[4] Bruciaga debuted with the short story collection Tu lagunero no vuelve más (English: Your Lagoon is Not Coming Back),[4] published by Moho in 2000.
[3] Bruciaga followed this with the novel Funerales de hombres raros (2012; Funerals for Strange Men), which won the Torreón City Council's literary competition.
[4] The work explores the life of a group of homosexual friends and the effect that one of their member's suicides has on them,[5] such as the protagonist traveling to his grandmother's funeral.
[4] In 2016, he published a book of columns and opinion pieces called Un amigo para la orgía del fin del mundo (A Friend for the Orgy at the End of the World),[2] in which he criticizes some aspects of queer activism including what he considers to be the "commercialization" of pride, and the fight for marriage equality, which Bruciaga describes as a conservative instruction that replicates the heterosexual family model.
[11] Since 2006, he has written a column in the newspaper Milenio in which he explores the Mexican gay community, his experiences as a person living with HIV, and his musical tastes.