Jonathan Grice Featured
Author of The House That Overlooks Westview Park trilogy and Midnight Snacks. Known for weaving Southern Gothic dread with sly humor—expect haunted history, supernatural menace, and flawed humanity.
Author of The House That Overlooks Westview Park trilogy and Midnight Snacks. Known for weaving Southern Gothic dread with sly humor—expect haunted history, supernatural menace, and flawed humanity.
A master of macabre wordplay. Breakout novel The Attic Eats at Midnight cemented a reputation as the bard of bumps in the night. Antique typewriter restorer by day; alleged ghostwriter by night.
Penning chilling romances that dance between candlelight and coffin lids, her series Love in the Crypt redefines gothic courtship. Best ideas arrive while wandering abandoned cemeteries.
Known for his fever-dream pulp sagas, including War of the Werewolves, Mangold revels in bloody myth and folkloric chaos. His work marries grindhouse energy with academic obsession, often cited as scholarly trash at its finest.
A true San Francisco treat, this California native blasts into the cosmos with Space Operas that are truly out of this world. His breakout series, Space Rangers!, doesn’t just bend the rules of space—it rewrites them. (Turns out, they can hear you scream.) When he’s not charting galaxies on the page, Prof. Wong can be found teaching at USC or stargazing from his backyard observatory, hunting for stories among the stars.
A mistress of eerie domestic tales, French pens psychological ghost stories that creep through kitchens, parlors, and broken family homes. Her acclaimed novel The Lamp in the Attic lingers in the quiet places where grief refuses to fade.
“Victor Douglas Clarke doesn’t just write about vampires—he writes like a man who’s met them. His novel The Beast of Togo feels less imagined than remembered, a chilling descent into West African forests where even the shadows are hungry.”