Stevenson has published both short stories and several novel series, most of them blending
urban fantasy with other popular storytelling genres. Her debut novel,
Trash Sex Magic (published in 2004 by
Small Beer Press), earned a place on science-fiction industry journal
Locus magazine's short list for its First Fantasy Short Novel Award in 2005, and on the
Science Fiction Writers of America's long list for its
Nebula Award in both 2005 and 2006.
Trash Sex Magic was praised by American critic
Jessica Crispin, founder of the literary-publishing newsblog
Bookslut, for its non-patronizing portrayal of poor characters and of the lives of lower-class Chicagoans. "What was the last book with main characters living in trailers below the poverty line who were not belittled or pitied by the author? Stevenson does not judge her characters, and that counts for a lot," Crispin wrote, noting Stevenson's refusal to use
classist caricature in her depiction of the
American underclass. Stevenson has created three series of fantasy novels, loosely set within the same universe: "Hinky Chicago" (
romantic fantasy, featuring female heroes Jewel Heiss, a fraud cop/investigator, and Hel, an energy vampire); "Slacker Demons" (
paranormal romance, about retired gods now slumming it as
incubi); and the upcoming "Coed Demon Sluts" (
fantasy paired with "
women's fiction", in ways that recovers the conventionally sexist,
dark fantasy/
horror trope of the
succubus to explore female lives). Stevenson also writes "Backstage Boys," a non-magical novel series about the comic adventures of sexy
stagehands, turning men who typically perform working-class labor and own union cards, into romantic leading characters. == Other contributions ==