge on the gender or sexual orientation of side characters, and even “boring,” everyday representation is a good thing.

For example, Mar’s closest friend is openly bisexual; she’s divorced from a man and dating a woman. It comes up in casual conversation a few times, but that’s all.

I identify as simply queer now, but I spent many years identifying as asexual, then as aro/ace (and so on and so forth as my perception of myself changed), while living in a near-constant state of fury and frustration at how hard it was to find ace main characters at all, let along ace main characters outside romantic subplots.

I didn’t plan for Mar’s aro/ace identity to become a strength, but it’s an important part of who she is. Part of why she’s so family-oriented is that she doesn’t care about finding a romantic partner. Her family is perfect the way it is, if only she could defy Death Valley and bring everyone together again.

The other queer rep I’d like to highlight is Mar’s aunt, Lucy, who is a trans woman. She’s got her own issues going on over the course of the story, but she doesn’t stand in the spotlight, either. I wanted to create a path for her to simply exist as a regular person dealing with a family curse and an increasingly desperate niece. (“Regular” is doing a lot of work here, I know.) But I wanted to remind readers that the environment does not give a rat’s behind about human-imposed boundaries, whether those be gender strictures or geographical boundaries.

Death Valley’s curse falls on the women of Mar and Lucy’s family, and both Mar and Lucy are women.

Death Valley is a character in the novella, much like the human characters. What was it like to develop this aspect of the novella? 

As a younger writer, I participated in a workshop where one colleague had a television background, and we talked a lot about the “white room syndrome,” where a scene entirely ignores its setting. The discussion left an impression, and over time my writing evolved from dutifully including setting descriptions to centering the setting alongside the characters.

Our surroundings in real life aren’t sentient, but speculative fiction is the perfect place to look beyond that natural end place. I’ve really loved trying to get into the headspace required to embody an inhuman, unpredictable, and nearly all-powerful true-neutral character, a vast ecosystem with little to no way of communicating directly with my human characters—sometimes I think of Death Valley’s character as alien as the actual location feels when visiting. And I’m definitely going to keep doing this in future stories!

For example, I have another story I’m working on about eating disorders with a gargoyle sent to live in exile in a different California desert.

Do you have anything that you want to share with readers, anything out now, or coming soon?

I’m in the middle of a companion novella for Death Valley Blooms! It picks up slightly before the end of Death Valley Blooms and is from a different character’s point of view. I have a beautiful cover created by the incomparable Rose Mayer, who also did the original, and I’ll be releasing the companion story sometime during summer 2026. I’ll be posting updates on bsky and via my author newsletter, which readers can sign up for on my website.

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Author Spotlight: British Gothic Horror author Laura Clarke Walker

Laura Clarke Walker (she/they) is a writer, teacher, and lover of all things Gothic. When she’s not immersed in the world of Coldharbour, she can be found drinking espressos darker than the night, listening to podcasts in other languages, and running around her local lakes.

AUTHOR LINKS:

Website: lauraclarkewalker.com

Instagram: @lauraclarkewalker

Amazon: Coldharbour

PITCH FOR READERS/BOOK CLUBS:

Three generations preyed upon by pure evil. Two lost souls drawn to each other in the darkness. One compelling story of love, loyalty, and betrayal. A spellbinding mix of murder, magic, and romance, Coldharbour is a thrilling Gothic fantasy full of Nineties nostalgia.

Coldharbour by Laura Clarke Walker

Your debut novel Coldharbour is out now with Rowanvale Books – congrats on your debut! Can you tell us about your indie publishing journey from the premise of your book to publication? How did we get here?

Thank you so much! Well, this is a long story, as I came up with the first character in 2005 and wrote the first draft in 2009. However, I only started taking Coldharbour seriously as a project to be published around 2021, especially as it had become a very personal story to which I really wanted to do justice.

In 2024, I queried agents for a while, but ultimately I decided that maintaining a certain level of creative control was more important to me than gaining literary representation. It’s a completely different journey for every author, but I’m so excited to be hybrid publishing and for Coldharbour to be now out in the wild!

Coldharbour is a Gothic paranormal mystery with 1990s nostalgia, set in Essex. What brought these elements together for you in terms of genre, tone, and setting?

I’m really passionate about the state of British seaside towns, which have been on the decline for a long time, and decayed settings are a huge feature of the Gothic.

Also, we think of the Millennium and we think of looking towards the future, but I can also remember the dread over the millennium bug and how everyone became extremely retrospective – there was a sense of the fin de siècle to everything.

Plus, the paranormal was having a heyday in the Nineties – shows like Charmed and Buffy were an important influence on me growing up, so I definitely pay homage to them in Coldharbour.

