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Seven Stories Press

Works of Radical Imagination

Book cover for Transmutation
Book cover for Transmutation

Transgressive, transformative short stories that explore the margins of trans lives.

Building on the success of All City, here is a wry, and at the same time dark and risk-taking, story collection from author (and baker) Alex DiFrancesco that pushes the boundaries of transgender awareness and filial bonds. Here is the hate between 16-year-old Junie, who is transitioning, and her mom's boyfriend Chad when the family moves into Chad's house on Lake Erie. And here is the love being tested between Sawyer and his dad, who named his boat after his child and resists changing it from Sara to Sawyer now. There is DiFrancesco's willingness to enter lands that are violent and comfortless in some of these stories, testing the limits of what it means to be human, sometimes returning stronger and wiser and sometimes not returning at all as their characters surge forward into unknown spaces.

DiFrancesco's first novel All City (Seven Stories 2019) was praised by Publishers Weekly as a "loving, grieving warning [that] thoughtfully traces the resilience, fragility, and joy of precarious communities in an immediate, compassionate voice." All City was one of BookRiot's "Best Post-Apocalyptic Books of 2019," Entropy Mag's "Best of 2019," and Largehearted Boy's "Favorite Novels of 2019." It was a finalist for the 2019 Ohioana Book Award for Fiction.

Book cover for Transmutation
Book cover for Transmutation

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Transmutation is an eerie darling of a collection. Alex DiFrancesco has written stories here that are so unearthly they feel as if they have gossamer wings, characters lifting off the page to hold court in startling three-dimensional life. Some playful, some terrifying, all crafted with care–– Transmutation is the kind of story collection that will stick with you for days after reading. DiFrancesco is a radiant talent.”

“Alex DiFrancesco’s eclectic, absorbing first collection, “Transmutation,” captures moments of in-betweenness (often fraught, sometimes magical) that may be especially familiar to transgender people who are not legible, temporarily or purposefully, to others or themselves... Within these direct, straightforward stories are corridors of solitude and reflection... Unlike with the cool remove of, say, Rachel Cusk’s fiction, DiFrancesco clearly is not afraid to err on the side of sentimentality... At the affective core of “Transmutation” is the question of how we can offer shelter for one another’s pain, real and imagined.”

“Whether injecting lake water into their leg to conjure a swamp thing, using a reusable metal straw to suck up the air around an irrelevant professor, or dealing with the health concerns specific to vampires, the characters in Transmutation are tender and real. The presence of fantastical elements is part of the magic of these 10 stories, which are linked thematically by the changeable nature of the body. DiFranceso’s alchemy is that every story reveals someone who is realizing a new version of themselves.”

Transmutation is an innovative, magical collection about all the things that pulse with possibility: love in all forms, belonging, reckoning, and reclamation. Each sentence is a gem, multi-faceted and full of light. Alex DiFrancesco has the kind of imagination that saves lives.

“My heart grew three sizes reading Alex DiFrancesco’s Transmutation.”

“DiFrancesco’s characters are not simply reflections of who we appear to be, they are our real selves, the ones we try so very hard to keep hidden. These stories lay them bare and demand that we acknowledge them in all of their wondrous imperfection. Grimy, raw, and glittering with truth, these are portraits of the human heart.”

This memorable collection of short stories displays the wild talent of Alex DiFrancesco to push boundaries and explore the imagination while simultaneously comforting and strengthening their readers.

Transmutation is haunting yet immediate, horrifying yet gorgeous, stylishly blasphemous yet earnestly spiritual. I expected clever ghost stories about gender, but what I got will stay with me for a very long time.”

“This beautiful collection of stories features trans and queer characters across many times and places. Some of the stories have magical elements; others are straight-up realistic. They’re about family and first love, growing up, queer community, and the weird disconnect between the world as it is and the world as we experience it. DiFrancesco’s writing is gorgeous. There’s an eerie beauty in each of these stories, and the characters all feel strikingly real.”

“DiFrancesco takes readers by the hand and guides us into the darkness so slowly we don’t realize what’s happening until it’s too late. They’ve pulled us entirely away from reality, from the comfort and safety of the things which we assumed to be true. They make us confront the darkness of others and ourselves in ways that are both disorienting and enlightening. They show the ways people reach for each other, and seek to understand, and they write about characters who only know how to violently isolate themselves from others and from their own humanity. These stories are ostensibly about monsters, but really, they explore what it means to be human. Monsters are the things we carry with us, the things we want to escape, but DiFrancesco shows us monsters are also nothing to fear or run from. Monsters are outsiders and outliers, creatures who live on the boundaries of society and demand to be seen or feared, but they can’t be ignored. In Transmutation, the monsters are honored and welcomed as a more true version of their original form, if they started as human, or an idealized version of human potential. They are, too, the creeping horror of monsters that live among us—seen, but still not known until it’s too late.”

“These stories howl like Greek furies about everyday cruelty and the queer monstrous that lives to spite it. Our Nick Cave heir apparent, DiFrancesco here advances the project of the Transmasculine Gothic with a haunting instrumentation and an elegiac rage.”

