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Horror in Strange Pages: Dark Fantasy

The Dark Season is upon us my ghastly ones! I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff.

As we (finally) make our descent towards the end of another year I’m realizing that it has been almost two years since I decided that I needed more horror in my reading life and started my first forays into the genre. And now I’m here, writing you this newsletter, and that’s a bit surreal. It was actually Dark Fantasy that served as my soft intro to the horror genre, and something about the bleak, dark days of winter (are we sensing that this isn’t Jessica’s favorite season) that always makes me crave that beloved intersection of fantasy and horror.

Sometimes horror is zombies and ghosts, sometimes it’s unholy magics, twisted monsters, and vengeful gods. You don’t have to choose! Part of the beauty of horror is its crossover power, able to fit into any other genre and make everything it touches that much darker and creepier. Whether it’s dark fantasy, or a particularly vicious romantic suspense novel, if it makes your skin do that crawling thing where it tries to physically move away from the book you’re holding, it’s also horror. So this week let’s celebrate those books both frightening and magical.

Beneath the Citadel

Beneath the Citadel by Destiny Soria

Still the winner of the “most delightful cover ever” award, Soria’s dark fantasy novel features a city and a people ruled by the ancient prophecies of the elder seers, issued from behind the closed doors of the citadel even as the people wage a war in the streets. It has been over a decade since the last infallible prophecy came to pass and left unrest and anger in its wake. Now Cassa and her friends must solve the mystery of the final infallible prophecy before their city and all they’ve known is destroyed in its wake.

The Unspoken Name cover image

The Unspoken Name by A.K Larkwood

It’s dark, it’s queer, and I’m here for it. Csorwe, sacred tribute, turns her back on the Shrine of the Unspoken and the sacrifice that should have been hers. She follows the powerful mage who offered her her life in exchange for her assistance in his quest to destroy an empire and reclaim his power. But old vows are not easily broken, and gods have a nasty tendency to remember those who have betrayed them.

The Bone Shard Daughter by Andrea Stewart

Lin is the daughter and former heir to her father’s throne, presiding over an empire controlled by mighty and horrible bone shard magic. When her father refuses to recognize her claim to the throne, even as his own power fails him and revolution threatens to split the Empire apart, Lin vows to master the dark power of the bone shard magic and surpass even her father in skill. But that much power comes at a terrible cost, and Lin must decided how far she is truly willing to go to claim her seat on the throne.

the monster of elendhaven

The Monster of Elendhaven by Jennifer Giesbrecht

Giesbrecht’s novella is a delight of dark fantasy goodness. In the dying city of Elendhaven, on the edge of the sea, a monster stalks the shadows and does his master’s bidding. A creature in the shape of a man but who cannot die like one, twisted by magic and and shaped by his master’s cruel cunning. Together they will have their revenge on Elendhaven, no matter the cost.

The Bone Witch by Rin Chupeco

Chupeco you might recognize as the talented author of the Girl from the Well YA horror series, and I’m happy to say that her dark fantasy Bone Witch series is every bit as dark and delightful. Also, there’s necromancy. And if you stick around here long enough you’ll realize that Jessica never says no to necromancy. Tea can raise the dead, but at a price. She has a gift for necromancy, which means that she is a bone witch, but though her abilities allowed her to resurrect her brother from the dead, they also mean that she is feared and shunned by those around her.

House of Salt and Sorrows by Erin A. Craig

You might remember Craig’s debut novel making the horror rounds earlier this year. It was even nominated this summer for the Ladies of Horror Fiction Award for Best Young Adult novel. Inspired by the fairy tale of “The Twelve Dancing Princesses”, House of Salt and Sorrows is dark, Gothic, and filled with magic. Annaleigh lives in a manor by the sea with her sisters, her father, and her stepmother. Where there were once twelve sisters roaming the halls there are now only eight, and the tragic death toll just keeps climbing. Every night Annaleigh’s sisters sneak out and spend the night dancing at mysterious balls with unknown partners. And one by one they die. Who – or what – have they been dancing with?

Fresh From The Skeleton’s Mouth

In the realm of horror goodies over at Book Riot this last week, it’s all about snacks and shopping. Annika Barranti Klein has a list of horror baking books, because who says the horror snack fun has to end with Halloween? And if you’re kicking off your Christmas shopping for the year, check out these lists of horror-inspired socks and fantastic horror leggings for inspiration!

In honor of the hell that this winter is probably going to be, Salem Horror Fest tweeted asking everyone for their horror recommendations. If your “The World is Ending But At Least I Have Books” TBR is looking a little slim, check out the replies for an avalanche of fantastic reads.

Speaking of reading recommendations, House of Leaves Publishing, publishers of the recent critical text on religion in horror, Scared Sacred, have threaded a reading list of essential critical horror film texts.

For Bookstr’s latest 5×5 article, Samantha Jones featured five female horror authors and their answers to five bookish questions about their writing journeys and the horror genre.

On November 10 the Horror Writers Association will be holding their next Skeleton Hour webinar and you don’t want to miss it. This time they’ll be sitting own with the authors & editors of the anthology Black Cranes: Tales of Unquiet Women, including Lee Murray, Geneve Flynn, Nadia Bulkin, Angela Yuriko Smith, and Rena Mason.


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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The Fright Stuff

Extremely Suspect Boarding Schools

Class is in session, unfortunate souls! I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff.

This week we’re going to indulge in one of my favorite horror tropes: creepy boarding schools. Of course the return to school is a quintessentially fall activity, but the schools on this list aren’t all ringing bells and bright futures. Think big, old rambling buildings full of secrets and (often quite literally) ghosts of the past.

catherine house

The Catherine House by Elizabeth Thomas

Deep in the woods of Pennsylvania is an exclusive, experimental school for only the best and the brightest: Catherine House. For three years students are given one of the finest educations available for completely free – but the price is three years of their life completely cut off from the world they left behind. No family, no friends, no contact with the outside world. Ines is ready to trade in her old life for a new world of intense study and discipline, but what she finds instead is a gilded prison of luxury and permissiveness. When tragedy strikes, Ines begins to suspect that the truth of Catherine House is not at all what it seems.