What sort of representation can readers expect, and what makes this rep important to you as the author?

There’s a whole variety of representation in Coldharbour, including a range of sexualities and gender identities, ethnic backgrounds, and neurodivergences and disabilities. It can sound a bit like I’m ‘box-ticking’, but it’s just my reality as a neurodivergent Queer person of colour.

I really craved representation growing up and I think the way that the sociopolitical landscape is shifting at the moment, hearing from diverse voices is more important than ever.

What is your favourite trope/theme that appears in this novel? Can you tell us about any that you play with or subvert?

My absolute favourite trope in Coldharbour is the haunted house that reflects the protagonist’s psyche, which really is as Gothic as it gets.

The house in question, 1 St Augustine’s, is loosely based on some that I’ve lived in and I really feel that it, like the town, is a character in its own right. There are locked doors, mysterious bloodstains, things in wells which shouldn’t be, all hinting at the dark family secrets Alex must try to unravel throughout the novel.

However, the love story between Alex and Elizabeth is unconventional: Alex is a single mother in her thirties and Elizabeth has certainly had her own life, so they come together with a certain maturity (and reticence) that comes from being a bit older compared to a lot of relationships depicted in fantasy works.

Also, I really try to avoid the standard romance tropes around love triangles and miscommunication, mostly because the characters have bigger things to worry about!

The most significant trope I subvert is ‘bury your gays’, in which Queer characters tend to die in service of the plot or their loved one’s character development. It is a harmful trope that’s still used prolifically, so while Elizabeth does die, it’s only temporary – because her Power is resurrection. Whether the resurrection always goes to plan, well, that’s for readers to find out!

Let’s talk about your main character, Alex Wilde. How did you develop her from the initial idea, and what makes her who she is? What has been your favourite reader response to her so far?

To be honest, the initial Alex was a very generic protagonist. I was only sixteen when I first devised her and she was very active, enthusiastic, enquiring, just not necessarily interesting.

Alex has evolved as I have.

I really needed to go out there and experience everything adulthood has to offer (both good and bad) before Alex could become a well-rounded character. Homecoming and grief run through the current Alex like Brighton rock, neither of which I could’ve written authentically when I was a teenager.

This Alex is an unreliable narrator and reluctant heroine, which is influenced by many of my favourite books.

Shirley Jackson’s work has been a crucial part of my writing journey and I can definitely see aspects of Eleanor from The Haunting of Hill House in Alex, especially in terms of her mental health.

Readers are usually very sympathetic to Alex as a character, but they tend to respond particularly to her relationship with Elizabeth. The word ‘compelling’ has come up several times and I can’t ask for much more than that!

Elizabeth also sounds really intriguing; where did she come from as a character, how did she develop as you drafted & revised? Were there any moments between her & Alex that you ended up cutting but wanted to keep, or any bits you really enjoyed writing that you couldn’t part with in the final edit? 

I recently described Elizabeth as ‘cold but also compassionate, confident in her abilities but self-conscious as a person, secretive but protective’, so she’s definitely one of the more complex characters in Coldharbour!

She’s also one of the last ones to reach their ‘final form’, as she was an amalgamation of three characters from the pre-2021 story, but once she came together, there she was: Elizabeth the Unkillable.

Elizabeth is particularly morally grey and like Alex, that’s influenced by some of my favourite characters in books and other media. I don’t think I’ve ever cut anything significant for Elizabeth, but I always say that the night of the storm in the first Coldharbour is one of my favourite ever scenes of the entire series.

Minor spoilers, but both Alex and the reader finally have enough pieces of the picture that is Elizabeth Black to decide exactly who she is.

What has been your favourite feedback on the novel so far/favourite reader response?

I have loved all the reviews that have mentioned the atmosphere and the tension in Coldharbour – this was an area of the book I spent a long time cultivating, so to have seen it pay off with readers has been fantastic. I know that Gothic literature can be very particular, so I was really worried that people just wouldn’t get it and I’ve been so happy to discover that actually, people both understand and enjoy the book.

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Author Spotlight: Queer Cyberpunk author A.E. Bross

My name is Addy (they/them or xe/xem) and I write under A.E. Bross. I love to write across genres, though at the moment only have fantasy and modern romantasy published. I’m a lot of things—queer, agender, disabled, autistic, exhausted—but I’m nothing if not a jack of all trades and a master of none. It’s why my other job is as a librarian. On top of that, I’m parent to a teenager (who also wants to be a writer), spouse to a poet, and grandparent to two very different kitties.

