The Devil’s Banquet by Phil Lecomber: Dark, Occult, and Unmissable
Occult decadence, Nazi shadows, and a Cockney detective who won't look away — Phil Lecomber's Piccadilly Noir reaches its full dark potential... Read more.
Our Top 5 Mark Morris Novels: Blood, Floods, Folk Legends, and Whatever’s Standing Outside
This week, Ginger Nuts of Horror is marking the release of his new novel, Bad Things Happen Here, with three consecutive days of Mark Morris. Today, we are running... Read more.
Vic Kerry Is Stuck in A Horror Franchise
Vic Kerry wakes up in I Know What You Did Last Summer—and he's not scared. Between crushing on Jennifer Love Hewitt and exploiting Ben the Fisherman's terrible... Read more.
Find Your Friends Review: Izabel Pakzad’s Desert Revenge Misfires
Izabel Pakzad's Find Your Friends drops five wasted party girls into Joshua Tree and promises a survival-horror reckoning with toxic masculinity. There's a real... Read more.
Cover Reveal: Still Floating: Pennywise at 40 and Why He Won’t Die
Forty years after Stephen King published IT, Pennywise the Dancing Clown is still showing up: on HBO, in academic criticism, and now in Still Floating: 40 Years... Read more.
UK’s Best Horror Movies That Set the Mark
UK's Best Horror Movies That Set the Mark... Read more.
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... Read more.
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... Read more.
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.... Read more.
Why suspense makes digital games feel sharper
Why suspense makes digital games feel sharper Horror fans understand one thing very well: tension does not need to be loud to work. A closed door, a slow camera... Read more.