The Broken Girls by Simone St. James

Vermont. The Idlewild School for girls – for the troublemakers, the illegitimate, and the clever. Rumored to be haunted by the small town that surrounds it, Idlewild is the site of mysterious disappearances and strange happenings. In 1950, four roommates bonded together during their time at the school until the day one disappeared. Sixty-four years later, journalist Fiona Sheridan is investigating the death of another girl, her own sister, found dead in the fields near Idlewild’s ruins.

plain bad heroines by emily a danforth cover

Plain Bad Heroines by Emily. M Danforth

Plain Bad Heroines tells the linked stories of two sets of girls whose live are entwined in the history of a mysterious New England boarding school (It’s always New England, right? All we have up here are creepy small towns and creepy, isolated boarding schools, apparently.) In 1902 there’s Flo and Clara, who were students at the school and died tragically. Over a century later, Harper and Audrey are playing Flo and Clara in a horror film about their gruesome deaths and the supposedly cursed Gilded-Age school, only to find past and present becoming tangled together.

Never Let Me Go By Kazuo Ishiguro

At Hailsham the students are cared for and nurtured, raised in idyllic peace in the English countryside and kept ignorant of and almost completely separate from the world outside. Kathy, Ruth, and Tommy grew up together safe inside of Hailsham, but when the time comes for them to leave the school they are forced to face the dark truth about Hailsham, its real purpose, and their own identities. Set in an alternate, dystopian England, the horror of Never Let Me Go is made all the more terribly by its subtlety and the resignation of its principal characters to their fate.

Enjoyed reading that? Watch this!

Sometimes you get on a reading trend… and then run out of books. The horror! (Ba dum tish) While there are plenty of other scary school books out there to enjoy, sooner or later (depending on how fast you read) you’re going to run out. So allow me to recommend some scary films to go with this weeks scary reads:

The Woods

Set in 1695, The Woods is about frequently-in-trouble Heather who has been sent away to an exclusive girls school located deep in the woods. And from the strange whispering she can hear in the trees, to the ominous disappearances of her classmates, it becomes clear that there is something terribly wrong at Falburn Academy. The Woods gets horror bonus points, by the way, for including a Bruce Campbell cameo as Heather’s somewhat negligent, but loving father.

The Blackcoat’s Daughter

This is one of those bleak winter horrors where everything feels really washed out and intense. So of course I love it. I mean does it get more peak boarding school horror than two girls being left behind over winter break at their Catholic boarding school where the nuns are supposedly Satanists? (If you believe the student rumors and yes of course we believe the student rumors.) And who doesn’t love Kiernan Shipka, right?

Fresh From the Skeleton’s Mouth

Over at Book Riot Rachel Brittain has put together a list of 10 Perfectly Creepy Supernatural Books for Halloween, and Dee Das is discussing Eerie Books by Asian Authors to add to your holiday reading list.

In an oddly coincidental but felicitous happenstance, Books in the Freezer Podcast’s most recent episode launched Tuesday, October 20th and they’re talking all about, you guessed it, Boarding School Horror! So for some fantastic book chatter and a longer list of boarding school titles, go and give them a listen!

We Are Bookish, NetGalley’s readers blog, has a list of 6 Books to Get You in the Halloween Spirit. That includes Opium and Absinthe by Lydia Kang, which has long been on my to-read list because Dracula and Absinthe and dear god I am an easily pleased trash creature that exists solely on pretty horror things.

Diversity in Horror is doing a giveaway on their Twitter. The winner will receive copies of Bleeding Violet by Dia Reeves and Category Five by Ann Dávila Cardinal, as well as a 4” goth rainbow sticker (so cute!?), a “Haunted Book Store” candle, a “Segrado Corazón” bath bomb, and some adorable resin bird heads! The details about how to enter can be found here and details about the prize makers can be found in the second thread of the tweet!


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Ripped From the Pages

Hey there Happy Haunters, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff

We all know that Halloween is not going to be the same this year. All those parties and events that usually give you an excuse to dress to your creepy best have probably been cancelled at this point. But that doesn’t mean you can’t still get your costume on! Even if the furthest you’re going this Halloween is your couch for a scary movie marathon, getting dressed up will keep you in the spirit of things. And if you can get your family or roommates to do it with you, all the better! If you’re short on ideas, these books will help you put a spin on some of the classic Halloween costumes we know and love.

Witch

Before you break out the pointed hat and green face paint, or steal the spare broom from the cupboard, dive into these witchy reads for some inspiration to innovate this most classic of Halloween costumes. Want that quintessential dark, atmospheric occult feel? Venture into the dark woods in search of witches with Alexis Henderson’s The Year of the Witching, or strike a deal with a demon prince to avenge your eviscerated sibling in Kerri Maniscalco’s Kingdom of the Wicked. Prefer your witchcraft with a twist of dark academia? Grab a copy of Leigh Bardugo’s The Ninth House and choose your magical house in a process that has nothing to do with singing hats and everything to do with whatever creepy magic shit you get up to in your free time. (House Book & Snake represent. It’s all about that necromancy)

Vampire

Forget the plastic fangs this year. Move away from the silk capes, but hang on to those tubes of fake blood. These vampire books put Dracula back in his grave and will take your vampire costume in new, frightening directions. For starters, pick up copies of these fangtastic (not sorry) new anthologies: Vampires Never Get Old edited by Zoraida Córdova and Natalie C. Parker, which contains eleven stories about all kinds of different vampires, and Slay: Stories of the Vampire Noire edited by Nicole Givens Kurtz which celebrates the vampires of the African Diaspora. Two anthologies, so many unique vampire concepts sure to put some new (un)life in your costume design. I wanted to recommend Certain Dark Things by Silvia Moreno Garcia as well, which introduces readers to a variety of vampire subspecies whose appearances and powers are influenced by where they come from and the vampire line they descend from. But sadly it is out of print. But HAPPILY, Tor Nightfire has already announced that they are “resurrecting” Certain Dark Things in May of 2021!

