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A Woman Unbecoming

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A thwarted female defense attorney releases the baying of the hounds under a full moon, signaling the death of an era—and the birth of a new one under the Old Gods.

Most funerals are celebrations for the living—unless the guests decide to tempt fate and the guest of honor.

A bicycle ride becomes a contest of egos, but the male pursuers aren't the only ones hungry for the race to end.

These women are going to cut the world and let it bleed.

Crone Girls Press presents A Woman Unbecoming, a charity anthology of horror and dark tales to benefit reproductive healthcare rights. Award-winning and up-and-coming authors share over two dozen stories and poems. If you like intense characters, powerful women, and twists you won’t see coming, then you’ll love this fierce anthology co-edited by Rachel A. Brune and Carol Gyzander.

Explore A Woman Unbecoming to revel in women’s rage, power, and agency—and support reproductive healthcare rights today.

Stories and Poems
Marc Abbott, Linda Addison, Alp Beck, Carina Bissett, Rachel Brune, Paige L. Christie, Ravyn Crescent, Elizabeth Davis, Angela Giddings, Nicole Givens Kurtz, Teel James Glenn, Carol Gyzander, CM Harris, Nicole Henning, Darin Kennedy, DeAnna Knippling, Tara Laskowski, Lee Murray, Bridgett Nelson, Jennifer Nestojko, Jessica Nettles, Christina Nordlander, Cindy O'Quinn & Patricia Gomes, Cristel Orrand, Jude Reid, Mike Robinson, Kathleen Scheiner, Jeff Strand, Anna Taborska, Steven Van Patten, Holly Lyn Walrath, Michael G. Williams, and Jeff Wood

316 pages, Paperback

Published October 3, 2022

15 people are currently reading
42 people want to read

About the author

Linda D. Addison

72 books58 followers
Linda D. Addison was born in Philadelphia in 1952. She is the oldest of nine children and received a bachelor of science in mathematics from Carnegie-Mellon University. She is the author of three collections: “Being Full of Light, Insubstantial”, “Consumed, Reduced to Beautiful Grey Ashes” and “Animated Objects” (Space & Time Books). Her work has also appeared in numerous publications, including Essence magazine, Asimov’s Science Fiction magazine and Doorways magazine,.

In 2001, Addison was the first African-American to win the HWA's Bram Stoker Award for superior achievement in poetry for “Consumed, Reduced to Beautiful Grey Ashes”. Other prominent recipients of this distinguished award include authors, Alice Sebold (Lovely Bones) and J.K. Rowling (Harry Potter Series).

She was honored with her second Bram Stoker Award for her third collection of poems titled “Being Full of Light, Insubstantial” (Space & Time Books).

She is the only author with fiction in three landmark anthologies that celebrate African-Americans speculative writers: the award-winning anthology Dark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction (Warner Aspect), Dark Dreams (Kensington), and Dark Thirst (Pocket Book).

Her work has made frequent appearances over the years on the honorable mention list for Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror and Year’s Best Science-Fiction.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
37 reviews2 followers
December 26, 2022
I bought this anthology from the Horror Writers of America booth at Philcon.
When Roe v Wade was dismissed from history, when a woman’s right to her own body was taken away from her, so many people, male, female, gender-fluid, became angry. More than angry. This anthology is Crone Girls Press reaction.
Edited by Rachel A. Brune and Carol Gyzander, this is a charity anthology to benefit reproductive healthcare rights.
The stories and poems within are provocative, disturbing, incredibly creative, and so well-written. These are not fluffy, feel-good stories. These are stories with meat to them. After reading a few, I put the book down, and just said wow.
I recommend this highly, not just because I believe in the charity sales will benefit, but because it’s just so damn good.

32 reviews1 follower
September 11, 2022
Horror And Rage And Power

This anthology was birthed by the overturn of Roe V Wade and is full of horror, anger, and resolve in a collection of stories and poetry I’m still feeling as well as thinking about.
Crone Girls Press does not disappoint.
41 reviews
November 25, 2025
A Woman Unbecoming is a bold and blistering anthology that channels women’s rage, agency, and power into a series of chilling and emotionally resonant horror and dark fiction pieces. Co-edited by Rachel A. Brune and Carol Gyzander, the collection brings together more than two dozen stories and poems from both award-winning and emerging voices, each exploring transformation, reclamation, and the consequences of a world that underestimates or suppresses women.

From courtroom metamorphosis beneath the full moon to funerals where fate is challenged, to a bicycle race where predatory pursuit turns both literal and supernatural, the anthology delivers a spectrum of unsettling, creative, and intelligently crafted narratives. It captures the sense of women refusing to stay small, quiet, or contained even if the world must bleed because of it.

Unapologetic, intense, and filled with emotional and thematic depth, this is a standout collection for readers who appreciate feminist horror, speculative fiction with purpose, and stories that bite back.
Author 17 books1 follower
May 7, 2023
Overall this anthology was very emotionally satisfying. The title story is good fun, as well as SPLASH and After the Funeral presented well w"ith a certain Southern Gothic flare. The few stories that didn't work for me stood out in that respect. The Church of Women" just never felt like it belonged in a horror anthology, "the Line" is the only one I didn't finish, and "A Crucible Feast" didn't have any foreshadowing that worked for me.
Profile Image for Mary.
255 reviews3 followers
January 22, 2024
I bought this book because it was a fundraiser for reproductive rights and I'm a fan of Crone Girls Press. Instead of several short stories/novellas, it's tons of very short stories and poems, so it's easy to read several at a time. The stories are all about raging against the patriarchy (Yay!) but there's a huge variety of takes on it. I enjoyed it a lot.
Profile Image for Joel Doetsch.
167 reviews1 follower
November 17, 2022
I bought this to support the cause of reproductive healthcare rights. Glad to support the cause, but the book itself is only alright. Some of the stories are interesting, but a lot of them are kind of bland with very cardboard characters. I don't see myself picking this one up again
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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