"This is why books like Nothing Without Us Too are so important. Stories featuring disabled characters that are written by disabled authors themselves are inherently stories of transformation and the new-because they come from people who've had to view the world in different ways in order to get by, to survive, to thrive in ways that only we know how. Disabled authors don't just 'fix' disability in their stories-they go about fixing, as it were, the entire world."
Amanda Leduc, author of Disfigured: On Fairy Tales, Disability, and Making Space, and The Centaur's Wife"Sometimes joyful, sometimes tragic, always beautiful: the stories in Nothing Without Us Too are a reflection of the disabled community and the unique-yet still universal-experiences that make us who we are."
Jennifer Lee Rossman, disability advocate and co-editor of Mighty: An anthology of disabled superheroes"As a voracious and chronically ill reader, I so rarely get to see myself reflected in books the way I do in Nothing Without Us Too. It's so refreshing to see a group of disabled authors across a diversity of genres tell our stories with empathy, understanding, and creativity."
Nicole Zelniker, author of Letters I'll Never Send and Until We FallReading Nothing Without Us Too was like looking into a large diamond, filled with all kinds of different facets. This incredible collection contains stories about disabled people written by those who have actual lived experience. When reading this collection, I recognized pieces of myself and learned about the true power of the human spirit. Each story can stand on its own, but together, this collection is a diamond that shines so brilliantly.
Jamieson Wolf, Author of Little Yellow Magnet and Beyond the Stone"From the first story involving a uniquely relatable sensory hell, to stories critiquing the medical industrial complex, this lush collection was very hard to put down. In fact, I was reading it so many times and just enjoying it that I put all other books to the side just to live in these stories again. There are multiple disabilities showcased here, but the power isn't just that Disabled people are on the page. The power comes from stories that show people what living with a disability is truly like, through our own eyes."
Robert Kingett, co-editor of Artificial Divide"From neurodivergent accidental vampire slayers to Lady Macbeth with a tic, from queer magic to magical Watchers, the disabled protagonists in Nothing Without Us Too navigate real and speculative worlds with stories of crip agency, humour, and feisty finesse. A worthy sequel and companion piece to the first anthology, Nothing Without Us."
Dorothy Ellen Palmer, disability activist, author of Kerfuffle: A Novel that Speak Spoof to Power, and winner of the Helen Henderson Award for Disability Journalism