the deep alma katsu

Ghost

If you want to cut holes out of an old bed sheet I will never stop you, that’s classic. But may I recommend taking it up a notch this Halloween? The saltwater-soaked, wrathful ghost of The Deep by Alma Katsu might entice you to find your best Titanic gown look-a-like and throw some seaweed over your head. Plus this beautiful, emotional historical read makes a great companion for the darkening days of autumn. Pop culture crossover points if you drag a prop door frame behind you and sob like Leonardo DiCaprio just slipped through your fingers. (Too soon?) If you want a plethora of ghosts to choose from for inspiration pick up the Echoes anthology, edited by Ellen Datlow. It’s 816 pages of ghost stories written by a host of popular authors. That’s a lot of ghosts, and a lot of costume ideas.

an illustration with a red-tinged silhouette of a wolf in the foreground and a standing person in front of power lines and a car against a yellow background

Werewolf

Grab your claws and splash on some Eau de Wet Dog, because a werewolf costume is as classic as it gets. But if watching The Wolf Man on loop isn’t inspiring your costume design, pick up one of these amazing, toothy horror treats instead. Mongrels by Stephen Graham Jones is a genre favorite, and probably one of the best werewolf novels of recent years. It’s a gristle between your teeth violent, dark, emotional story about a boy trying to find his place in the world and in the pack. In Romina Garber’s Lobizona, Manuela Azul is also on the hunt to discover her own story and her true heritage as she uncovers a hidden world of brujas and lobizones and struggles to find her place in a society where her very existence is illegal.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

The horror good times continue over at Book Riot with this line-up of fantastic Filipino Horror Books for Your TBR, a selection of creepy Middle Grade Horror for the Haunting Season, and 28 Frightening Folk Horror Books because it’s harvest time! Someone get the animal masks, chunky knit sweaters, and acoustic guitars. And if you don’t have enough existential dread in your life yet, I’ve pulled together a list of Modern Cosmic Horror Books.

Silvia Moreno-Garcia and Innsmouth Free Press are publishing Mexican author José Luis Zárate’s cult novella and Dracula prequel The Route of Ice and Salt in January 2021, translated into English for the very first time by David Bowles and presented with an accompanying essay by Poppy Z Brite. This book sounds absolutely amazing! Be sure to preorder so you don’t miss out. If your NetGalley account is up and running you can request a review copy now!

Horror Booktuber Cody Daigle-Orians, has put together a video about “Books That Slay”, featuring four amazing slasher/slayer horror books you won’t want to miss. Tune in for some stabby good times!

The Know Fear Podcast’s most recent episode is about Eco-Horror! For those of you who want to add a little dread to your excursions into the wild. Literally the only way to get outside here is to head for the woods and what’s the point if I’m not terrified the whole time?

Author Jessica Guess was on the Ladies of the Fright Podcast talking about ’90s Horror, her novel Cirque Berserk, and pursuing dreams. Have a listen!


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Of Final Girls and Monstrous Women

Hey there horror fans, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff

Grab your knives, your shovels, your claws, and your teeth, because this week we’re talking about the final girls and monstrous women of horror fiction. Whether surviving the unthinkable or reaping a little bloody revenge, women in horror are kickass until the end. You know what final girls and monstrous women have in common? Survival. They will kick and claw and shoot and scream their way through hell to save themselves or the ones they love. In fact if you look into the past of some monstrous women you might find a final girl who did what she had to to survive. Whatever she had to, whatever the cost. So clear some room on your shelves for these tales of women fighting and clawing their way to the finish line.

Black Cranes: Tales of Unquiet Women edited by Lee Murray and Geneve Flynn

In this new anthology, Southeast Asian writers Nadia Bulkin, Rin Chupeco, Christina Sng, Lee Murray, and more come together to spin 14 dark and intimate tales exploring their own experiences of “otherness” and what it means to be an outsider. You know I love a good anthology, and Black Cranes really promises to be one of the top anthologies of 2020. Don’t pass on this one.

wilder girls

Wilder Girls by Rory Power

I love this book so much. It’s emotional, it’s queer, it’s dark and absolutely teeming with flinch-worthy body horror. And it features my favorite kind of final girl: the one slowly becoming a monster herself. It’s been 18 months since Hetty and her classmates were trapped on Raxter Island by the Tox. Since then the students of Raxter School for Girls have been doing their best to survive on dwindling supplies in an increasingly hostile environment, as the unknown virus slowly turns their own bodies against them.

Cockblock by C.V. Hunt

Sonya and Callie just want a quiet night out at a restaurant together. However, that’s proving to be more difficult than anticipated. On their way to the restaurant they are verbally assaulted by a group of men, and what starts as an already awful incident quickly becomes a nightmarish race to the restaurant and safety. But once inside, it becomes obvious that what happened to them was not an isolated incident. Men everywhere have turned violent and the source seems to be a hate-filled screed against women being broadcast nationwide by the president. The only way to save themselves? Survive long enough to take out the source of the chaos.

The Last Final Girl by Stephen Graham Jones

I am more than a little obsessed with this novella. For real. The Last Final Girl is a love letter to slasher films, and in particular to the glory that is ’80s horror. Homecoming Queen Lindsay is a final girl. She survived – barely – the brutal attentions of Billie Jean, the sadistic murder in a Michael Jackson mask who was determined to kill her. She’s a legend. But Billie Jean isn’t done with Lindsey, and Lindsey’s not the only final girl in town. When the masked killer slaughters her royal court, Lindsay replaces them with other final girls, stacking the decks in her favor. One psycho killer vs. a homecoming court full of final girls, all competing to be the last survivor standing when the credits roll.

All the Fabulous Beasts by Priya Sharma

Behold the short fiction collection that I am absolutely obsessed with, and which may be my top collection read for the year. Priya Sharma’s All the Fabulous Beasts is a powerhouse of imagery and tone. All 16 stories in this collection are a glorious blend of the monstrous and the beautiful, full of nature and humanity, life, death, and transformation. But my personal favorite was “Pearls”, a continuation more than a retelling of the Medusa myth, and a lushly emotional one too. I also loved “Fish Skins” about a man whose wife came from the sea, and “The Sunflower Seed Man”, a harrowing look at the nature of grief and how we survive.