AUTHOR LINKS:

Website: addyelsewhere.com

Bluesky: @aebrossbooks.bsky.social

Universal Links to Books: books2read.com/ap/xXJm2G/AE-Bross

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Book Elevator Pitch for readers/book clubs:

A reimagining of the classic Snow White, Bianca Nieve is the only child and heir to the fortune of the Nieve Corporation. When she finds herself on the wrong side of the law, she’s forced to flee into the streets of a city that she’s only seen from afar. There she finds help, comfort, and maybe even the will to oppose her own legacy.

CyberSnow by A.E. Bross

Your latest release is CyberSnow, a queer cyberpunk retelling of Snow White; what inspired you to meld this fairy tale with this genre?

When the idea first struck me, it was just a passing thought. I wondered what fairy tales might look like in a genre that seemed so set apart from the original telling. Then, the more I looked at it, the more I wanted the challenge. I loved how well Snow White fell into the dynamic of cyberpunk and thought it would be fun to explore it.

How did you tackle the elements of the fairy tale that require more sensitivity, such as the translation of the fantasy dwarf element into a cyberpunk world?

At this point, many of us are aware of the antisemitism that sort of undergirds the entire concept of the fantasy dwarf. I wanted to remove that from my storytelling, but I also wanted to have a place for little people in my story.

There have been so many opportunities for this fairy tale to be told in a way that doesn’t Other marginalized folks, and we don’t see that in popular media. I remember back a few years when Peter Dinklage was calling out Disney for not being progressive with their depictions of the dwarfs in their live action remake of their film. That’s just stuck with me, so I made the little people in my retelling some of the prime movers of the story. I wanted the depiction to eschew the gross stereotypes and just let them be as nuanced as they are.

What sort of representation will readers find in the story, and why was it important to you to include this representation? What was your process to ensure this representation was created sensitively?

There’s a fair bit of representation, I think.

First and foremost, the MC Bianca Nieve is autistic. The narrative never outright says she is, but her symptoms and expressions and coping mechanisms all come from my own autistic experience. It’s very much an ‘own voices’ situation with her.

Taja, my second MC, is a trans woman. This I had to do some research for, including talking with trans women regarding certain aspects of transition and life in general.

Depictions of life for little people was a bit trickier. I had to do a lot of research when it came to accommodations and differences in every day life. I watched a lot of interviews with little people and dove into accessible home design, as well as accessibility needs in public spaces. Also the different kinds of dwarfism and how that could or would affect life. We all know that no one group of people is a monolith, so it was a lot of gathering perspectives and treating each one with the importance that it carries. There were so many things that folks of the taller persuasion don’t even dream of thinking of. Counter height, furniture, bathroom utilities, driving and mobility aids. It blew my mind.

What were the main influences for the corporation and the city – how did you go about developing this world and its socio-political conditions?

If I’m being honest, I drew a lot of influence from what is going on in the world right now, specifically in the United States. There is a lot of sway that large corporations currently hold over decisions being made in the U.S. government, and I used a lot of what I was seeing in the news and a lot of what I was hearing from individuals who were being harmed and fed it into this story.

While Bianca Nieve is the Snow White equivalent, and the heir to the giant corporation, Taja, is another POV character from a very different background; tell us how & why you chose the POVs found in the story, and how they help you to bring out themes of anti-capitalism and acceptance within the novella?

I wanted a different kind of riches to come from Taja’s POV. In the original story, Snow White’s love interest isn’t a real part of the tale, so much as he’s supposed to be the reward at the end, when Snow White has somehow survived all of the trials her stepmother put her through. I wanted Bianca to have someone who could help her through those trials, to make them less frightening. So that meant someone who had been in the city, who knew the ins and outs, but also knew a whole slew of different people with wildly differing personalities and that they all somehow fit, despite having their disagreements. I think that’s where the acceptance comes in.

As for the anti-capitalism, I wanted to make it so Taja was successful, but not in a monetary way. Yes, we all have to deal with the system we are in, but Taja gets to take repair jobs she wants, (try to) keep her sister out of trouble, and be a helping hand, and is still managing to stay afloat. She’s finding her success in a different way, away from money, and I think that’s important. In our society, we’re constantly sold nice things or vacations or standards of living. I think it’s important to find that place where you can get by, but you also make your own nice things. I wanted someone who could show Bianca (and the reader) that. Thus, Taja.

Can you share your favourite reader reaction or editor reaction to the book out of context?

My critique partner, who is also my spouse, wrote in big letters, “I’m sorry, WHAT?” next to a part later on in the story. While his writing is not normally very legible (it’s taken years for me to be able to decipher it on sight) he wrote the “WHAT” so big that I could have read it from space and had to laugh. I’m hoping I get a few more people with reactions like that when the book is released.

