Genghis Cum's stories chronicle four aspects of procreation—conception, pregnancy, infancy, and parenthood—with savage honesty and ruthless humor; Josh’s soft ink drawings of robot fetuses and sunglass-wearing sperm place the stories in context. Glaze’s take on infancy, “10 Darlings and a Handbag,” details a woman’s violent attempt to rid herself of the responsibility of her newborn, but in a raggedly funny way that makes the grotesque easy to swallow. Glaze dives into the deep at word one, and she stays there, never losing her footing on a rough and wild trek into the void she encountered after the birth of her first child.(Laura Dattaro)