Meet the BRAVE NEW WEIRD-O'S: LC von Hessen

LC von Hessen (they/them) is a writer, noise musician, multidisciplinary artist/performer, and former Morbid Anatomy Museum docent. Their work has appeared in Bury Your Gays, Seize the Press, The Book of Queer Saints, Stories of the Eye, YOUR BODY IS NOT YOUR BODY, Vastarien, and many others. Their debut short story collection will be released in late 2024 through Grimscribe Press. An ex-Midwesterner, von Hessen lives in Brooklyn with a talkative orange cat.


LC’s “Transmasc of the Red Death” originally appeared in The Book of Queer Saints II (Medusa Haus Publishing), and will appear in BRAVE NEW WEIRD: The Best New Weird Horror Volume Two, available to preorder now.

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Give us the elevator pitch of your BNW-nommed story, please.

Poe-inspired parties full of hubristic rich pissheads getting their comeuppance, but with more extreme kink (e.g. consensual lust-murder) and queer T4T content. There's also a giant demon dick. If you're into that.

What does your writing routine look like? Do you have an office? A preferred coffee shop? The back of the bus? Standing under your neighbor’s eaves, avoiding the rain? Are you one of those true modern Weirdos who write your entire novel on your phone?

I don't really have a single set routine. Much of my writing gets done in the form of notes and passages jotted down in Google Docs open among the million tabs on my work laptop when I have downtime during my day job. Pre-pandemic I'd go to a coffee shop in my neighborhood on weekends and try to nab the lone seat in the corner to write.

I have trouble finishing work if I don't have a set deadline to aim for, and thus frequently in the past I've ended up downing constant caffeine while staying up late the night of a submission deadline to squeak by at the last minute. This method is not recommended if you value your health or sleep schedule

What's vital for doing a lot of writing in one sitting is a comfortable seat, privacy, adequate caffeination, a decent soundtrack and lighting, and regular breaks and/or rewards for finishing a certain word count or whatnot. As a practicing heathen I also have a specific bindrune I draw for creative productivity.

My cat sometimes helps, or more often "helps." He's sprawled out in my lap as I type this.

What does “Weird” mean to you, in the context of storytelling? And what creators/experiences/influences helped sculpt this definition for you in your creative journey?

"Define 'weird fiction'" is one of those terribly fraught queries that often leads to headache-inducing "discourse," but I will say it includes:

-A sort of mélange of SFF and horror, though it doesn't necessarily need to have confirmed supernatural elements

-Related to the above: the tools and trappings of horror, but using anything from quiet everyday ambiguity to apocalyptic-scale cosmicism; more interest in exploring the abject and uncanny than "mainstream" horror

-A goal of mood-setting that is less interested in outright fear than pervasive dread, anxiety, absurdity, existential despair, or even beauty and revelry in the grotesque and profane

My BRAVE NEW WEIRD story is an example of the loose microgenre I frequently write in which I call "pulp gothic," with style and content inspired as much by old-school 18th-19th century gothic literature as the '70s-mid-'90s pop culture horror I absorbed growing up. Also for my work in particular, "non-genre" influences like William Burroughs, Franz Kafka, JK Huysmans, Arthur Rimbaud, Kathy Acker, etc. carry as much weight as Weird-leaning horror writers like Poppy Z. Brite, Ramsey Campbell, and Clive Barker, all of whom I read before leaving high school.

On the Tenebrous Discord, we ask everyone to introduce themselves as a Film-meets-Music Artist (Citizen Kane x Metallica, f’rinstance). It doesn’t have to be your favorite, and don’t spend too much time overthinking it; now GO.

Ken Russell's Gothic x Swans.

What’s the Weirdest thing—capital W—that’s ever happened to you (that you’re comfortable sharing)?

That isn't sex or substance-related? Precognitive dreams that came to pass, or spells and rituals that saw results, all of which becomes normal over time to a practicing witch or occultist? The overwhelmingly uncanny experience of seeing a dead friend in their coffin, knowing a bullet wound has been concealed by the embalmers? I'd say probably the time I might have encountered a ghost, or some other entity, while visiting my late grandmother as a child.


This happened in the living room of her little apartment in her retirement center. She had recently moved there from her old house on the North Carolina mountainside, and some extended family were helping her unpack. Among her things was a section of newspaper from 1929, dated some months before the stock market crash: we were passing it around and having a chuckle at some of the text and images, like an ad from some duchess or other praising the smooth taste of Camel cigarettes. I was sitting there reading the whole thing--I was 11 years old, and a big history nerd even then--when I felt three gentle but unmistakable taps on the back of my right hand as if from an index finger.


