A yellow cover of flowers with a black gravestone in front

Featuring stories by Liz Leo, Sunny Everson, Stephen Folkins, Katrina Hamilton, Rachael Sterling, Amy Piedalue, Kristina Horner, Shay Lynam, Tara Theoharis, and Maria Berejan.

Death is only half the story.

What happened to Annabell?

She left poor instructions.

She outgrew her manufacturing specs.

She defrauded an international brewing company.

She burned down her house.

She sold her soul to vengeance.

She sent herself to the future.

She never existed in the first place.

She was too stubborn to die.

Annabell should have died long ago—and often did—but there’s more than one way to be immortal.

Monday Night Anthology presents the many possible lives of Annabell Doyle as told through occult humor, speculative feminism, historical fiction, and even a touch of cozy mystery. Perhaps she joined a satanic cult, or maybe she ran away from a society that didn’t yet value her skills. She could be stuck for eternity cooking for her descendants, or solving murder mysteries in a fantasy world with a talking cat at her side. She could have built a new life in the aftermath of the Great Depression, or quietly died, forgotten by everyone she once knew.

Or, perhaps she’s just the oldest woman in the world.

  • Strange Hydrangeas - mentions of abuse and murder

    The Beast - suicide, violence, witchcraft

    I Remember - mentions of miscarriage

    The Engraver - violence, murder, mentions of abuse and abortion

    The Sewing Basket - mentions of abuse and murder

    World’s Oldest Annabell - mentions of witchcraft

    The Blue Clover Cafe - mentions of murder

    The Monkey Box - animal death

Buy it on:

Amazon - ebook & paperback!
Amazon - Hardcover!

UW Bookstore - shop local!

“Quirky, wicked, morose … an inspired, surprising anthology.”
-BookLife

“From shadow selves and horrible beasts to casual culinary reincarnations and the bureaucracy of heaven, these writers tumble into afterlife premises and discussions of mortality with grace, creativity, and wit.”
-Self Publishing Review

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The Mistletoe Paradox