The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter

I know most everyone already knows The Bloody Chamber. But I couldn’t make a list of books about monstrous women without Angela Carter’s legendary collection of bloody fairy tales. This book is my whole heart. The women in Carter’s collection are toothy, sexual, and bold. They are monsters, survivors, the wives of lions, and tigers in their own right. They’re clever and canny; they’re wolves with skin on the outside. If you haven’t read The Bloody Chamber, autumn is the perfect season. Or if, like me, it’s an old favorite of yours, autumn is also the perfect time for a reread.

Fresh From the Skeleton’s Mouth

Bit of a slow news week, folks, but we’ve got plenty of horror content for you over on Book Riot as blessed Halloween approach-eth. If you need a few more titles to fill out your Halloween TBR, I recommend this list of 15 terrifying reads, or this collection of 9 Gothic books to read this autumn. And while ye old Covid is keeping us at home this Halloween, and costumes may be a thought for the distant future, maybe snag one of these funny horror t-shirts to wear while you’re marathoning the scary content of your choice at home and downing candy by the handful.

Books of Blood is liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiive on Hulu. If you need me, don’t need me, because this is all I’m going to be doing this holiday weekend.

As always, you can catch me on twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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New Terrors for October

Happy Season of the Pumpkin everyone! I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff


Well my darling creeps, it’s the start of another month. But not just any month! Today we are 5 days into the most glorious, most haunted, and most delightful month of the year. It’s finally October, and even those of us who have been celebrating Halloween since September have an extra spring in our step and an extra scream in our souls. (Or maybe that’s a 2020 thing, not an October thing.) The start of a new Halloween season also means new scream-worthy horror! So here are a few of the titles I’m gleefully anticipating in this most hollowed of months:

halloween season by lucy snyder coverHalloween Season by Lucy A. Snyder (October 5)

Lucy A. Snyder has a new collection of stories all about our favorite time of year, and it was released today! So go forth at the beginning of this shiny new October and read of sweets and scares and parties and treats! The stories in Halloween Season run the gamut from chilling to hilarious, so there’s a little something for every reader.

 

the hollow places by t kingfisher coverThe Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher (October 6)

Personally, if I found the ominous inscription “Pray they are hungry” inside a hidden bunker behind a wall of the house I was living in, I might consider not living there. Ever again. Kara doesn’t leave, though. Instead she becomes obsessed with the mysterious warning, and the strange bunker hidden inside her Uncle’s house. A bunker that, it turns out, contains portals to alternate realities full of strange, deadly creatures that can hear your thoughts and feed on your fear. I’ve been hearing a lot of buzz about this title! In particular that it is SO scary. Like leave the lights on while you sleep scary. If you’re mourning the loss of your usual Halloween haunt experience, maybe pick up a copy of The Hollow Places instead.

slay stories of the vampire noire edited by nicole givens kurtzSlay: Stories of the Vampire Noire edited by Nicole Givens Kurtz (October 13)

This is the second Vampire anthology we’ve been blessed with in as many months and I could not be a happier fangophile. Slay is the first of its kind, an Afrocentric vampire anthology that celebrates the varied cultural and mythological backgrounds of the African Diaspora. Each story in the collection centers on a Black protagonist, and narratives range from matriarchal vampire broods and immortal deities to hunters and heroes. If you love vampires stories be sure to pre-order a copy of Slay, out October 13th from Mocha Memoirs Press.

on sundays she picked flowers by yah yah scholfield coverOn Sundays, She Picked Flowers by Yah Yah Scholfield (October 18)

The Gothic has always been centered on the domestic, and Scholfield’s new Southern Gothic invests deeply in the thematic heart of the genre. A novel of transformation and healing, retribution and closure, On Sundays, She Picked Flowers is about Judith who comes to live by herself in a cottage in the Georgia countryside after having finally escaped her mother, and discovers beings in the woods beyond her home. Described as “a rollercoaster of emotion, dealings of familiar trauma, love, and mystery”, On Sundays belongs on the TBR of every lover of the Gothic.

plain bad heroines by emily a danforth coverPlain Bad Heroines by Emily A. Danforth (October 20)

Plain Bad Heroines tells the linked stories of two sets of girls: In 1902 there’s Flo and Clara, who were students at the school and died tragically. Over a century later, there’s Harper and Audrey, who are playing Flo and Clara in a horror film about their gruesome deaths and the supposedly haunted and cursed Gilded-Age school. When past and present get tangled up during filming what is real and what is fiction becomes increasingly uncertain.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

Over at Book Riot we’ve got a fresh batch of creepy posts for your delectation and TBR destruction, from this list of horror manga by Erika Hardison to this collection of heart pounding survival horror novels compiled by K.W. Colyard. If you’ve ever wondered how to keep up with the latest horror releases and make your TBR truly undefeatable, make sure to catch up with Nicole Hill. And if you really want to stock up on terrifying books this October, Emily Martin has your back.

As part of this year’s online New York Comic Con, Hulu is holding a Cast and Creators panel on October 8th for the upcoming adaptation of Clive Barker’s Books of Blood! Subscribe to the NYCC Youtube channel so you don’t miss out on your chance to watch!

And since this newsletter is turning into all Clive Barker all the time party (sorry, not sorry) can we talk about the fact that we are now expecting a Nightbreed adaptation as well?!

HWA’s Halloween Haunts started Thursday, October 1st! You can find all the details, plus daily posts, book excerpts, and more on their website.

You are not going to want to miss this Scream Queens panel on Oct 20th being hosted by the University of Pittsburgh. Authors Gwendoly Kiste (Rust Maidens), Kathe Koja (The Cipher), Michelle Lane (Invisible Chains), and Sara Tantlinger (The Devil’s Dreamland) will be talking about about the history and future of women in Horror.

Sturgis Library’s Spooky Storytime will feature Stephen Graham Jones (The Only Good Indians) next week on the 8th of October. Check out the twitter thread for information on how to sign up and to get a look at the other authors participating!


