The 2024 Ho-Ho-Horror Gift Guide

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Dive into all the best horror gift reads of the year. Perfect for getting ideas for the horror gift lover on your holiday list. All the entries here come highly recommended from the horror community. You’re sure to find something in here to suit your holiday horror gift giving needs.

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FREE STORY SUNDAYS – HOSPITAL ON A HILL

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Every other Sunday is Free Story Sunday, with another story brought out of the archive for your reading pleasure. Believe only the things you see in front of you and then only half of that.

Photo by Dez Hester @DezHester on Unsplash

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Free Scary Stories for Spooky Season

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Anthology of the Damned: Last Chance

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From TreeShaker Books comes the ultimate in Hallowe’en horror: Anthology of the Damned. This three-volume set features the best in classic horror combined with searing stories from up and coming horror masters.

Claim Your 3-Volume Horror Set!

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ANTHOLOGIES OF THE DAMNED: NOW ALIIIIIIIVE

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FREE STORY SUNDAYS: THEOTOKION

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Get free short fiction every other Sunday! Changes out often, so check back regularly.

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My Mother Told Me A Ghost Story Once

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From Hiraeth: Dark As Life features dark stories of trying to stay alive under dismal living condItions. Some of those conditions are created by ourselves, others are created for us. A teenage girl is punished for her interest in science fiction. A traveler comes home to a place she has never been. A revenant seeks revenge against her enemies and her friends. You’ll find all this and more on these pages. Turn them carefully.

Contents
 Stories
Devotional by Tyree Campbell
The Girl in 114 by Trevor James Zaple
coming back home to a place I’ve never been by Laney Gaughan
 Flash Fiction
Home Schooled by G. O. Clark
Siren With the Soft Sign by Nadia Gerassimenko
 Poems
Slavery by Yuliia Vereta
An Acquired Taste by Debby Feo
Satan’s Voice by Peter MacQuarrie
A Dead Wizard’s Dust by Matthew Wilson
Features
Movie Review: King on Screen by Lee Clark Zumpe

Click below to purchase your copy today!

I Need You To Listen, And Watch

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Shh. Are you ready? We don’t have much time.

In the spirit of the season, Disturb Ink has published, live now, six – count ’em, six – new collections about horror and the everyday technology we use in our daily lives. Each collection delves into the common technology of a specific decade and reveals the dread lurking behind such seemingly benign devices.

ESCAPE looks at film in the 1920s. Back when it was still new, cutting-edge technology, film provided a relatively cheap way for people to entertain themselves, and to beat the heat in the height of summer. But what shadows lurked in the corners of theatres? What terrors might crawl across the screen?

Fireside chats. Baseball games. News as it happens. LISTEN looks at the 1940s, when radio was king, and asks the burning question: what are you hearing, when you turn the dial and finally land on a station that’s broadcasting? Who – or what – might be talking on the other end? For those playing along at home, “Red Rover, Red Rover” is a bit of World War II horror I have in this one.

Once, you had to go to the screen to see what wonders and horrors it might have to show you. Now, in the 1960s, the screen has come to you. WATCH spins tales of what else you might be letting into your home when you turn on the small screen. When you stare into the television, the television also stares back into you. Features “Sorry Girls, He’s Married” by your faithful scribe.

Ah, the 1980s. Has there ever been a decade so reviled and loved in equal measure? I guess it depends on whether you were there or not. By the Eighties, the public was no longer just watching movies – they were given the tools to make their own. Camcorders and home video were the rage, but just what were people recording? Even the most innocent of home movies can take a sinister turn in CAPTURE.

Craig Finn once said, in the midst of a positive jam, that ‘we were wired and well-connected, put it all down on technology and lost everything that we invested.’ He was talking about the Dot Com bust but HOST looks at the 2000s and wonders what else we invested…and what else we might have lost. With the internet, we were all suddenly in much closer contact with each other: chat rooms, message forums, early social media like Friendster. As your parents warned you, though, how do you know what’s lurking on the other end of that chat window?

Finally, the modern day, the 2020s – no better decade to ponder on the essential terror of being alive. Or, more precisely, the daily horror of interacting with beings who might not actually be. LURK examines that most disturbing of commonplace technology, artificial intelligence. What is it telling us? What, if anything, is it thinking?

More to the point, what is it planning?

Photo by Markus Spiske on Pexels.com

Available now on Amazon as ebooks, Disturb Ink’s SINISTER CENTURY series is sure to have enough disturbing ink to keep you awake for days. Click on the images above to be taken to the individual collections, or dare to use the button below to take in a hundred years of terror at once!

New Short Fiction – “The Girl In 114”

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Hot off the presses at Hiraeth Books, the newest issue of Dark As Life has my newest publication, “The Girl In 114.” Set in the Toronto neighbourhood of Parkdale, centered on the infamous West Lodge towers, the story concerns two generations’ obsession with the same ghost, and the myths and rumours that spring up among locals when the eerie and inexplicable occurs.

“It was just chance encounters at first, stoned kids wandering through the hallways between one place to chill or another. When you’re in an altered state, it’s much more comfortable to get off the elevator on the second floor and walk down to the exits. It avoids the problem where the elevator doors open in the lobby and there’s a mixture of people ranging from disapproving elders from more traditionalist cultures to the overbearing and imposing Spanish woman who runs the rental office. Kids looking to avoid that scene, then, almost always pass through the hallway outside 114. One night, closer to the witching hour than not, a trio came out of the elevator and were halfway down the shabby hall when they saw the little girl standing in the middle of the dirty carpet. She didn’t notice them, and they edged by her with wide eyes and disbelieving expressions on their faces. They could have lied to themselves later about the appearance just being some weird kid, but the side of the girl’s head was stoved in and her eyes flickered. Even then, when her corporeal hold on reality was strongest, her eyes phased in and out of being. The old chestnut about the eyes being the window to the soul never supposed those windows being shattered with a brick.” 

Trevor James Zaple, “The Girl In 114”

Grab a copy of Dark As Life 2 and get spooked tonight! Click on the image below to be taken to Hiraeth’s shop. Don’t forget to check out my most recent work with Crow & Cross Keys and Sinister Smile Press, or the full list of available work.

Cover image of Dark As Life 2, from Hiraeth Books

Lights On Distant Shorelines

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