Lost horrors: how the eerie telly of the 1970s birthed liminal dread The empty classroom after the last bell. The hotel corridor at 2 AM. That patch of torn concrete behind the grocery store, where no one goes but everyone walks past. These spaces don’t scare you. They wait for … Lost horrors: how the eerie telly of the 1970s birthed liminal dreadRead more
Shauntionne on Black Southern Gothic and the Horrors History Leaves Behind
Shauntionne writes from a place where the soil remembers what the living try to forget. The Louisville, Kentucky native, now navigating a creative path shaped by stints in Atlanta, Los Angeles, Chicago, and time abroad, constructs fiction that refuses to look away from the abandoned corners of American history. Her … Shauntionne on Black Southern Gothic and the Horrors History Leaves BehindRead more
Lee Cronin’s The Mummy Finds Gross-Out Horror in Grief
“Lee Cronin’s The Mummy traps another family with a possessed loved one, then drowns the grief in pus, eyeballs, and funeral comedy so nasty you’ll laugh and wince at the same time.” You might not know Lee Cronin by name. But if you saw Evil Dead Rise in 2023, you sat through … Lee Cronin’s The Mummy Finds Gross-Out Horror in GriefRead more
Trends in MMA Fighter Training in Canada: Technology and Science
Trends in MMA Fighter Training in Canada: Technology and Science Canadian MMA fighters are no longer relying on pure instinct for their training – Every movement they make is being quantified, recorded, and improved upon. Camps are combining experience with data to eliminate all but the smallest advantages. The preparation … Trends in MMA Fighter Training in Canada: Technology and ScienceRead more
Japanese Gothic Review: Kylie Lee Baker’s Haunting Dual-Timeline Horror
“Japanese Gothic doesn’t hold your hand. It buries you slowly, then asks you to stay. Kylie Lee Baker’s most ambitious novel yet — and her most unforgettable.” Two centuries. One house. And the horror of what we inherit. Kylie Lee Baker’s Japanese Gothic arrives as a masterful blend of historical horror and … Japanese Gothic Review: Kylie Lee Baker’s Haunting Dual-Timeline HorrorRead more
Havenfall: New Post-Apocalyptic Horror Thriller Lands from Indie Trio of Directors
Havenfall: New Post-Apocalyptic Horror Thriller Lands from Indie Trio of Directors Three people. One cottage. No good choices. The end of the world does not announce itself. It arrives with a knock on a cottage door. After civilization collapses under a relentless outbreak, a hardened survivalist (Jack) and a grieving … Havenfall: New Post-Apocalyptic Horror Thriller Lands from Indie Trio of DirectorsRead more
YA and Middle Grade Horror March & April 2026: The Best New Scary Books for Teens
YA and Middle Grade Horror March & April 2026: The Best New Scary Books for Teens A wide range of topics feature in our latest look at Middle Grade horror and YA horror books 2026. Only one Middle Grade title appears this March and April. The always reliable Lindsay Currie … YA and Middle Grade Horror March & April 2026: The Best New Scary Books for TeensRead more
Harmed and Dangerous Review: Jasper Bark’s Bark Bites Horror Shines
Harmed and Dangerous Review: Jasper Bark’s Bark Bites Horror Shines Harmed and Dangerous (Bark Bites Horror, 2026) by Jasper Bark follows Kyra, a seventeen-year-old runaway who discovers her dead mother was a serial killer’s last victim. What she finds in Yeuxville, Louisiana, is worse than any headline. Bark writes psychological horror … Harmed and Dangerous Review: Jasper Bark’s Bark Bites Horror ShinesRead more
Bodies of Work by Clay McLeod Chapman Review: Supernatural Revenge Horror Delivers Ghosts, Art, and Unease
“Clay McLeod Chapman’s ‘Bodies of Work’ is a supernatural revenge novella that turns the serial‑killer trope inside out. The ghosts don’t just haunt, they rewrite the story.” Horror readers looking for a supernatural revenge novella with literary heft should put “Bodies of Work” on their radar. Clay McLeod Chapman, known … Bodies of Work by Clay McLeod Chapman Review: Supernatural Revenge Horror Delivers Ghosts, Art, and UneaseRead more
Florian Frerichs Interview: Dream Story, Kubrick’s Shadow, and “They Will Claim That I Was Dead” – The Fright Club Podcast
Florian Frerichs Interview: Dream Story, Kubrick’s Shadow, and “They Will Claim That I Was Dead” – The Fright Club Podcast The camera holds on a doorway steeped in history, not just of German cinema, but of world cinema itself. The walls here have absorbed the echoes of Fritz Lang’s expressionist … Florian Frerichs Interview: Dream Story, Kubrick’s Shadow, and “They Will Claim That I Was Dead” – The Fright Club PodcastRead more
Smart Bankroll Allocation Practices for Sustainable Long-Term Betting Habits
Smart Bankroll Allocation Practices for Sustainable Long-Term Betting Habits To most fans, the excitement of gambling is in the fact that you do not know how the result will be. But, when considering the question, can a person who wants to start playing on a long-term and not a casual … Smart Bankroll Allocation Practices for Sustainable Long-Term Betting HabitsRead more
Exit 8 Review: Genki Kawamura’s Liminal Horror Finds Dread in Repetition
Spot the anomaly. Turn back. Repeat. Welcome to the underground. Genki Kawamura made his name producing anime blockbusters. Your Name. Weathering With You. Massive hits. But horror? That felt unlikely. Then came Exit 8. Kawamura’s first directorial effort in the genre arrives quietly. No jump scares. No gore. Just white tiles, fluorescent lights, and … Exit 8 Review: Genki Kawamura’s Liminal Horror Finds Dread in RepetitionRead more
Crawlspace by Adam Christopher Review: SF Horror That Delivers Mechanical Dread
Adam Christopher’s Crawlspace delivers a tightly wound blend of SF horror and cosmic dread, a niche he’s perfected in works like The Burning Dark. For fans of psychological space horror reminiscent of Event Horizon, this novel follows a faster-than-light test flight that goes catastrophically wrong. When the Artemis Corporation crew encounters strange voices and … Crawlspace by Adam Christopher Review: SF Horror That Delivers Mechanical DreadRead more
Why Small-Town Horror Still Works Better Than Urban Nightmares
Small-town horror stays powerful because fear grows inside ordinary routines. A closed diner, one dark porch, or a missed bus can shift the mood fast. In a city, danger may pass without context. In a small town, every change gets noticed and remembered. That setting also gives horror a tighter … Why Small-Town Horror Still Works Better Than Urban NightmaresRead more
Horror-Themed Casino Games: The Best Spooky Slots and Table Games Online
Horror-Themed Casino Games: The Best Spooky Slots and Table Games Online There’s something almost poetic about the overlap between horror and gambling. Both thrive on tension. Both keep you on the edge of your seat, nerves buzzing, heart tapping just a little faster than usual. It makes perfect sense, then, … Horror-Themed Casino Games: The Best Spooky Slots and Table Games OnlineRead more