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Hold On To Your Ticket Stubs

Hey there all you monsters of the silver screen, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff


Grab your popcorn and nachos folks, because today on The Fright Stuff, we’re going to the movies!

It’s been six long, LONG months since I’ve had the joy of sitting in a movie theater. I saw The Invisible Man in February and was looking forward to an exciting year of horror releases. But we all know what happened next, don’t we. I’m not the only one who misses the smell of popcorn and the excitement of watching those first credits roll, and someday we’ll be back there, in our seats, sharing that unique joy of experiencing horror together. Uniting through our shared love of our genre. In the meantime, to take the sting out of missing the movies, here are some horror books that might make you glad you’re safe at home without the pitch black of the theater closing in around you as you realize too late: movies can kill.

experimental film by gemma files coverExperimental Film by Gemma Files

When Canadian film history teacher Lois Cairns accidentally stumbles across a long forgotten Ontario filmmaker from the early 20th century, she unleashes more than a new obsession. Mrs. A. Macalla Whitcomb’s films are haunted by dark forces that may very well have led to the filmmaker’s unsolved disappearance. Now Lois has invited these forces into her own life, putting herself and her loved ones in grave danger.

 

tribesmen adam cesare coverTribesmen by Adam Cesare

When an ’80s film crew and their cast of international talent land on an isolated island in the Caribbean, at the height of the “ultra-violent ‘Italian cannibal’ grindhouse film craze”, with visions of gore amid paradisiacal landscapes, they get more than they bargained for. The island’s dead are angry and have something far bloodier in mind for the unlucky film crew.

 

harrow lake kat ellis coverHarrow Lake by Kat Ellis

Lola Nox is immune to fear. Her father is a celebrated horror filmmaker and disturbing is in her blood. But when her father is attacked in their home and sends Lola off to the town of Harrow Lake to keep her safe, she quickly finds her life has become an homage to her father’s darkest slasher film. Deposited in the care of a grandmother she’s never met, in a town full of bizarre locals, Lola quickly realizes that there is more to Harrow Lake than first meets the eye, and that the horror of her father’s most famous film may be all too real.

 

final cuts new tales of hollywood horror by ellen datlowFinal Cuts: New Tales of Hollywood Horror and Other Spectacles edited by Ellen Datlow

For lovers of film-themed horror, Final Cuts is a must not miss anthology. Featuring some of your favorite authors like Stephen Graham Jones, Josh Malerman, Cassandra Khaw, Kelley Armstrong, Gemma Files, Usman T. Malik, and more, this anthology takes you deep in to the evil behind the screens. Danger lurks in every roll of film and between the pixels of every stream. Get ready for an exciting night out at the movies. It might just be your last…

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

It’s been a busy month for horror over at Book Riot! P.N. Hinton talks horror books she wishes she’d had growing up, which is a great pre-read before jumping into Emily Martin’s list of 15 Spooky Titles for Middle Grade Readers. Because it’s never too late to start putting together those Christmas shopping lists, Kelly Jensen has a list of Horror-theme gifts for the book lover in your life (or for yourself!), and K.W. Colyard has compiled a list of horror short story collections for your shortening autumn days (if you’re in the Northern Hemisphere, that is.)

So can I just say: AHHHHHHHHHHH!! Clive Barker is back folks, and he comes bearing books and short stories and listen all I’m saying is take my money, Mr. Barker, it’s all for you.

We Are Horror is a bi-monthly horror e-magazine, devoted to promoting diverse voices in the horror genre. With a focus on diversity and inclusivity, a minimum 80% of all content in the zine is the work of creators who are women, BIPOC, and/or members of the LGBTQIA+ community. So if you’ve been looking for a new literary Patreon to support, you couldn’t ask for better than We Are Horror.

Oh my darling audio lovers, have I got one for you. Nightfire has announced the second addition of their audio short story anthology Come Join Us By The Fire. Available for free beginning October 15th, exclusively on Google Play Books, season two of this fan favorite anthology includes 27 horror stories from authors like Cassandra Khaw, T. Kingfisher, Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Indrapramit Das, Catherynne M. Valente, Nibedita Sen and Caitlín R. Kiernan. Plus many more!

I’m not sure where I was when They Never Learn by Layne Fargo (Oct. 13) was announced (really, Jessica, way to lay down on the job), but I’m pretty sure a “sexy angry feminist serial killer thriller” is not something I want to miss out on. And if you decide that you also can’t live without a copy, Fargo has a pre-order campaign running right up until release day. Did I say no more book orders before the end of the year? Yes I did. Am I a liar? Yes I am.


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Abandon All Popcorn, Ye Who Enter This Big Top

Hey there clowns and cotton candy hounds, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in Horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff.


There are a lot of things to miss this year, especially now that fall is closing in and it’s likely most of our favorite autumnal activities will not be taking place. Sure, depending on where you live, there might still be apple picking, or pumpkin patches, or corn mazes (I think we’ve even got a sunflower maze up here somewhere). But one of my all time favorite fall activities – going to the local fair – has been a no go since April. Now, I grant you, fairs up here tend to be of the more agricultural variety vs that signature carnival mix of midways, rickety rides, sideshows, and questionable clowns that horror adores. Still, there’s something about fall that makes me crave the smell of fresh fried dough and popcorn, the taste of a sticky caramel apple, the music of the rides riding over the roar of the crowds.

Alas. Beloved fairs. Maybe next year. In the meantime, I’ll have to content myself with fictional carnivals and circuses of the creepy kind.

cirque berzerk by jessica guess cover circus horrorCirque Berserk by Jessica Guess

You might remember Cirque Berserk from my Rewind or Die newsletter! Well it’s making a comeback this week because you can’t have a list of circus and carnival horror without this delight of a novella. In the summer of 1989, disaster strikes the town of Shadows Creek, Florida when a group of teens massacred a dozen people at the local carnival, the titular Cirque Berserk, and then vanished. Thirty years later a new group of teens escape their boring senior trip and decide to explore the mystery of the infamous Cirque Berserk, unaware of the bloody dangers that lurk behind its gates.

wonderland by jennifer hillier coverWonderland by Jennifer Hillier

Vanessa Castro has only been deputy police chief of Seaside, Washington for one day when rotting corpse turns up in the middle of the midway at Wonderland, the local carnival-themed amusement park. Full of retro carnival delights during the day, at night Wonderland – with its extra creepy Clown Museum and frightening House of Horrors – takes on a more sinister air. Now one man is dead, and one of the park’s teenage employees is missing. The investigation into these tragic events will bring Wonderland’s dark history to light, and expose a killer’s deadly game.

