Books
I edited (and wrote much of) the book Mythmakers & Lawbreakers: anarchist writers on fiction, which was released in 2009 by AK Press. This book is a series of interviews with anarchist fiction writers, as well as appendices that include short bios of every anarchist fiction writer, living and dead, I was able to drum up in two years of research. I also give talks on this subject.
My first novel, What Lies Beneath The Clock Tower, is to be published in 2010 by Colander Press.
Being The Adventures of One Fine Summer is a photo book and personal zine in one that was released print-on-demand in 2009 by Strangers In A Tangled Wilderness.
The first bound book I’ve ever had published is actually an Italian translation of my zine A SteamPunk’s Guide to the Apocalyse, which is titled Guida steampunk all’apocalisse and was translated by my friend Reginazabo.
Zines
In 2007, SteamPunk Magazine released my A SteamPunk’s Guide to the Apocalypse.
I’ve written a good deal of zines, anonymously, for Strangers In A Tangled Wilderness, about politics and such.
Articles
“Take What You Need And Compost The Rest,” a post-civ primer forthcoming in Dodgem Logic #2.
I have written a number of articles for The Earth First! Journal
I have written extensively for SteamPunk Magazine on subjects such as regicide, pyrophones, coal, facial hair, and more.
“In Defense of Chaotic Good,” a brief piece about, well, the dungeons & dragons alignment Chaotic Good and how it is an excellent way to live one’s life, appeared on episode 102 of geek-life podcast Geek Fu Action Grip.
Short Fiction
“Yena of Angeline” is a piece of serial fiction that appears in issues one, two, three, and six of SteamPunk Magazine.
“A Man of the Wastes” and “A Pirate of Both Day & Night” are erotica pieces set in the same world as “Yena of Angeline” and appear on Steamypunk.net and can be as well. My work has been mentioned in such awesome blogs and projects as Boing Boing, MAKE blog, MAKE Magazine, and Anarchy: A Journal of Desire Armed, as well as WIRED.com and the lamentable Newsweek. I’ve been interviewed about steampunk by Small WORLD podcast, Steampunk Spectacular, CBC Radio, The Boston Phoenix, The Boston Globe, The Hartford Courant, and a handful of other publications from the US and overseas.
I once even did an interview with The Wall Street Journal Online. It was pretty funny: I said something like “well, obviously, our current oil-driven infrastructure can’t go on forever” and the man stopped me to ask, quite confused, “what do you mean?” (and that, by the way, is the problem.)
Press






