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Gothic horror | Dark sci-fi | Monster romance

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J. Federle

Gothic horror | Dark sci-fi | Monster romance

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11 AI-Free Oddity Lists of the Strange and Haunting

By EditorWriterJF on January 24, 2026January 24, 2026

About five years ago, I got it in my head to start a newsletter. In part, I wanted to talk about my work! As an author, I write speculative fiction, especially paranormal horror, sci-fi, and dark fantasy. (I do some monster romance too.) As an editor and reader, I engage with the same cool content daily. But I really wanted to pair my author updates . . . with oddity lists. Sharing my passion for the creepy, eerie, uncanny side of creativity would feel incomplete without also sharing the creative work that inspires me.

I’m a millennial. I remember getting the internet.

Our house had a “computer room,” which was where our one boxy desktop lived. Talk about formative memories. Holed up in there, with Kiss FM blasting on our Sony boombox, I discovered horror.

Little Jessica in the "computer room" with the boxy desktop computer that would plant the first oddity lists seeds
Pretty sure this was Day One of internet in our house. Little-me had no idea what was coming.

I’d always liked the spookiest Voyager episodes. I loved the monsters on Inuyasha (plus the angst, duh). I snuck X-Files episodes whenever I could. I was way more into Animorphs than Goosebumps, but it was the Andalites and dark, gloomy pools of Yeerks that drew me in. I’d listen to the library’s cassette tapes of A Wrinkle in Time on repeat just to re-experience that “dreamcore” scene, those blank-faced kids bouncing their balls in time.

Finally, online, I found analog and digital horror, the immersive epistolary storytelling of CreepyPasta and NoSleep. I wasn’t just hooked. I was home.

My oddity lists try to capture that weird, nostalgic 2000s-era internet magic.

Horror is a huge genre, and I kind of love it all. But in particular, I’m still into the uncanny: the eerily monstrous, the quietly strange, the unexplainable. I like open endings. Slow burns. I’m a sucker for horror told via found footage, journals, letters, and blogs. And even when it’s not explicitly “horror,” I like content that has those vibes. Things that are a little disorienting, a little haunting.

As I’ve grown up, I’ve recognized this love for the uncanny in all kinds of arts. Music and dance, folklore, performance art, tabletop and indie games. Mainly, I’m a writer. But that’s never stopped me from drifting wherever things are Gothically unnerving.

I believe creativity is a renewable resource. Creatives are strongest when we’re feeding each other. The more variety, the better.

If you’re somebody who just loves the “odd,” I hope these oddity lists lead you to creative people you want to support. And make no mistake: supporting creativity is activism, especially creativity that makes the general public a bit uncomfortable.

If you’re a creator, I really hope these oddity lists spark something for you. Your work matters. Your voice matters. Please keep creating.

One side note: Being imperfect is hard.

I’ve got big perfectionist tendencies. Agonizing about inconsistencies and organization is my day job. But over the years, I’ve loved a lot of content that felt entirely human, errors and all. I might’ve even loved it because it felt so human.

I plan to keep updating these lists over time! But for now, I’m at peace with them looking a little on the “homemade” side. I promise they’re baked with love.


The 2025 oddity lists

In January of 2025, I decided to do themed oddity lists. By about April, I realized how ambitious that was . . . aaand forged ahead anyway. The result is eleven oddity lists that each have a distinct vibe and focus. Expect book recs and reviews, old and new art, a bit of music, and some general “oddities.” I hope it’s fun to see how the lists grow over time!


1

Snow Horror That Will Make You Shiver

2

Mushroom Horror: Spore Content That Will Make You Fear Fungi

3

CAVES: Scary Books and Old Art in Dark, Deep Places

4

HOUSES: Scary Books and Other Strange Content

5

APPLES: Scary Books and Other Strange Content

6

SUBMERGED: Underwater Horror Books and Other Strange Content

7

CATS: Oddball Books, Unsettling Art, and Strange Facts

8

EYES: Horror & Sci-fi Books, Art, and Other Strange Content

9

MERMAIDS: Scary Books and Other Strange Content

10

DREAMS: Scary Books and Other Strange Content

11

WOLVES: Scary Books and Other Strange Content

Enjoy these oddity lists?

Join me for more! The Author-Oddity Newsletter goes out twice a month. In addition to my (now un-themed) oddity lists, I share my adventures as an agented author and editor in publishing. And if you’d like to read more about my work in 2025, check out A Year in Review: Failures, Growth, Lessons.

Category: Inspiration Lists, Newsletter

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J. Federle is a wandering lover of ghost stories and folktales. She left Kentucky to study poetry in England. Now she lives in Peru with her husband and cow-colored dog, where she writes about her own ghosts and folks. Find her work in The Saturday Evening Post, The Threepenny Review, and the NoSleep Podcast, among other awesome publications.
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