The Grand Tour by E. Catherine Tobler

Published by Apex books, with an absolutely gorgeous cover, E. Catherine Tobler’s short fiction collection, The Grand Tour, collects nine of Tobler’s circus stories all in one place. Jackson’s Unreal Circus and Mobile Marmalade is a circus on the move, its steam strain containing worlds within its corridors, and inside are wonders to behold! Magicians, sideshow acts, rides, and magic marmalade – at the circus all things are possible. However wonderful or terrible.

nightmare carnival anthology edited ellen datlow cover circus horrorNightmare Carnival edited by Ellen Datlow

Collected by Hugo and Bram Stoker award-winning editor Ellen Datlow, whose anthologies are always a delight, Nightmare Carnival is a must read for carnival horror lovers. Oddities and marvels await beneath the big top in works by beloved horror authors like Stephen Graham Jones, Priya Sharma, Genevieve Valentine, Livia Llewellyn, and Nick Mamatas, among others! Step right in, step right in. The carnival awaits. And as added incentive: for those of you familiar with the 1989 carnival/sideshow horror novel Geek Love, Katherine Dunn wrote the introduction for this collection!

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

Over at Book Riot Jazlyn Andrews explores the “Inescapable Experiences of Horror”, Silvana Reyes Lopez wants to know what your favorite candy is so she can recommend you your next horror read, and Giovanna Centeno considers the experience of reading Shirley Jackson while in quarantine.

Here’s a can’t miss event to add to your calendars for October! Tor.com is holding a Women in Horror panel on Tuesday, October 27, featuring Alexis Henderson (The Year of the Witching), Zoje Stage (Wonderland), and Elisabeth Thomas (Catherine House). The fantastic Mallory O’Meara of The Lady from the Black Lagoon fame will be moderating. Be sure to register!

So any book recommended by Stephen King is one that I need to at least keep an eye one. But he’s not the only one buzzing about Catriona Ward’s forthcoming The Last House on Needless Street. Nightfire has acquired three of Catriona Ward’s novels, including Needless Street (Set for a US release in October of 2021). The available synopsis for the book is limited, but that hasn’t stopped me from being absolutely ravenous to get my hands on this one. Maybe it’s all that talk about dark forests and last houses on dead end streets.

I know it’s the wrong season entirely, but as we all know publishing is always a few months ahead so please feast your eyes on this gorgeous, creative table of contents for the forthcoming holiday themed Gothic Blue Book VI: A Krampus Carol, from author Cina Pelayo’s boutique press Burial Day. Coming to a TBR near you on October 31st!

It is 34 years old! Stephen King’s legendary brick may have its flaws, but it’s still widely beloved in the horror genre, and horror twitter has been sending the Loser’s Club some much deserved love. Grady Hendrix retweeted a piece he wrote for Tor.com back in 2013 as part of his Great Stephen King Reread, and others like reviewer Sadie Hartmann (AKA Mother Horror) tweeted their appreciation for this door-stopper of a horror classic.


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Tiny Satan Wants a Cookie

Hey there ghouls and goblins, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghastly and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff

Hey there, Tiny Satan. Please don’t murder me.

Scary children are a horror staple. Where would we be without the Regan MacNeil’s and Gage Creed’s of the world? When I came up with the idea for this newsletter, the first thing I thought of was this joke about horror movies and toddlers that I’d seen once on the internet and never forgot. It took a little digging but I managed to track down the author of the blog it was originally posted to, Jill Krause of Baby Rabies, and found what seems to be the original post:

It’s just… so accurate. I mean let’s face it: kids are natural horror fodder. They’re small, seemingly innocent, surprisingly sneaky when they want to be, and periodically they talk to “nothing” or say the most terrifying things in their little terror cherub voices.

So here’s to the scary kids. We love you. Please don’t eat our souls.

Seed by Ania Ahlborn

Jack Winter has spent his whole life running from his past and his dark childhood. The sort of childhood he’d never wish upon his six-year-old daughter, Charlie. But the past has a way of catching us up no matter what we do, and though Jack did his best to protect her, in the end Charlie found that the apple didn’t fall far from the tree. When the darkness in his past manifests one night after a near fatal accident, Charlie sees it too, and Jack is forced to watch his daughter change before his eyes as she is slowly consumed by the hungry shadows he thought he had long since escaped.

Head Full of Ghosts by Paul Tremblay

When the Barretts’ 14-year-old daughter Marjorie develops what appears to be acute schizophrenia, and all medical attempts to help her fail, the family turns to the church for aid. But a local priest’s suggestion that he perform an exorcism on Marjorie is tainted with suspicion when he also invites a camera crew to accompany him. Then tragedy strikes. 15 years later, Marjorie’s little sister Merry agrees to an interview about the events of that night, and as buried memories surface it soon becomes clear that what she remembers, and what she’s been told, are two complete different stories.

The Icarus Girl by Helen Oyeyemi

Like most children with extraordinary imaginations, Jessamy – the child of an English Father and a Nigerian mother – has a hard time fitting in at school. She struggles to make friends until her mother takes her to visit Nigeria for the first time and she meets TillyTilly. TillyTilly understands Jessamy the way that no one else ever has, but the more time she spends with TillyTilly, the more Jessamy begins to realize that there’s something very wrong with her new friend.

baby teethBaby Teeth by Zoje Stage

Suzette loves her daughter Hanna. She does. But when Hanna is bad she’s really really bad, and she’s only ever bad for Mommy. After years of school expulsions, and struggling to home school her troubled daughter, Suzette’s physical and mental health are suffering. Her husband may be blind to Hanna’s real behavior, but Suzette knows the truth. There’s something not right with Hanna. Her tricks are becoming increasingly complicated, and violent, and if Suzette can’t find a way to get Hanna out of the house, it could cost her her life.