I immediately lowered the newspaper and looked around a bit in confusion. I was sitting on the rightmost end of a couch, and on my right side was a little end table holding a lamp, then the corner of the wall, and then, a bit further, a picture window. Nobody else had noticed, nor was anyone sitting anywhere close enough to me to have done it, and there was no ceiling leak or anything of the kind. I figured that something supernatural had happened, but was more intrigued than anything else, certainly not scared at all, and my response was to keep reading the newspaper.


When I told my mother that evening, she assumed it was my uncle playing a prank, but he was seated too far away; I absolutely would have seen him. And besides, I felt intuitively that it was a feminine hand, not one of my uncle's big callused man hands.


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BRAVE NEW WEIRD: The Best New Weird Horror, Volume Two, is out June 26th.

You can preorder it here.



Meet the BRAVE NEW WEIRD-o's: Amitha Jagannath Knight

Amitha Jagannath Knight is an Indian American writer and poet for all ages, and an award-winning picture book author. She is a graduate of MIT and Tufts University School of Medicine. Dr. Knight has lived in Texas and Arkansas, and now lives in Massachusetts with her husband, kids, and cats.


Amatha’s poem, “My Mother, the Exoskeleton", originally appeared in Tower Magazine, and will appear in BRAVE NEW WEIRD: The Best New Weird Horror Volume Two, available to preorder now.


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Give us the elevator pitch of your BNW-nommed story, please.

“My Mother, the Exoskeleton" is a multi-part speculative poem about a strange alien species, and it is also about feeling trapped by biological and ancestral cycles.


What does your writing routine look like? Do you have an office? A preferred coffee shop? The back of the bus? Standing under your neighbor’s eaves, avoiding the rain? Are you one of those true modern Weirdos who write your entire novel on your phone?

With my prose writing, I have a regular routine and a home office with a built-in desk and lovely bookshelves and my family's junk everywhere. I mostly write on weekdays when my kids are in school, and once a week at the local indie bookstore cafe with a group of writers, one of whom I have been writing with for more than a decade!


However, my poetry writing is different--I write poems randomly as they occur to me, usually as I'm falling asleep. I keep a notebook in my bedside drawer for this specific purpose. The poem in this anthology came to me as I was falling asleep one day pondering an alien side character I had already written in another story for children. As I was thinking about whether the character could be the main character of its own book, the words for this poem started emerging from some part of my sleepy brain. Because my family was in a house we'd rented to attend a family wedding, I didn't have my usual notebook. Instead I either got out my laptop (or another notebook) and the poem basically emerged whole onto the page. Later, at home, I opened the poem and still liked it, and revised only a little for clarity before starting to submit it to speculative poetry venues.


What does “Weird” mean to you, in the context of storytelling? And what creators/experiences/influences helped sculpt this definition for you in your creative journey?

"Weird" for me is a story that isn't told in a typical fashion, or is about a topic most people do not touch in their writing. The meaning may even be a bit opaque for most readers. This type of writing is difficult to get published, but can't be revised into being something more mainstream--the story is what it is, take it or leave it!


On the Tenebrous Discord, we ask everyone to introduce themselves as a Film-meets-Music Artist (Citizen Kane x Metallica, f’rinstance). It doesn’t have to be your favorite, and don’t spend too much time overthinking it; now GO.

Amélie x Radiohead


What’s the Weirdest thing—capital W—that’s ever happened to you (that you’re comfortable sharing)?

Drawing a blank on this one! The weirdest thing that happened is probably anything having to do with my writing journey. It might even just be the writing of this poem!


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BRAVE NEW WEIRD: The Best New Weird Horror, Volume Two, is out June 26th.

You can preorder it here.



Meet the BRAVE NEW WEIRD-o's: Hussani Abdulrahim

Hussani Abdulrahim is a writer from Kano, Nigeria. He won Ibua Journal’s 2023 Bold Call and the 2022 Toyin Falola Prize. He was the first runner-up for the 2023 Kendeka Prize. He has also been longlisted for the Commonwealth Short Story Prize and a finalist for the Boston Review Prize, Gerald Kraak Award, Afritondo Prize, and ACT Award. His work has appeared in Boston Review, Wilted Pages, Brittle Paper, Evergreen Review, Solarpunk, and Ibua Journal.

Hussani’s story, “The Library Virus,” originally appeared in Wilted Pages: An Anthology of Dark Academia (Shortwave Publishing) and will appear in BRAVE NEW WEIRD: The Best New Weird Horror Volume Two, available to preorder now

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Give us the elevator pitch of your BNW-nommed story, please.

A virus causes its victims to vomit books in Dangana Memorial Community School. This odd phenomenon with pandemic vibes causes panic within the school and its host community.


What does your writing routine look like? Do you have an office? A preferred coffee shop? The back of the bus? Standing under your neighbor’s eaves, avoiding the rain? Are you one of those true modern Weirdos who write your entire novel on your phone?

