Private Rites
by Julia Armfield
Herculine
by Grace Byron
Women, Race, and Class
by Angela Davis
Dungeon Crawler Carl
by Matt DInniman
In Dungeon Crawler Carl, Carl’s world collapses. Literally. Every interior on Earth with a roof is collapsed and absorbed into the 18-Level World Dungeon. Part Hunger Games, part role-playing game, The Dungeon is an episodic intergalactic reality show with impossible odds. Dinniman has a clear understanding of what makes action readable and an impressive ability to bring a character to life. And beneath the very foot-enthusiastic game host A.I. and the ultra charismatic talking cat, Dungeon Crawler Carl is about humanity—finding and keeping it under a system that exploits and commodifies. It is the funnest, most engaging series I’ve ever read—and it all starts here: “You will not break me."
A Short History of Trans Misogyny
by Jules Gill-Peterson
Babel: An Arcane History
by R.F. Kuang
The Wax Child
by Olga Ravn
Coffin Moon
by Keith Rosson
The Priory of the Orange Tree
by Samantha Shannon
A Day of Fallen Night
by Samantha Shannon