Queer Horror: Fun and Freaky Perspectives on Macabre Media

Fabulous vampires of screen and page

Don’t be scared straight! Curl up on the couch with Joe and Gina for a romp through their favorite horror movies, TV shows, and books from the 1930s to today, exploring their messages, meaning, and enduring appeal for queer audiences. From The Thing to vampire porn, The Exorcist to paranormal television, Goblin Market to Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, these thoughtful, conversational essays will make you think, laugh, shiver, and see your favorite media in a new light (even if you have to cover your eyes for the scary parts). 

Horror buffs and queer media mavens alike will enjoy this wide ranging journey through a genre often derided, dismissed, and misunderstood, but which offers rich opportunities to explore our culture’s ideas about gender, sexuality, and desire. Whether you relate to the monster or the final girl, enjoy sleuthing hidden queer themes, or just want recommendations for obscure, low-budget ghost movies, this book’ll be a scream.

Read on for an excerpt from Queer Horror: Fun and Freaky Perspectives on Macabre Media written by Gina Brandolino and Joe Carlough, available to order from our site or your local bookseller (shipping from us now, available everywhere 9/2/25).

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How do we think bookseller trade shows can improve? | A People’s Guide to Publishing

Continuing our ongoing series on trade shows, publishing, bookselling, and more, this week Joe and Elly talk education sessions, galley rooms, the decreased focus on placing orders and getting face time with publishers, and some of their thoughts for improving the shows.

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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Pittsburgh Tarot: A Gilded Age Deck & Guide

New deck and guidebook zine offer an oracular tour of the Steel City

Iron and stained glass, brick and stone, clouds and rain—Pittsburgh is arguably America’s most gothic city. Permeated with an old-world sensibility, this once perennially dark and smoggy metropolis that built its wealth through coke and steel is moody, atmospheric, melancholic, and beautiful.

Eschewing contemporary stereotypes that reduce the city to football or sandwiches with fries on them, The Pittsburgh Tarot expresses the complicated and conflicted period of the city’s greatest expansion and influence during the 19th century. This is the same era that inspired the iconic Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot illustrations, and each of the cards in this deck pays homage to those original designs. The Major Arcana features significant historical figures, while the Minor Arcana is divided into suits of Neighborhoods, Rivers, Nature, and Industry.

The Pittsburgh Tarot features people, events, and themes from the 19th century and through La Belle Epoque, with a special focus on the Gilded Age, the city’s period of greatest significance. With an aesthetic style that calls to mind the work of artist Edward Gorey, this is a beautiful and unique expression of a city that’s as much sentiment and disposition as it is location.

Read on for an excerpt from the guidebook by Ed Simon! The Pittsburgh Tarot Deck and The Pittsburgh Tarot Guide, written by Ed Simon and with art by Steve Teare, are available for preorder from our site or your local bookseller (deck ships 9/1/25, guide ships 8/12/25).

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Punk Women: 40 Years of Musicians Who Built Punk Rock

Girls to the front!

The new edition of this trailblazing classic includes 11 new interviews and over 30 new profiles of even more incredible musicians, including Blondie, Neko Case, The Urge, Gang of Four, Pogues, Submission Hold, Fastbacks, Teen Idols, and many more.

In this far-reaching anthology, David Ensminger delves underground to explore the oft-overlooked community of badass women who shaped the punk scene. There is a common thread of women being excluded and gatekept from hardcore music; this book shows that women have been able to overcome those barriers, kick ass, and shred with the best of them. Biographies, interviews, band anecdotes, and never-before-published photos showcase the talent and artistry of bands like Bikini Kill, the Guttersluts, Bratmobile, Spitboy, the Germs, the Slits, and dozens more. With its intimate aesthetic analysis and raw, zine-like presentation, this is an essential resource for anyone looking to discover, rediscover, and cherish punk history.

Read on for a sneak peek at the new foreword by Katy Otto of Trophy Wife and Exotic Fever Records! Punk Women: 40 Years of Musicians Who Built Punk Rock is available to order from our site or find with your local bookseller.

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What does it mean that Costco is cutting books? w/Jane Friedman | A People’s Guide to Publishing

Is Costco cutting books a big deal, or will it be a great chance for readers to go back to their local indies? What does it mean for publishers? Jane Friedman of The Hot Sheet is back this week to talk with Joe about bulk buying, waste, returns, and Costco’s target book customer.

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!