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Author Spotlight: Queer Cyberpunk Author Stefanie Carter (AKA Wayward Sparx/Fox N. Locke)

Meet author Stefanie Carter (they/them) who writes as Fox N. Locke and Wayward Sparx. They are a UK-based English Sci-Fi author, working on a nonfiction book about cyberpunk, and here to talk about their Trans+ collection of stories, TRANS_LUCENT.

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Author Spotlight: Queer Cyberpunk Author Stefanie Carter (AKA Wayward Sparx/Fox N. Locke)

I’m an AuDHD trans femme enby (they/them) who writes queer genre fiction under the pen names Fox N. Locke and Wayward Sparx. An on again off again journalist, poet, comms professional, and amateur romancer of mech pilots.

Author Links:

Website: foxenlock.com

Bluesky: @foxenlock.bsky.social

Samples of Work: Samples for all my books can be found via my website – foxenlock.com – by clicking on the relevant book title.
For Trans_lucent click here.

Book Club/Reader Book Pitch for TRANS_LUCENT:
A collection of cyberpunk stories carving space out for Trans+ characters in near-futures ravaged by rampant capitalism, terminal environmental decline, state surveillance, poverty, and the rolling back of human rights.

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Welcome to Stefanie Carter, writing as Fox N. Locke and Wayward Sparx, who is currently working on a nonfiction cyberpunk book, but who is here to talk about their Sci-Fi collection, Trans_Lucent. First of all, can you tell us what prompted the creation of a collection of stories with trans+ characters, and why pick Sci-Fi as your genre for this (instead of, say, fantasy or horror)?  

Thanks for having me! I’ve loved cyberpunk almost as long as I can remember, but it was galvanised after watching The Matrix at the tender age of eight. In the aftermath, I wrote short stories that either flirted with cyberpunk themes or were out and out love letters.

It wasn’t until coming out as trans a few years ago that I started reading more trans authors and discovered a cache of incredible stories centring people like me. Aubrey Wood’s incredible Bang Bang Bodhisattva was like a lightning rod and has become one of my favourite books. I then embarked on my own trans cyberpunk story which became ‘Cumulative Realities’.

At the time, the intention was to try and get it in a magazine, but I quickly realised I had enough scattered shorts that I could redraft and refine to put a collection together. Some of them took so much rewriting they may as well have been new stories (think Ship of Theseus) while others were more effortless.

In particular was ‘Risingson’, co-written with my partner (Trans+ and disability advocacy journalist, William Elisabeth Cuthbert).

And then there’s ‘Venus as a T-Boy, Saturn as a Femme’ which started life as a novel but ended up becoming a short instead. It never occurred to me to tell these stories any other way, because cyberpunk not only provides a common language for Trans+ and queer readers, but is a perfect vehicle through which to explore transness in worlds that are becoming increasingly like our own. It’s such a great way to position allegory alongside explicit representation and get underneath big existential themes.

What sort of Trans+ rep can readers expect to find within the collection, and how did you develop these characters, were there sensitivity readers involved in the process etc?

I knew from the get-go I wanted to try and include a broad cross section of people in these stories, both in terms of gender identity but also racial backgrounds.

As an English writer, I’m also always keen to reflect the country around me. It would be so dishonest and unrealistic to not include people from Indian, Caribbean, or Eastern European backgrounds, for example.

A lot of this stems from lived experience, first and second hand. I’m trans femme and my partner is trans masc, we’re both non-binary, so it’s only natural those identities would crop up in the stories. But I wanted to reflect the wider Trans+ community as much as I can with characters whose gender expression fall outside of my own, incorporating things like neopronouns which aren’t something I personally use.

Shani, from the final story, might be my favourite character in the collection and fae’s a computer wizard with Caribbean heritage, a Brummy accent, and a love for football. All but one of the stories are set from a Trans+ perspective.

‘Progeny’ follows finance professional Alana Khoury, of Middle Eastern heritage, who grapples with reproductive rights and motherhood in a near-future where birth is strictly controlled by government programmes. The story is framed around the fallout of a terror attack committed by her progeny, who illegally left the programme, transitioned and became pregnant herself.

A lot of how I approach writing characters this far outside of my own experience is cumulative. I’ve worked with sensitivity readers on other projects, lived and worked alongside people from different backgrounds, read as much as I can, and pay attention. Some aspects are meticulously researched, finding first hand accounts, and some is approached from a position of empathy and intuition. I think belonging to any kind of minority group enables you to have a greater level of awareness for others – but by no means a full and total understanding of their lives. These are different, albeit often intersecting, experiences and backgrounds, and I’d never pretend or assume authority or total knowledge.

