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
The Lighthouse at the end of the world
The Lighthouse at the End of the World Review: Philip A. Suggars Builds a London You’ve Never Seen Before
The Lighthouse at the End of the World Review: Philip A. Suggars Builds a London You’ve Never Seen Before “Philip A. Suggars arrives with one of the most inventive urban fantasy debuts of 2026. The Lighthouse at the End of the World plants a working-class South London criminal into a … The Lighthouse at the End of the World Review: Philip A. Suggars Builds a London You’ve Never Seen BeforeRead more
The Lighthouse at the End of the World: Philip A. Suggars on Urban Fantasy, Social Mobility, and Inherited Trauma
“A working‑class kid, a London built from broken skyscrapers, and a chaos magic system that bends probability instead of rules. Philip A. Suggars delivers urban fantasy that feels genuinely new. No chosen ones. Just grit, wit, and inherited trauma.” Philip A. Suggars grew up in Tooting, South London, watching double‑decker … The Lighthouse at the End of the World: Philip A. Suggars on Urban Fantasy, Social Mobility, and Inherited TraumaRead more