Sour Candy by Kealan Patrick Burke

Phil Pendelton and Adam seem like any other father and son pair when you first see them. They do normal father and son things; they go on trips and eat meals together. Maybe Phil’s a little indulgent, letting Adam stay up as late as he wants and eat candy whenever he wants. And maybe Adam’s a little hot headed, but hey every kid loses their temper in public sometimes, right? Perfectly normal. Except Adam isn’t Phil’s son. Phil met him a few weeks ago in the grocery store, and Adam just… never went away. You might even say that Phil can’t get Adam to go away, no matter how hard he tries.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

Over at Book Riot we’ve got all the spooky content lined up as we creep our way into Fall. Our contributors are discussing Gothic Horror, diverse YA Horror reads, Indigenous Horror books, and Mary Shelley’s timeless Frankenstein. Cant decide what to read? Design your ultimate haunted house and find your next horror read!

Hello, have you SEEN the cover of Daka Hermon’s new MG horror Hide and Seeker? It’s so gorgeous, and so creepy. I can’t even.

As if I weren’t already salivating to get my fangs on my copy of Vampires Never Get Old, editors Zoraida Córdova and Natalie C Parker have just launched the companion Vampires Never Get Old Podcast, providing additional content about the creation of the anthology and the history of vampire literature. Warm up those headphones folks!

Author Adam Nevill is coming back to a stream near you with the Netflix adaptation of his novel No One Gets Out Alive.

Speaking of movie trailers, maybe you’ve seen the one going around twitter for Freaky, the delightful meta-slasher, Friday the 13th meets Freaky Friday movie coming out in November from Universal? Well I’m obsessed. And if the wait until November seems interminable, embrace the slasher by picking up a copy of Stephen Graham Jones’ equally meta, and equally delightful The Last Final Girl.


As always, you can catch me on twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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When is a Ghost Not a Ghost?

Hey there ghost hunters and ghostly haunters, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghoulish and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff.

Let’s talk about haunted house boooooo-ks.

If I had to pick one horror plot to read for the rest of my life, it would be the haunted house. No other plot offers such a wealth of story telling options. It’s a recurring motif in horror literature, with some recognizable tropes and beats, but it’s also a plot made of silly putty. The more a writer pulls the more it stretches, and they can stretch it in any direction they please. Why? Because a ghost is never just a ghost.

the haunting of hill house by shirley jackson coverSteven J. Mariconda described the haunted house story as “amazingly flexible” in its variety of themes such as “good versus evil, science versus the supernatural, economic conflict, class, gender, and so on” (“The Haunted House”, Icons of Horror and the Supernatural, p. 269). In her critical study The Literary Haunted House, Rebecca Janicker adds to that list “capitalism, consumerism, domestic turmoil, and race” (11), and goes further to posit that the motif of the haunted house “affords a distinctive type of literary encounter with ideological forces, one tied to specific socio-historical contexts through the physical spaces in which hauntings occur” (11).

Put simply: A ghost is never just a ghost because it always represents something more than itself. Something that you try not to think about. Something unpleasant you try to ignore or repress until you can’t any more and it rises up to – quite literally – haunt you.

beloved by toni morrison coverPerhaps one of the best examples of this phenomenon is Toni Morrison’s harrowing novel Beloved. Like all the best ghost stories, it’s ambiguous in its approach. You are constantly left wondering if the ghosts in question are real, or projections of the trauma of Sethe’s past. And is a ghost any less real if it is in fact a memory? Or are all ghosts memories? Grady Hendrix wrote a wonderful piece about Beloved’s place in horror history for Tor.com’s blog a few years ago, and in it he describes ghost stories as being “about one thing: the past. Even the language we use to talk about the past is the language of horror: memories haunt us, we conjure up the past, we exorcise our demons.”

Sethe’s guilt, the brutal violence she encountered in her life as a slave, and a history of racism that continues to haunt this country even today; all these things are the ghosts of Beloved.

The Shape of Night cover imageIn The Haunting of Hill House, another classic haunting novel, Eleanor’s anxieties and the emotional trauma of her shuttered life lived at the back and call of her overbearing mother, are either the source of, or a source of energy for, the forces that roam Hill House (depending on your reading). In Tess Gerritsen’s The Shape of Night, the ghost that haunts the main character punishes her for the guilt she feels for fatal mistakes in her past. In Helen Oyeyemi’s oft recommended White is for Witching, family history, family secrets, and race all serve as an impetus for the haunting of the Silver family home.

Hauntings come from us. From, as Hendrix pointed out, our past, and our fears, our sufferings, our longings, and our rage. We make ghosts of things that leave scars. Whether they be on us, on the physical locations where they took place, or on the world. And just like scars, Ghosts linger long after the initial pain has passed. They poke their fingers into our weak spots and the places where we still hurt.

white is for witching helen oyeyemi coverMaybe that’s why I can’t get enough of ghosts. These days the past is a contentious issue. If you try to right – or even just acknowledge – the wrongs that left nothing but suffering and hatred in their wake, you’re “destroying the past”. But to ignore the dark, ugly corners of history entirely is to permit them to happen again and again, and never learn from our mistakes. And I guess for some people that’s rather the point. The past is a lot prettier when you’re wearing the rose colored classes of “the way things used to be”. I think that’s why, like Hendrix said, we “conjure up the past” with ghosts: so that we never forget. If the past is full of violence, pain, and injustice, then like hell should it rest in peace.

Maybe we deserve to be haunted.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

they threw us away by daniel kraus coverDaniel Kraus’s forthcoming MG book They Threw Us Away is about discarded teddy bears on a mission to escape a terrifying dump landscape and find their way back into the arms of someone who will love them, and I am obsessed with the slightly creepy, painfully adorable cover. There’s also a book trailer!