How can regional trade shows improve for bookselling? | A People’s Guide to Publishing

We’ve been talking trade shows the last few weeks, from how they benefit booksellers to what publishers need to make them work. We continue the conversation this week with some more folks from the PNBA show talk about how they can improve for booksellers and bookselling.

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!

How effective are regional trade shows for book publishers? | A People’s Guide to Publishing Podcast

After last week’s episode, where booksellers and publishers evaluate the effectiveness of trade shows, this week Elly and Joe give their own analysis! Learn what regions we’re a bit TOO known in, our thoughts on building relationships at shows, and what our thoughts are on going to shows going forward.

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!

Elly was interviewed by The Creative Independent!

Elly had a chance to sit down with one of our friends at Kickstarter, Oriana, and be interviewed for their blog, The Creative Independent.

They talked about Microcosm’s background as a publisher, how we got into using Kickstarter, balancing work and life, and more.

Here’s an excerpt. You can read the full interview at this link!

Between MicrocosmWorking Lit, the podcast, your own writing and editing, and presumably a smidge of life outside of publishing, you do so much. Can we start by talking about how you make time for it all?

A few years ago I went down this rabbit hole of reading interviews with women about how they make time for it all. And all these highly successful women (with the exception of Marie Kondo, who refuses to be rushed)—all of them were just frantic. One of them literally said she would microwave everything for 2 minutes and 22 seconds, or 3 minutes and 33 seconds, so she could save time by not having to press multiple buttons. So anyway, I’ve dedicated myself to never living that way.

My strategy used to be what many busy people do: they just pile on more things until you have no flexibility, so your time winds up managing itself. That was me for a while: I was just saying yes to everything. And I did get a lot done! But then I would just crash and burn. I refuse to live that way any longer. My philosophy now is about focusing on priorities rather than deadlines. If something does have a hard deadline, I will try to make that, but I’m never going to be doing it, I hope, the night before in a panic. There’s no worse feeling to me than that kind of pressure. Instead I’m like, What are the most important things that I need to do? I’m going to do those first, deadlines be darned.

Do you include self-care, or some time for protecting your creative heart in there, or not so much?

I do try to do that. I succeed sometimes. I mean, I do protect my time off work very fiercely. I prioritize that over everything else because I’ve burnt out so many times. But as far as my own creative work, that can very easily fall to the bottom of the pile if I’m not careful.

It seems like everything about your life, your creative practice, and your career have been geared toward leading a nontraditional life. How did you figure out how to create those paths outside of established systems?

I’m not sure that’s something I’ve ever done intentionally. Those established systems just never seemed available to me. I was a weird kid. I dropped out of high school, and I’ve kind of continued to say no thank you to systems that don’t seem like they have a purpose or have my best interests or goals at heart. Me and my partner Joe Biel, who founded Microcosm—we’re both business and life partners—we’re on the same page about this. We look at things that we see most people doing and we’re like, Would that work for us? Sometimes really traditional things do work for us—owning a house seems kind of magical to be able to do. But other things, like getting married or having kids or owning a car… for us, what’s the point? Other people might find great joy in all these things, but we don’t.

Check out the full profile here.
And you can find our current Kickstarter project, The Underground is Bigger than the Mainstream, here!

Comfort Eating With Nick Cave: Vegan Recipes To Get Deep Inside of You

Bury your feelings with recipes that feel good inside

Find good cries, good laughs, and good meals all in the brand-new paperback edition of this Microcosm classic by beloved illustrator Automne Zingg and vegan chef extraordinaire Joshua Ploeg

Mr. Cave finds healthy ways to feed and soothe his sorrows in these pages, featuring cool Cave-based illustrations and rockin’ vegan recipes from mashed potatoes to tofu dogs. Whomst among us doesn’t need to passionately tell a slice of pizza to “get inside of me” from time to time?

For plant-based snackers, rock music weirdos, Red Hand Files followers, or anyone with a sense of humor and a more-than-usual number of feelings, this comfort food cookbook lets us all shed a few tears and self-soothe with food together.

Read on for a sneak peek at Comfort Eating with Nick Cave: Vegan Recipes to Get Deep Inside of You by Joshua Ploeg and Automne Zingg, shipping now from our site or available from your local bookseller September 23!

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How well do regional trade shows work for publishers? | A People’s Guide to Publishing

For booksellers, the regional trade shows are a beloved time for community, connection, and learning about the latest reads from their favorite publishers. Are they as effective for publishers? Joe and Elly had a chance to chat with other publishers and booksellers at the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Fall Forum last year to find out what brought them to the show.

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!

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