My review of internet sensation Train to Busan, a Korean movie about zombies taking the train. Written and directed by Sang-ho Yeon.
All tagged horror
My review of internet sensation Train to Busan, a Korean movie about zombies taking the train. Written and directed by Sang-ho Yeon.
My review of Korean horror movie The Wailing, written and directed by Hong-jin Na. A suggestion from Brian Evenson.
My review of Broken River Books' first 2017 release: David Bowles' new short story collection Chupacabra Vengeance!
Interview with Brian Evenson, author of Last Days, Immobility, The Warren and many others. We discussed his legacy, genre fiction, institutions and contemporary audiences and more!
Don't let the words "debut short story collection" scare you away. Paul Michael Anderson's the real deal and Bones are Made to be Broken is one of a kind.
The Secret of Ventriloquism by Jon Padgett is the real deal. Now, click on my review to know why it's one of the most refreshing and original things I've read all year.
The most original and underrated new voice in weird fiction T.E Grau has a new book out. They Don't Come Home Anymore is his most accessible project to date, but it is ambitious and genre bending nonetheless. A fantastic read.
Josh Malerman's novella A House at the Bottom of a Lake is thinking man's horror. Let it crawl under your skin.
Living legend of horror Laird Barron dropped by the blog for horroctober to discuss cosmic horror, the genesis of his new and fantastic collection Swift to Chase and a crucial writing principle: never judging one's own character.
Livia Llewellyn's short story collection Furnace will challenge what you know and what you think you know about cosmic horror.
Brian Evenson's Last Days is everything is promises to be. A powerful and entertaining detective novel about the process of worship. It already has a proud place in my book collection.
It has become cliché for bloggers to dedicate the month of October to horror. I totally assume that, except my horror is scarier than your horror. Horroctober will be dedicated to cosmic horror, weird fiction and whatever makes you and everything you ever loved and hated feel insignificant. Join the conversation on social media using #horroctober!