Hailey Piper has a new cosmic horror book coming out November 15th, from Off Limits Press – The Worm and His Kings – and the plot promises a 90’s New York underground peopled with “enigmatic cultists” and “shadowy creatures”.

Rev up your CBS All Access subscriptions folks, because in the year of our Plague Lord Covid-19, the new adaptation of Stephen King’s The Stand will be premiering December 17!

Nightfire Books has an interview with Adam Cesare whose delightfully autumnal new YA horror, Clown in a Cornfield, is climbing the charts left and right! Have you got your copy yet?

Matt Redmon compiled a creature feature list of werewolf horror reads over on the Night Worms blog, and Kallie Weisgarber shared her eco-horror book and movie recommendations along with some tips on reducing your ecological footprint.

Emily Martin has also written a list of the Best Eco Horror Novels over at Book Riot, if Weisgarber’s list leaves you hungry for more!

Updates about The Haunting of Bly Manor (season two of Mike Flanagan’s Haunting series, this time based on Henry James’s eerie The Turn of the Screw) are finally starting to surface and I have ZERO chill.


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Series Spotlight: Rewind or Die

Hey there horror fiends, I’m Jessica Avery and I’ll be delivering your weekly brief of all that’s ghoulish and grim in the world of Horror. Whether you’re looking for a backlist book that will give you the willies, a terrifying new release, or the latest in horror community news, you’ll find it here in The Fright Stuff.

Series Spotlight: Rewind or Die

This week in a new-to-The-Fright-Stuff feature, we’re putting the series spotlight on Unnerving Magazine’s gloriously retro horror series, Rewind or Die. Touted as the book form of your local movie rental store’s horror section back in the ‘70s, ‘80s, and ‘90s, Rewind or Die is a fifteen book (so far) series of horror novellas that celebrate all that made classic horror so beloved. The monsters, the gore, the camp, the abundance of questionable fashion choices, a healthy dose of rock and roll, and even a little (or more likely a lot) of cannibalism. So here’s to the nostalgic joy of old school horror, and here’s to Rewind or Die!

Select Series Titles

cirque berzerk by jessica guess cover rewind or dieCirque Berserk by Jessica Guess

Nothing says summer like a carnival massacre. One night in 1989, at Cirque Berserk in the town of Shadows Creek, a group of teens murdered a dozen people, then vanished. Thirty years later a second group of teens, led by best friends Sam and Rochelle, decide to ditch their boring senior trip in favor of exploring the dark history behind abandoned Cirque Beserk carnival. One final adventure. Emphasis on final?

 

benny rose the cannibal king hailey piper cover rewind or dieBenny Rose, the Cannibal King by Hailey Piper

A Halloween prank goes horribly wrong in Blackwood, Vermont when a vicious storm traps high school student Desiree St. Fleur, her friends, and the unfortunate new girl they were trying to prank. It was just supposed to be a bit of seasonal fun, inspired by Blackwood’s own dark legendary figure: Benny Rose, the Cannibal King. Now the girls are lost in an unfamiliar neighborhood, hunted through the streets by a figure straight out of the legend itself. Benny Rose is all too real, and oh so hungry.

 

hell's bells by lisa quigley cover rewind or die Hell’s Bells by Lisa Quigley

Rock & Roll and Satanic summonings. Yes please! Four friends in 1991 who spend their time listening to rock music and dabbling in the occult. But when one of the girls, Hayley, becomes convinced that rock music is an evil straight from the devil, her determination to save her friends backfires when they accidentally summon the man himself. They find themselves trapped in a basement, face to face with real evil, and only rock & roll can save them.

 

hairspray and switchblades by v castro cover rewind or dieHairspray and Switchblades by V. Castro

Sisters Maya and Magdalena are determined to stay together after their parents die. Magdalena, the eldest, will do anything she can to make sure that happens, and to ensure that her baby sister Maya is able to continue the high school education that will guarantee her a better future. Even if it means Magdalena must give up her own dreams and taking up exotic dancing to make a living. But the San Antonio Stripper Ripper is on the loose, putting all Magdalena’s plans in jeopardy.

 

the kelping by jan stinchcomb cover rewind or dieThe Kelping by Jan Stinchcomb

Doctor Craig Bo lives a charmed life in a charming coastal town, with his wife, kids, and thriving dermatology practice. But as we know that sort of perfection is usually only, wait for it… skin deep. (You’re welcome). After being crowned Sea King of Beachside at a local festival, Craig’s life takes a strange turn. Something unknown is growing on his skin, his son is telling horrible tales about mermaids in museum attics, and his wife Penelope has been keeping dark secrets about her own connection to the sea.

 

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

Over on Book Riot, Danika Ellis wrote about the reclaiming of Sheridan Le Fanu’s Carmilla in the 2019 Lanternfish Press edition, edited and introduced by Carmen Maria Machado

Nicole Hill over at Nightfire created a list of novels that explore the horrors of racism, including the forthcoming and much anticipated Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark.

Apex Magazine set up a kickstarter to finance a new run of the magazine in 2021, and they are now fully funded! Not only that but they have unlocked all of their stretch goals. It’s going to be really good to have this excellent magazine of dark speculative fiction back in print!

Hello childhood Goosebumps memories. Hello new nightmares. Seriously, how cool are these covers though?

Jessica, does the new stop-motion adaptation of Pinocchio really count as horror? Well it’s being directed by Guillermo del Toro so… probably? Either way, I’m excited. Just look at the cast they’ve got lined up!

I, surprising no one, have no willpower in the face of beautiful hardcovers. Which is why I jumped at the chance to preorder the first two books in Valancourt Press’ new Monster, She Wrote series featuring some of the often overlooked early women writers of the Horror genre. The hardcovers are currently $20 a piece instead of the usual $25 right now so, you know, strike while the iron is hot and the will is weak!

So this sounds amazing and I had no idea it was happening. I’m always a fan of supplementing my fiction reading with critical texts, and The Science of Stephen King by Meg Hafdahl and Kelly Florence falls squarely in my haunted wheelhouse!


As always, you can catch me on twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.