Cook Your Own Fucking Life: Vegan Comfort Food Recipes to Feed Yourself and Build Community

Meatless, anti-capitalist & punk AF

For scrappy, can-do vegans on a budget, this essential cookbook eschews fancy ingredients and gets back to basics. It’s packed with attitude and recipes anyone can cook and eat, including comfort food, smoothies, holiday staples to feed your family, and dirty rice to feed the touring band sleeping on your floor.

More than just a collection of recipes, this is a DIY cultural icon. The book makes author Ashley Rowe Palafox’s long-out-of-print Barefoot and in the Kitchen zine accessible again, with spirited annotations and updated resources, so you can find plant-based, cruelty-free inspiration you need without needing to hunt through your co-op’s crusty cookbook collection. Because plant-based broke folks deserve good eats, too!

Read on for an early peek at updated classic Cook Your Own Fucking Life: Vegan Comfort Food Recipes to Feed Yourself and Build Community by Ashley Rowe Palafox, shipping directly from our site October 14th, available from your favorite local retailer November 1st!

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Taste or Market: Deciding Your Publishing Focus | A People’s Guide to Publishing Podcast

Do you publish what YOU want to read, or what the market says people want to read? We’re back with last year’s PNBA trade show talking to publishers about how they decide what they acquire and publish, and the various things that go into it.

Prefer an audio experience? Listen to the episode on your favorite podcast app.
Get the People’s Guide to Publishing here, and the workbook here!
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The Heart vs The Mind: Tarot, Art, and Books w/ Nic LaRue | A People’s Guide to Publishing Podcast

Nicole LaRue is both a queer artist and graphic designer and is widely known for her iconic work on the Women’s March on Washington logo. Her latest work, the HeART Tarot, is a unique deck featuring beautiful, original illustrations incorporating the shape of the human heart and elements of the natural world into each tarot archetype, and reminding us that the heart and mind aren’t working in opposition.

This week on the pod, Nic hangs out with Joe and Elly to talk astrology, intuition vs the brain, publishing, and so much more.

Get The HeART Tarot here: https://microcosmpublishing.com/catalog/decks/51617

Prefer an audio experience? Listen to the episode on your favorite podcast app.
Get the People’s Guide to Publishing here, and the workbook here!
Want to stay up to date on new podcast episodes and happenings at Microcosm? Subscribe to our newsletter!

Hot Pants: Do-It-Yourself Gynecology and Herbal Remedies

Get their laws off your reproductive health

Hot Pants, long an underground classic and now available in a gorgeous new edition, offers great basic sexual health information along with tried and true herbal treatments for common gynecological problems. “Patriarchy sucks,” the authors begin. “It’s robbed us of our autonomy and much of our history. We believe it’s integral for women to be aware and in control of our own bodies.”

In that spirit, diagrams and herbal remedies teach you how to diagnose and heal many basic problems, including bladder infections, inducing your period, easing cramps and PMS, aphrodisiacs, and dealing with pregnancy. You’ll learn herbal remedies to ease every stage of your menstrual cycle. This book deserves a place next to your copy of Our Bodies, Ourselves.

Read on for a peek at the new edition of MCP classic Hot Pants: Do-It-Yourself Gynecology and Herbal Remedies by  Isabelle Gauthier, Lisa Vinebaum, with JJ Pursell and Jennifer Baumgardner, available now from our site now or your local bookseller!

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Indie Solidarity Project: Sisters in Christ

Radical goods from the Crescent City

Welcome to the Indie Solidarity Project! Part of Microcosm’s special sauce is our network of amazing retailers around the world—some of whom are traditional bookstores, but many more who aren’t book-focused—we peddle “books for stores who don’t sell books!” as our sales team puts it. Much like our Bookstore Solidarity Project, this series highlights our partners who run all kinds of small and independent businesses, blazing their own trails, supporting their communities, and growing our small world.

For our series debut, we’re stoked to feature Sisters in Christ of New Orleans (the city with the most Microcosm authors, FYI!). Dive in to learn more about their infoshop roots, favorite comix artists, and beyond:

Your name, pronouns, and role at the store?
Bryan Funck, he/him, owner

Tell us a little bit about the store and your community
We’re a small record and book store that grew out of the Iron Rail Infoshop, specializing mainly in punk/indie/underground, radical literature, small press comics and zines. We’ve been at the current location for about nine years; we were in a smaller spot for a year or two before that; and we handled the records at Iron Rail for about six years. No cats currently, but we love the cat down at our friends’ shop Blue Cypress Books!

How was the store’s name chosen?
We wanted something that reflected New Orleans culture without being fleur de lis and the saints, Mardi Gras and Bourbon Street, alligators and 504, etc. We also wanted to stay away from a generic record shop name to create some mystique.

How did you get into your area of business?
Distro’ing records at punk and hardcore shows in the late 90s then running the record rack at the anarchist bookstore.

What’s something about your store that you think will surprise people?
We’re not religious.

What are some of you favorite ways your community supports your store?
Someone got an enormous tattoo of our shop logo on their abdomen.

What are some of your favorite way to support your community?
Buying and selling local records, tapes, books, and zines! Disseminating relevant information to our radical allies! Using local artists to print and screen flyers and shirts, using the local pressing plant NORP to make records, using local video techs for creating shorts.