“Multilayered, poetic, insightful stories that won't let you put them down. Transmutation is simultaneously an absolute pleasure and heartache of a read. I thought about the stories in this book for weeks after I finished them, reliving the small details, searching for new meaning, which I always found.”

“In Transmutation, monsters come in many forms but so does grace. Here you will find a merciful vampire, a shrewd lobotomized woman, a repentant rock star, a trans girl finding kinship with a mythical green hag. Alex DiFrancesco’s characters are outsiders, often victims of a cruel world, but they are never just victims. These masterfully wrought stories transmute suffering into a kind of triumph, in which harsh realities are never softened but are somehow, sometimes, transcended.”

“DiFrancesco’s sharp and sometimes fantastical collection (after the novel All City) depicts a series of challenges faced by outsiders. Junie, the young trans protagonist of “Inside My Saffron Cave” suffers the tyranny of her mother’s abusive boyfriend Chad, whose house they’ve just moved into. “The Ledger of the Deep” portrays a warmer familial relationship, but not one without problems. The complexity of Dad’s feelings is represented by his resistance to renaming Sara, his beloved boat, now that daughter Sara has become Sawyer. The collection’s title signals DiFrancesco’s often whimsical exploration of various types of change. In “The Disappearance,” an aging academic’s public screed against minority poets leads to his literal progressive vanishing. The boundless love of a vampire lies at the center of “The Pure,” while gypsies and a monster inhabit the eerie folkloric “The Wind, the Wind.” “The Chuck Berry Tape Massacre” is the longest and most ambitious story, with parallel woven narratives. One thread follows the descent into lunacy of single mother Kay and the abandonment of her two daughters; the other fancifully charts the obsessive quest of a music lover named Jack Tran. How these narratives connect is left to the reader to decide. Whether striking chords that are playful, poignant, or both at once, this collection consistently charms.

“Alex DiFrancesco delivers a collection of thought-provoking stories that bring attention to transgender awareness and shed light on the emotional aspect of transitioning.”

“The stories in Alex DiFrancesco’s new collection Transmutation will break you apart then put you back together in ways you will be thankful for. A magnificent collection.”

blog — June 01

Seven Questions with Alex DiFrancesco

We're pleased to share a short interview with Seven Stories author Alex DiFrancesco, whose newest book asks, how do you tell the story of being human in an unfeeling world? A linked collection of speculative short fiction, The Grief Shop follows Gemma, a woman navigating surreal jobs in a near-future dystopia, wherein a cataclysmic event has rendered the population unable to feel emotions "organically."

Gemma must wrestle with the void of indifference. At her many jobs—a grief-infused coffee shop, a boxing gym for pain therapy, a graveyard, etc.—she encounters a range of eccentrics struggling to survive in a world where grief, ecstasy, suffering, and joy are commodities for some to purchase and for others to exploit. Gemma’s path is one of glimmering possibilities, ones with feelings she may not understand or accept.

Along with The Grief Shop, Alex DiFrancesco is the author of the dystopian novel All City, the story collection Transmutation, and the memoir Breaking the Curse. They are the winner of an Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Award for 2022, and their novel All City was the first awards finalist by a transgender author for the Ohioana Book Awards in its eighty-year history. They served as an assistant editor for Sundress Publications in Tennessee, and edited LGBTQIA+ non-fiction for Jessica Kingsley Publishers. Their work has appeared in Tin House, Electric Literature, Pacific Standard, Eater, and Vol. 1 Brooklyn, among others. DiFrancesco lives in Philadelphia.


The stories in The Grief Shop take place in the wake of a global tragedy, which only accelerated an all-consuming nihilism that your characters then grapple with. This is a world that feels both vaguely removed and, in many ways, innately parallel to our own. I’m wondering how you see The Grief Shop in regards to its elements of realism versus its more dystopian aspects? Did you struggle with how and when to balance familiarity with discombobulation? 

I started writing The Grief Shop in 2022, shortly after the COVID-19 lockdown. I wanted to make it a direct reaction to that tragedy, but as I kept writing, tragedies kept accumulating in the world around me. Rising fascism. The genocide in Palestine. The war in Ukraine. The climate. Eventually, it became clear that "the tragedy" had to be a blank in the book because it was important for me for readers to be able to plug in their biggest tragedy from all the many, many choices. Like any of my dystopian work, this novel is firmly based in reality, with just a little "what if-ing" and peeking down the corridor of what could possibly come. I use my imagination from the platform of the elements of reality that are most inspiring.

Your previous novels, Transmutation and All City, heavily featured both transgender and gender-queer characters. In contrast, transness isn’t an explicit focal point in The Grief Shop. Did this change how you approached writing The Grief Shop and its characters? Are there ways that you interpret The Grief Shop as a queer or queer-adjacent narrative?

The main character, Gemma, is a queer character, though it's not really a focal point of the book. When I was writing All City (which I started writing 13 years ago), there was a dearth of trans and genderqueer characters in literature, and it was important for me to portray them in climate change fiction. That novel also has a sort of "guns blazing" approach to queerness and radical politics. I think my need to be so explicit about such things is still there, just in a different form.

