[On Literary Censorship]: Vladimir Nabokov’s LolitaOn morality, appearances, and engaging with the uncomfortable.Sep 17Sep 17
[Book Review]: Clay McLeod Chapman’s What Kind of MotherParenthood’s soft, vulnerable underbelly has never been so exposed.Aug 29Aug 29
[Book Review]: Stephen Graham Jones’ I Was a Teenage SlasherOn slashers, destiny, and breaking cycles.Jul 29Jul 29
[Book Review]: Stephen Graham Jones’ The Angel of Indian LakeOn Final Girls, trilogies, and the passion to survive.Jan 7Jan 7
[On Literary Censorship 2023]: Sylvia Plath’s The Bell JarOr, being 30 and floundering for purchase in a superficial world.Oct 2, 20231Oct 2, 20231
[On Literary Censorship 2023]: “The end is only the beginning”, Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of…A cry for queer recognitionSep 4, 2023Sep 4, 2023
[Book Review]: V. Castro’s The Haunting of AlejandraGenerational curses are made to be brokenFeb 26, 2023Feb 26, 2023
[Book Review]: Stephen Graham Jones’ Don’t Fear the ReaperThe return to Indian LakeJan 3, 20231Jan 3, 20231
[Book Review]: Expanding Kier-La Janisse’s House of Psychotic WomenWhen critical analysis gets personal, and creative lenses color lifeDec 21, 2022Dec 21, 2022
[Book Review]: Valkyrie Loughcrewe’s Crom CruachThe anti-fascist, queer-friendly novella-in-verse of your nightmares…Dec 21, 2022Dec 21, 2022