What are three things (books or not books!) you’re stocking right now that you want everyone to know about?
Any and all comics by Linnea Sterte or Matt Emmons. Any issues of Sean Tejaratchi‘s Craphound. Any of the Silver Godling records or tapes.

How can non-local customers shop with you?
We do mailorder from our website and respond to Instagram messages at @christly_sisters.

Editor’s note: Please observe that SIC have maybe the best tote bags we’ve ever seen.

Keep up with Sisters in Christ on their Instagram! Peep this great, oldish Creative Independent interview with Bryan while you’re at it.

Do book reviews matter? | A People’s Guide to Publishing Podcast

Trying to get high-profile reviews for your books can feel like a rat race. So many publishers competing for the same space in the same publications (and space in readers’ brains). But do reviews really matter? Are they worth the time publishers put into getting them?

This week on the podcast, we’re back with the booksellers and publishers of the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association tradeshow to get their thoughts on the importance of book reviews.

Prefer an audio experience? Listen to the episode on your favorite podcast app.
Get the People’s Guide to Publishing here, and the workbook here!
Want to stay up to date on new podcast episodes and happenings at Microcosm? Subscribe to our newsletter!

Is There a Cult for That? Facts and Activities for Fanatical Fun

Humor for cult survivors and true crime enthusiasts

As this ride called life starts to feel more like a perilously rickety rollercoaster, people are seeking any kind of stability they can grab onto, and—whoops!—suddenly they’re in a cult. In this tongue-in-cheek yet refreshingly generous dive into the contemporary cult craze, Mary Beth Chapman explores what defines a cult and why Americans (and the media) are so fascinated with them. Rather than focus on the foolishness of cult members, Chapman explores the contributing factors like capitalism, isolation, and overwhelm that lead people to seek firmer spiritual footing in the first place.

Served up with humor, self-awareness, and fun charts, the book also includes tips for starting your own cult, including how to choose your idol and how to hire the just the right charismatic cult leader, plus activities like word salad mad libs, red flag bingo, and your very own cult leader paper dolls. Perfect for cult questioners, kool-aid critics, and zealots for fun facts, the quest for the one true path just got a fresh dose of snarky good times.

Read on for an early peek at Is There a Cult for That? Facts and Activities for Fanatical Fun by Mary Beth Chapman, available for preorder from our site or your local bookseller, heading to a shelf near you (available in stores October 7, 2025)!

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2026 Slingshot Organizers

Any activist’s necessity for over 30 years, the Slingshot organizer is a day planner that fits your radical life. Every page has unique illustration, and important dates, birthdays, and events in radical history are marked. 

More than just a calendar and date book, the Slingshot includes space to write your phone numbers, a contact list of radical leftist groups around the globe, a menstrual calendar, info on police repression, and extra note pages to record all your important revolutionary ideas. It also lists popular activist and alternative cultural holidays. As if that weren’t enough, it also teaches you key phrases in multiple languages; phrases such as “freedom and mutual aid” and “where is the library?” 

Get ’em here.

Submitting AI to Publishers w/ Jane Friedman | A People’s Guide to Publishing Podcast

Can publishers tell if you submit work with A.I.? Does it matter if they can’t even tell?

Jane Freidman of “The Bottom Line” joins Joe and Elly this week to talk about what publishers mean with A.I. disclosures, what presses are looking out for, and how authors can communicate with their publishers about it.

Check out Jane’s articles here: https://janefriedman.com/

Prefer an audio experience? Listen to the episode on your favorite podcast app.
Get the People’s Guide to Publishing here, and the workbook here!
Want to stay up to date on new podcast episodes and happenings at Microcosm? Subscribe to our newsletter!

What Rides at Night: Queer, Feminist, Fantastical Bicycle Halloween Stories

Have a queer and bikey Halloween!

When the veil thins, the bicycle revolution rises—along with thirteen new, original, spooky stories for the thirteenth volume in the series! 

Gather ‘round, ghoulfriends, and peer into this enchanting collection of ghost stories, tall tales, and feminist fictions simmering with cyclist power. This monster mashup of thirteen queer and quirky stories grants us a glimpse into the world beyond this one, where community, creativity, and bike culture reign—a world where DIY zombies start a monster zine collective to fight their oppression by “normals,” time moves backwards as bones are covered again with flesh, cryptids defend fellow outcasts from bullying, and teen crushes take an otherwordly (though not unwelcome!) turn. Whether shared with your feminist book club, passed around the Halloween house show, or read alone on a dark and stormy night, each story is a spell, reanimating the land of the living with more fun, imagination, and bike rides.

Featuring original stories from Elly Bangs, Jessie Kwak, Nell Hanson, Mildred Locke, Kortney Nash, Dawn Vogel, N. Anaar, Erin Cullen, Grace Desmarais, Kay Hanifen, Siri Caldwell, Summer Jewel Keown, and Valerie Hunter.

Read on for a sneak peek at What Rides at Night edited by Summer Jewel Keown and series editor Elly Blue, available for preorder from our site or your local bookseller, heading to a shelf near you!

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