Do/How do these stories reflect present-day realities and anxieties for trans people and the wider queer community, and can you give some examples of these from the story premises/what inspired each story?

At its best, I think cyberpunk – and sci-fi more broadly – must reflect modern day realities and anxieties. Without, you end up with empty aesthetic and a story propelled only by superficial vibes. The stories are therefore filled with modern concerns around trans rights, bodily autonomy, and the power of community.

The most explicit here are the collection’s first and last stories. ‘Cumulative Realities’ is named after the Marsha P. Johnson quote that opens the story and is all about the importance, safety, and power of community alongside the need to preserve queer and trans art, otherwise it’ll be lost. It’s something we’re already seeing taking place as creators struggle to get their work seen and huge swathes of the internet are banning queer content on pornographic grounds. I’m trying to buy as many physical trans books as I can as part of an ongoing preservation project. There are decades of stories at risk of being lost if we don’t all try and help.

The final story, ‘Venus as a T-Boy, Saturn as a Femme’, made one reviewer so anxious they had to stop reading. But it was about an England where it’s flat-out illegal to be trans, so I knew it had to be heavy going. We’re already seeing things moving in this direction, so it wasn’t a stretch to imagine.

How does your collection approach themes of transhumanism & bodily autonomy, and within the fictional worlds of the stories, how are these aspects of selfhood developed and understood both within community contexts, and in isolation as something individual and personal?

The most explicit example of transhumanism and bodily autonomy is in ‘Risingson’ which concerns a trans masc cyborg called Calder.

As a cobbled together collection of parts, what does it mean to feel misaligned with the assigned – or remembered – gender of those parts? What does it mean to be trans when you’ve gone beyond the parameters of being human?

The scene in which Calder talks about exactly that was incredibly moving to write, beautiful and horrifying in equal measure.

Speaking of trans masc cyborgs, you should all go read Franklyn S. Newton’s Synthetic Sea.

Another story, ‘In Wait of Obsolescence’, takes a different route. Environmental disasters mean everyone is kept inside capsules 24/7 that see to all their needs. No one sees one another anymore, all communication is done through screens, the body has become a burden, and things would probably be easier if we were all digitised. Functionally, we’ve become transhuman. So, what does it mean to nurture the first flourish of one’s transness in this kind of physical isolation, to explore your gender presentation for no one else other than yourself?

How did you choose which stories to open and close the collection, and is there any thematic importance to the order, or can they be read out of sequence? 

I wanted the two longest stories to bookend the collection. More than that, they’re both ultimately hopeful stories that showcase the power of community and depending on one another. They’re about survival.

Although length played a role, the sequencing is based more around emotional ups and downs, balancing the light and the dark, and being mindful of how I’m leaving the reader.

It’s a bit like an album, this is the intended way to read, but not the only. I’m happy for people to read in whatever order they like and, of course, skip over stories where most comfortable.

Finally, do you see cyberpunk as a subgenre being picked up more as a vehicle for telling these kinds of stories in recent years, and do you see its readership expanding among the trans+ and wider queer communities? What do you think the future holds for queer cyberpunk?

I don’t want to beat around the bush. Cyberpunk belongs to Trans+ people. So many people have decried the genre as dead, or passé, but they can’t see beyond the mainstream, where we keep getting derivative stories that can’t do much more than regurgitate what Gibson, Bethke, Stephenson, and Sterling et al were doing in the eighties. But look beneath the surface and there’s a vibrant world of incredible Trans+ writers, artists, game designers, and musicians making innovative, beautiful, frightening, and timely cyberpunk works. And we’ve been here creating and actively influencing cyberpunk for decades.

That’s why I’m writing an entire book about cyberpunk from a Trans+ perspective, covering the early years all the way through the thriving self-pubbed scene.

Trans in the Machine: Chronicling the New Cyberpunk Canon is the first book of its kind to tackle the topic and is due for release in 2027.

What always surprises me is how cis people assume trans art has no audience. How laughable is that? Look at the success of indie books like The Hades Calculus or Magica Riot or films like The People’s Joker to name a few. It’s no different with cyberpunk.

There’s a huge audience here hungry for more. And I genuinely think plenty of cis readers and viewers are bored with mainstream cyberpunk and want something that’s truly subversive and, frankly, more interesting. And who knows, maybe engaging with these kinds of stories is how some might realise they’re trans themselves.

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#cyberpunk #queerAdultSFF #queerAuthor #sciFi #transBooks