November Kelly, fka Alice Caldwell-Kelly, fka Alexander Kelly, co-host of Kill James Bond and other podcasts, has, a year and change after giving up hijab, officially broken up with Islam. He is now flirting with Catholicism.
It appears that the "ex who was there for my whole transition" is Christopher Caldwell-Kelly, the black American SF writer once referred to as Alice's husband who appeared in some of his old pre-trans Insta posts. Some time back, when Alice became November, he dropped the Caldwell from his digital footprint. Strangely Christopher has kept the Kelly. They still interact from time to time on Twitter. Alice mentioned the divorce recently and confirmed that Christopher is, as speculated by some in this thread, trans:
The "new wife" is Gwen @POISONOMICON, who tagged along to some KJB liveshows and features regularly in Alice's posts — though one must keep in mind when hearing about "wives" from this lot that they use the term not legally but expressively, to signify their undying love and devotion to all members of their long-distance T4T polycules.
Relationship drama aside — run of the mill stuff for their circle — the turn to Catholicism is funny to me. How long did the Muslim phase last? five years? All spent insisting upon his sincerity, posting nonstop about his adventures as a trans woman in arcane exotic Islam, drawing the ire of (real) Muslim (real) women with his fetishism but sticking to the bit nevertheless... then he bought a hair transplant with his podcast earnings, ditched the hijab after a year of recovery, and is now looking for a different culturally conservative religion to post about for angst and edge. lol.
Muslim, woman, wife: all these identifications come so cheaply to him and to his subculture more broadly, untethered from anything that anyone less online would call real. As a Muslim he never entered a mosque. As a woman he is a man. As a wife he is probably not married to someone with multiple "wives" already. Let's not rehash the purported lesbianism.
Based on his posting this spring, I don't think it unreasonable to suggest that his interest in Catholicism was motivated at least a bit by its voguishness online.