Anthologies

Unapologetic Love
A Charity Anthology of Radical Resilience Vol. 1

Twenty-one tales of self-love, sensuality, and community come from all across the globe to stand together as a timeless reflection of the human condition. Unapologetic Love: A Charity Anthology of Radical Resilience is a beacon of hope, proving that the boldest form of radicalism is unapologetically living your truth. All proceeds benefit the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

Contributing Authors include Caleb L. Ambrose, Océane Anagonye, Cheyenne Browning, Kay Claire, J.S. Crawford, Des DeVivo, Cassandra Diviak, Gabriel Hargrave, Alex La Bruyère, Adrienne Lothy, Katy Manz, Sia Morgan, Nova Nox, Emily Roman, Katerina Ross, Jessica Salina, Nico Silver, Rowan St. George, Benjamin Twigg, and J.B. Warrick.

Short story featured: Fly Agaric

When two roommates and best friends go for a walk in the swamps near their Florida home, they stumble upon a perfect circle of mushrooms. The ring of fly agaric is a fae trap, so the two girls step into the portal and enter Fairyland. There, they see how different life can be as they seek belonging. This short story—set in a dystopian near-future America based on Project 2025 policies—contains mentions of death and war (neither depicted), adult language, and an open-door depiction of consensual group sex.


A Wild Run
A Blended Genre Anthology

One prompt. Fifteen authors.

We put together this anthology to showcase the very real enigma of human creation. In a world increasingly complacent with AI, we wanted to prove a point: You can give the same prompt over and over to a machine and it will spit out the same, if not largely similar output. Give authors the same prompt… and watch what the human mind can do.

Short story featured: Bride of the Forest

When noblewoman Yelena is arranged to marry a cruel prince, she flees into the forest seeking her lover Ivan. But before she can take refuge in the chicken-legged hut Ivan calls home, Yelena must first pass three tests laid forth by his mother, Baba Yaga. This short story, inspired by classic Baba Yaga folk tales, features sexually explicit content best suited for readers 18 and up. It is set in the same universe as the romantasy Eyes Of Molten Silver, though readers do not need to be familiar with Eyes Of Molten Silver as Bride of the Forest is set hundreds of years before.