Editor Annie Carl was born with a rare spinal birth-defect (lipomeningomyelocele) and is a Stage IV Non-Hodgkins survivor. She owns and runs The Neverending Bookshop in Edmonds, Wash. She is the author of My Tropey Life: How Pop Culture Stereotypes Make Disabled Lives Harder and the novella Nebula Vibrations. When not running an award-winning bookstore, Annie reads massive quantities of science fiction, fantasy, and romance; pole dances; knits; and hangs out with her goofy family and friends. Nicola Griffith is the author of the award-winning books Hild, Spear, and So Lucky, among others. Her essays, opinion pieces, reviews, and short fiction have appeared in an assortment of academic texts and a variety of journals and media outlets, including the New York Times, Nature, New Scientist, Los Angeles Review of Books, NPR, Electric Lit, Literary Hub, and Out.
Top Ten SFF and Horror Books, Booklist, 2024 Bronze winner, Foreword Reviews, anthology ""Fans of space opera, fairy tales, and postapocalyptic stories will revel in the reinvention of beloved tropes and the wealth of eye-opening creativity—and disabled readers will be especially moved."" —Publishers Weekly ""Like disability itself, these stories are a myriad of things: rich, nuanced, furious, complicated, joyous, determined. They are wild howls of imagination that simultaneously manage to showcase a vast spectrum of true, lived experience. Let Soul Jar be an arrow sent out into the world.” —Keith Rosson, author of Fever House “A wonderfully curated selection of captivating stories that will stay with you. A must-have for every bookshelf.” —Sho Roberts, owner of Maggie Mae's Bookshop “For those of us with bodies that look and function differently than the majority, reading science fiction and fantasy can be a means of feeling understood and seen, or being ever closer to a world that is more welcoming than the real one. I'm grateful to Annie Carl and the talented authors who make up the contents of Soul Jar—these vibrant, haunting, full-hearted tales are as necessary as they are entertaining.” —Mo Daviau, connective tissue-disordered author of Every Anxious Wave “Soul Jar is a fantastical bullhorn for voices that so often go unheard. Dive into this captivating collection of narratives, crafted by authors intimately familiar with the complexities of living with disabilities. Vibrant characters come alive, navigating a range of experiences and emotions, while simultaneously illuminating the impact representation in literature can have. The stories in this extraordinary anthology will pull you in, show you a vastly under-explored area of the literary world, and leave you wanting more.” —Violet Lumani, author of Foretold “The soul jar overfloweth in this radical anthology of mermaids, mechas, and rotten hyenas. Annie Carl’s refined taste for the far out has unleashed a swath of writers who zone in on disabled joys and vexations. How refreshing it is to read stories from writers who get it.” —Jonah Barnett, author of Moss-Covered Claws “The literary community is a landscape in which you can still hear artists, writers, readers, and creatives calling each other in, asking each to bear witness to our individual and collective truths. Soul Jar is no exception. This dazzling anthology of creative writing demonstrates an incredible constellation of talent, humor, and not-so-out-of-this-world dystopian possibilities through the pens and pages of authors living with disabilities. It also reminds the literary community of the importance of true representation, and the void of raw talent and imagination we create when we create without accessibility and sustainability at the forefront of our practices. The future is now. Open this book and read.” —Christina Vega, founder of Blue Cactus Press and author of the poetry collections Vega (2023), Decay (2022), and Maps (2017)