I can’t say I have a routine. It’s chaotic for me. I often spend days, weeks and months daydreaming about a story before having the courage to sit and write it down. I thrive better in quiet environs. So, nighttime is when I find the words flowing.

 

What does “Weird” mean to you, in the context of storytelling? And what creators/experiences/influences helped sculpt this definition for you in your creative journey?

For me, Weird has always existed. In my country, a government official once claimed a mysterious snake swallowed millions of public funds when it was time to give account. That’s outrageous, right? That’s just a tip of the Weirdness we encounter on a daily. So, when I think of Weird, I think of all possibilities, no matter how stupid or unrefined, and try to make it make sense. In this context, I like to think of Lesley Nneka Arimah (Who Will Greet You At Home), Ben Okri (The Famished Road), Wole Talabi (Shigidi and the Brass Head of Obalufon), Umar Abubakar Sidi (The Incredible Dreams of Garba Dakaskus) and Abubakar Adam Ibrahim (When We Were Firefles; Dreams and Assorted Nightmares) as influences because they do so much exciting stuff with language and imagination.

 

On the Tenebrous Discord, we ask everyone to introduce themselves as a Film-meets-Music Artist (Citizen Kane x Metallica, f’rinstance). It doesn’t have to be your favorite, and don’t spend too much time overthinking it; now GO.

Apocalypto x The Weeknd.

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BRAVE NEW WEIRD: The Best New Weird Horror, Volume Two, is out June 26th.

You can preorder it here.



Meet the BRAVE NEW WEIRD-o's: Anemone Moss

Anemone Moss (she/her) is a transgender lesbian speculative fiction and horror writer who grew up in the forests of the Sierra Nevada foothills in northern California and now lives in the outskirts of the SF Bay Area. She spends her time studying history and ecology, making art, watching too many horror movies, and exploring local marshes and forests.

Her story, “Everything You Dump Here Ends Up in the Ocean” originally appeared in Fish Gather to Listen (Horns and Rattle Press) and will appear in BRAVE NEW WEIRD: The Best New Weird Horror Volume Two, available to preorder now.

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Give us the elevator pitch of your BNW-nommed story, please.

A former radical's evening at sea with a mysterious wealthy woman takes a frightening turn when she learns what's really lurking below the waterline and in her date's past.

What does your writing routine look like? Do you have an office? A preferred coffee shop? The back of the bus? Standing under your neighbor’s eaves, avoiding the rain? Are you one of those true modern Weirdos who write your entire novel on your phone?

I usually write little bits and pieces on my phone as it comes to me while I'm out and about. Once I have an idea strongly developed I sit down in bed with my laptop and a few mugs of tea and write continuously for several hours, sometimes most of the day. It's not ideal for my posture but I don't really have a working space right now and it's nice and cozy.

Phone Writers = Three! I don’t know why this fascinates me, I think it’s because my meathooks can barely tap the screen without smashing six buttons simultaneously; though Alex did recently beat the gospel of slide-texting into me.

What does “Weird” mean to you, in the context of storytelling? And what creators/experiences/influences helped sculpt this definition for you in your creative journey?

Weird fiction is surrealism that feels a little too real when you know it shouldn't. It moves in ways that break our rigid understanding of how things work while implying that maybe we need to question that rigidity. This frequently means horror and speculative fiction elements but I don't think those are necessary.

I've been inspired by many others--some standout influences are Jeff Vandermeer, Jorge Luis Borges, William Hope Hodgson, Hailey Piper, and William S Burroughs. I'm also a huge fan of horror film and pick up a lot from directors like David Cronenberg, Lucio Fulci, and John Carpenter.

Right on. I preach at anyone who’ll listen that Fulci’s Gates of Hell trilogy are as Weird Horror as anything ever filmed.

On the Tenebrous Discord, we ask everyone to introduce themselves as a Film-meets-Music Artist (Citizen Kane x Metallica, f’rinstance). It doesn’t have to be your favorite, and don’t spend too much time overthinking it; now GO.

Alien: Resurrection x Black Dresses

What’s the Weirdest thing—capital W—that’s ever happened to you (that you’re comfortable sharing)?

On my birthday in my mid-20s I was having a really awful time dealing with some trauma so I took a walk to cool off. There are these bicycle trails that run between the suburb houses, mostly mud and the backs of fences. As I crested the nearest hill I encountered a perfect stranger who asked me for a cigarette. When I sat down to roll one for him, he began telling me about how he had visions of demons and evil spirits he had to travel around fighting and people he had to help. Apparently that morning he'd had a vision of me and had been waiting there for me to walk by. He gave me a personal message about my family including details like my family members' names (they lived several counties away) and a conflict I'd had that he encouraged me to resolve. I never saw him again.

I don’t know how to tell you this, Anemone, but I think you’re the main character now.

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BRAVE NEW WEIRD: The Best New Weird Horror, Volume Two, is out June 26th.

You can preorder it here.