Horror surged to the front of comic readers’ minds in the 1990s when Sandman, Hellblazer, and other DC Vertigo books met with critical and commercial success....
Tough-guy actor Danny Trejo has a new memoir on the publishing calendar for Atria Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Publishing House, titled Trejo: My...
Fans of pulpy schlock stories with a comedic horror edge, this one is all for you! A Disgusting Supermarket of Death from author Jim Harberson is available...
Even with the best intentions and most meticulous planning in place, we can all be subject to the possibility of a vacation gone horribly awry. Missed...
Something is Killing the Children (Boom! Studios, $14.99) begins with a group of teenage boys playing truth or dare. Choosing truth, James recounts something he recently...
Back in 2018, Thommy Hutson (Never Sleep Again, The Id) published Jinxed, a young adult horror novel that read like a classic slasher and made superstitions a means for...
I’m getting really close to calling the race for best British genre novelist of the 21st century (thus far) for Catherine Cavendish, and the author’s new...
Edgar Allan Poe and I go way back. No really! In a very real way, he was my introduction to horror. I was in the fifth...
Tim McGregor takes readers back in time to 1820s New England in his new novel, Hearts Strange and Dreadful, due out next month from Off Limits...
A delectable horror comic, Ice Cream Man (Image), hides under deceiving covers at your local comic shop. The first issue’s cover–also the Volume One Trade cover–shows...
Last year’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark was a pretty fun movie. Although the André Øvredal film was more of a vignette sampling than...
The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones (Saga Press, 2020, $26.99) wastes no getting down to business. Its first chapter is an eleven-page adrenaline rush...