THE YOUNG BLOOOD LIBRARY The Kids Are Alright- Horror Books for 10 Year Olds

The Kids Are Alright: Horror Books for 10 Year Olds

HORROR BOOK REVIEW Deadbeat by Maxim Volk, A Choose Your Own Queer Adventure Horror at Its Nastiest

Deadbeat by Maxim Volk, A Choose Your Own Queer Adventure Horror at Its Nastiest

Pam Kowolski Is a Monster! by Sarah Langan Review: And I Thought I Held Grudges!

Pam Kowolski Is a Monster! by Sarah Langan Review: And I Thought I Held Grudges!

HORROR BOOK REVIEW Home Sick by Rhiannon Grist Review- Folk Horror That Gets Under Your Skin

Home Sick by Rhiannon Grist Review: Folk Horror That Gets Under Your Skin

HORROR BOOK REVIEW The Way It Haunted Him Review- Laura R. Samotin's Dark Academia Horror Is the Real Thing

The Way It Haunted Him Review: Laura R. Samotin’s Dark Academia Horror Is the Real Thing

The Heart and Soul of Horror Book & Movie Reviews Cymera Book Haul: Nine Books, One Ghost Cat, and a Water Heater Closet That Goes Nowhere Good, and Loads of the Uncanny

Cymera Book Haul: Nine Books, One Ghost Cat, and a Water Heater Closet That Goes Nowhere Good, and Loads of the Uncanny

HORROR FEATURE ARTICLE The Greatest Trick the Devil Ever Pulled Was Making Us Forget Scrappy-Doo

Scrappy-Doo: The Greatest Trick the Devil Ever Pulled Was Hiding Him in Plain Sight

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Deadbeat by Maxim Volk, A Choose Your Own Queer Adventure Horror at Its Nastiest

Deadbeat by Maxim Volk, A Choose Your Own Queer Adventure Horror at Its Nastiest

Maxim Volk’s Deadbeat — the first entry in Slashic Horror Press’s Extremities series — drops you dead on page one and hands you a choice. A choose-your-own-path narrative maze in relentless second person, it follows a gay househusband resurrected by a naked cult and left to navigate undead existence with an insatiable hunger for human flesh. Funny, nasty, structurally inventive, and built around complicity as its core horror mechanism, Deadbeat is one of the most confident debut novels in queer horror this year. Jim McLeod reviews.

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Pam Kowolski Is a Monster! by Sarah Langan Review: And I Thought I Held Grudges!

Pam Kowolski Is a Monster! by Sarah Langan Review: And I Thought I Held Grudges!

Sarah Langan’s Pam Kowolski Is a Monster! (Raw Dog Screaming Press, 2025) is a 119-page psychological horror novella about failed journalist Janet Chow, who attempts to expose her high school nemesis — now “Madame Pamela,” America’s favourite doomsday psychic — and uncovers a version of their shared past she’s spent twenty years getting wrong. Langan builds horror from the inside out: bitter, funny, and structurally precise, this is one of the most accomplished novellas published in horror this year. Read the full review at Ginger Nuts of Horror.

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Home Sick by Rhiannon Grist Review: Folk Horror That Gets Under Your Skin

Home Sick by Rhiannon Grist Review: Folk Horror That Gets Under Your Skin

Rhiannon Grist’s debut novel Home Sick (Solaris, 2026) is a slow-burn psychological horror rooted in Scottish folklore and the particular dread of the domestic uncanny. Following Tamsin as her Scottish countryside fresh start becomes something far less clean, Grist builds claustrophobic menace from shared walls, unreliable narration, and a folkloric framework that deepens rather than resolves the horror. Read the full Ginger Nuts of Horror review of this essential 2026 folk horror debut.

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2026 Video Generator for Music Video: Standout Tools for Dark & Indie Artists

2026 Video Generator for Music Video: Standout Tools for Dark & Indie Artists

2026 Video Generator for Music Video: Standout Tools for Dark & Indie Artists For independent horror musicians, dark ambient producers, and underground metal artists, finding a reliable video generator for music video is never just about flashy demo reels. The real priority is simple: which professional music video generator delivers … 2026 Video Generator for Music Video: Standout Tools for Dark & Indie ArtistsRead more

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Headlights by CJ Leede Review: Horror at Its Most Devastating

Headlights by CJ Leede Review: Horror at Its Most Devastating

CJ Leede’s Headlights is the most ambitious novel of her career: a supernatural FBI thriller set against the frozen Colorado wilderness that fuses folk horror, procedural crime, and cosmic dread into something that stays with you long after the last page. Special Agent Daniel Stansfield returns to Denver on his final day with the FBI, drawn back by a case he never solved and a signature that defies explanation — people waking on highway shoulders, wearing the skin of victims, each with a stranger’s hair knotted around their tongue. Leede uses horror to do what only horror can: hold grief, trauma, freedom, and the afterlife simultaneously, without flinching from any of them. This is a review of a novel that rearranges something in the reader. Read on.

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Slotastic Casino 2026: 250% Bonus and RTG Pokies for Aussies

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Sunyi Dean’s The Girl with a Thousand Faces: A Gothic Ghost Story

Sunyi Dean’s The Girl with a Thousand Faces: A Gothic Ghost Story

Sunyi Dean’s The Girl with a Thousand Faces (Tor/HarperVoyager, May 2026) is a structurally daring gothic horror set in an alternate 1975 Kowloon Walled City, where fifty-three-year-old triad ghost talker Mercy Chan is forced to confront a powerful new spirit and the past she cannot remember. Drawing on Chinese ghost lore, the real history of the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, and a bold four-timeline narrative, Dean’s second novel is a deeply personal, formally ambitious work that confirms her as one of the most interesting voices in the genre today. This is Jim McLeod’s full review for Ginger Nuts of Horror.