In the story “The Bad Neo-Dadaist,” we’re introduced to a group of artists who solely create nonsensical art pieces using modern culture. Xander, a recurring character throughout The Grief Shop, refers to the content of their art as “Replications, AI shit, nonsensical memes…” Can you say a little bit about how you came up with the idea for the Neo-Dadaists? What role do you see them playing alongside your other characters?

The original Dadaist movement was a reaction to World War I and its atrocities. Dadaism was pretty nonsensical, though firmly based in leftist politics and anti-war sentiments. So, the inspiration for the "Neo-Dadaists" in the book (I put this in quotes because there was an actual Neo-Dadaist movement in the '50s and '60s) was all the nonsense and none of the politics, or hope for a better future, or sincere lampooning of capitalism, or anything that mattered. Just nonsense devoid of meaning. In this world where meaning is something some people, like Gemma, are searching for, the Neo-Dadaists are rejecting it entirely. Except, of course, the Neo-Dadaist Ezra, who finds meaning in everything.

Despite the pervasive numbness Gemma experiences, she’s still beholden to the basic biological necessities of her body. At the end of “Tragedy’s Prophet,” Gemma has a muted emotional reaction to the death of her mother, and instead only feels a “a little gnawing hunger starting to grow in my body” which, she notes, is her sign to go and make dinner. It feels to me like The Grief Shop is partially an exploration into what happens when our mental processes become severed from our physical ones. Was this something you set out to explore when writing the book? What do you feel is important about Gemma’s, and the other The Grief Shop characters, physical and mental divide?

Yes, this was something I consciously set out to explore. At one point in the book, some characters are wondering what they have left to motivate them — morals, ethics, biological drives? And Xander notes that eating and fucking are things that people will always want to do, even if life seems meaningless.

Connie Converse plays a large role in the ending of The Grief Shop; did you originally plan to include Converse in the book when you began writing? What impact has she, and her music, had on your own life?

Connie Converse is a folk musician who's probably best known for vanishing without a trace. I've always loved her music and her legend, but there was something more that motivated me to include her. It has to do with hero-worship of artists, who are, at the end of the day, just humans who happen to make good art. I think this line of thought arose for me because I spend a lot of time reading Nick Cave's Red Hand Files newsletter, where he responds to fan questions. Sometimes his answers are beautiful, and sometimes they're just atrocious, and it really made me think a lot about what an "art hero" is. So Connie Converse, in the book, is Ezra's art hero, and one who can really do no wrong since she ejected herself from the public eye long ago and had been missing ever since. But what Ezra discovers is similar to what I discovered from reading Nick Cave's newsletter — artists are just kinda average people, with opinions and thoughts you may or may not agree with, not people to put on a pedestal and idolize. They can't save us. They're not built to be heroes. They're just people who happen to make art. And you can find whatever meaning you need to in them and their work, but the fact remains that they're just people who make art, not anyone who can save us.

Are there any books in the Seven Stories backlist that you were thinking of while writing The Grief Shop? Or are there any writers whose work you drew from throughout the writing process? 

Some of my favorite SSP backlist books are Chavisa Woods's Things to Do When You're Goth in the Country, Luis Negron's Mundo Cruel, and Youseff Rakah's The Crocodiles. I don't know that they were a direct inspiration for this book, but they're books that have stayed with me since I first read them, and which I come back to in my mind often, so I suppose they probably affect my aesthetics, if nothing else!

Do you have any thoughts or hopes for how readers, whether old or new, might respond to the book? 

I'm always hoping that at least one feral weirdo will see themselves in my work and realize there is a place for their work out there, too. 


From the author of Transmutation comes a linked collection of speculative short fiction that follows a woman navigating surreal jobs in a near-future dystopia, in which people have become completely numb to their emotions following a cataclysmic event.

How do you tell the story of being human in an unfeeling world?

After an unnamed tragedy renders humanity numb, Gemma must wrestle with the void of indifference. She works a series of jobs—at a grief-infused coffee shop, a boxing gym for pain therapy, a graveyard, and more—and encounters a range of eccentric characters struggling to survive in a world where grief, ecstasy, suffering, and joy are commodities for some to purchase and for others to exploit. Gemma’s path is one of glimmering possibilities, ones with feelings she may not understand or accept.

The Grief Shop is a remarkable meditation on what it is to be—even when the very characteristics that make us human have been stripped away.

Alex DiFrancesco

ALEX DIFRANCESCO is the author of the dystopian novel All City, the story collection reflecting trans realities Transmutation, and the memoir Breaking the Curse (2024). About their debut story collection, Patrick Cottrell wrote in The New York Times: “At the affective core of Transmutation is the question of how we can offer shelter for one another’s pain, real and imagined.” They are the winner of an Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Award for 2022, and their novel All City was the first awards finalist by a transgender author for the Ohioana Book Awards in its eighty-year history. They served as an assistant editor for Sundress Publications in Tennessee, and edited LGBTQIA+ non-fiction for Jessica Kingsley Publishers. Their work has appeared in Tin House, Electric Literature, Pacific Standard, Eater, and Vol. 1 Brooklyn, among others. DiFrancesco lives in Philadelphia.