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Julie Day

    Julie C. Day writes fiction described as 'strongly strange,' resonating with the essence of American Gothic. Her genre-bending works explore unsettling themes across varied settings, whether in contemporary or altered past realities. Day possesses a distinctive voice, crafting narratives that are both disturbing and compelling, earning her recognition such as a Lambda Literary Award finalist nomination. Her short fiction has been featured in numerous respected journals and anthologies.

    He's Not Worth It
    Do You Know Where Your Nose Grows?
    Uncommon Miracles
    • 2023

      This whimsical story will walk young readers through various wonderful parts of their body ultimately playing on the words knows and nose while aiming to promote self-awareness, acceptance and love for themselves and others.

      Do You Know Where Your Nose Grows?
    • 2023

      He's Not Worth It

      • 128 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      A girlfriend-to-girlfriend breakup journal that tells it like it is.

      He's Not Worth It
    • 2018

      Uncommon Miracles

      • 239 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      4.2(25)Add rating

      A grieving man travels through time via car crash. A family of matriarchs collects recipes for the dead. A woman gains an unexpected child in the midst of a bunny apocalypse. An outcast finds work in a magical slaughterhouse. Julie C. Day’s debut collection is rife with dark and twisted tales made beautiful by her gorgeous prose and wonderfully idiosyncratic imagination. Melding aspects of Southern Gothic and fabulism, and utilizing the author’s own scientific background, Day’s carefully rendered settings are both delightful and unexpected. Whether set in a uniquely altered version of Florida’s Space Coast or a haunted island off the coast of Maine, each story in this collection carries its own brand of meticulous and captivating weirdness. Yet in the end, it is the desperation of the characters that drives these stories forward and their wild obsessions that carry them through to the end. It is Day’s clear-eyed compassion for the dark recesses of the human heart and her dream-like vision of the physical world that make this collection a standout.

      Uncommon Miracles