I’ll be frank: what hooked me about hermitmoth’s debut was the mix of late-night internet feeling and real-world tenderness. They said the novel grew out of two main threads — an obsession with small, liminal creatures (moths, stray cats, the kinds of things that live in gutters and attics) and a string of online conversations that refused to stay online. For months they were part of a forum where people shared short life fragments: a childhood smell, an unresolved goodbye, a photograph of a
torn postcard. Those fragments accumulated like leaves, and hermitmoth began threading them together into scenes that felt like dreams you could step into.
Musically, they leaned on sparse, ambient playlists that made sentences breathe; practically, they wrote longhand in cheap notebooks while commuting. There was also a clear emotional engine — a recent bereavement that made questions about memory and
inheritance urgent. Rather than write a grief
memoir, they built a cast of characters who inherit each other’s secrets and small kindnesses. The result is quiet, weirdly consoling, and textured with a tone that’s equal parts melancholic and mischievous. I walked away from it thinking about how much fiction can come from paying attention to tiny, discarded things, and how a single online chat can
seed an entire world.