Posts Tagged ‘Gray Friar’
Posted by demonik on January 24, 2016
Paul Finch (ed.) – Terror Tales Of The Ocean (Gray Friar, Jan. 2016)

Neil Williams
Terry Grimwood – Stuka Juice
Ship of the Dead
Stephen Laws – The End of the Pier
The Swirling Sea
Steve Duffy – Lie Still, Sleep Becalmed
Meg
Lynda E. Rucker – The Seventh Wave
The Palmyra Curse
Adam Nevill – Hippocampus
Gelatinous
Conrad Williams – The Offing
Blood and Oil
Peter James – Sun Over the Yard Arm
Echoes of an Eldritch Past
Simon Strantzas – First Miranda
Sharkbait
Simon Clark & John B. Ford – The Derelict of Death
Horrific Beasts
Jan Edwards – The Decks Below
The Flying Dutchman
Paul Finch – Hell in the Cathedral
From the Hadean Deep
Adam Golaski – Hushed Will Be All Murmurs
Mer-Killers
Robert Shearman – And This Is Where We Falter
Posted in *Gray Friar Press*, Paul Finch | Tagged: Adam Golaski, Adam Nevill, Conrad Williams, Gray Friar, Jan Edwards, Lynda E. Rucker, Neil Williams, Ocean, Paul Finch, Peter James, Robert Shearman, Simon Clark & John B. Ford, Simon Strantzas, Stephen Laws, Steve Duffy, Terror Tales, Terry Grimwood, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on June 24, 2015
Out now from Gray Friar Press, the eighth volume in this consistently splendid series
Paul Finch (ed.) – Terror Tales Of The Scottish Highlands (Gray Friar, June 2015)

Cover illustration: Neil Williams
Ian Hunter – Skye’s Skary Places
Phantoms in the Mist
Helen Grant – The Dove
Prey of the Fin-Folk
Barbara Roden – Strone House
The Well of Heads
Tom Johnstone – Face Down In The Earth
The Vanishing
William Meikle – The Dreaming God Is Singing Where She Lies
The Curse of Scotland
Rosie Seymour – The Housekeeper
From Out The Hollow Hills
Peter Bell – The Executioner
Saurians of the Deep
John Whitbourn – You Must Be Cold
Glamis Castle
Sheila Hodgson – The Fellow Travellers
Daemonologie
Graeme Hurry – Shelleycoat
Evil Monsters
Craig Herbertson – The Other House, The Other Voice
The Mull Plane Mystery
DP Watt – Myself/Thyself
The Bauchan
Carl Barker – Broken Spectres
The Big Grey Man
Gary Fry – Jack Knife
Tristicloke the Wolf
Johnny Mains – The Foul Mass At Tongue House
The Drummer of Cortachy
Carole Johnstone – There You’ll Be
Blurb:
The Scottish Highlands, picturesque home to grand mountains and plunging glens. But also a land of bitterness, betrayal and blood-feud, where phantom pipers lament callous slaughters, evil spirits haunt crag and loch, and ancient monsters roam the fogbound moors …
The Black Wolf of Badenoch
The deformed horror at Glamis
The witch coven of Auldearn
The faceless giant of Ben Macdui
The shrieking voices on Skye
The feathered fiend of Glen Etive
The headless killer at Arisaig
And many more chilling tales by William Meikle, Helen Grant, Barbara Roden, Carole Johnstone, DP Watt and other award-winning masters and mistresses of the macabre.
Order your copy direct from Gray Friar Press
Posted in *Gray Friar Press*, Paul Finch | Tagged: Barbara Roden, Carl Barker, Carole Johnstone, Craig Herbertson, DP Watt, Gary Fry, Graeme Hurry, Gray Friar, Helen Grant, horror fiction, Ian Hunter, John Whitbourn, Johnny Mains, Neil Williams, Paul Finch, Peter Bell, Rosie Seymour, Scottish Highlands, Sheila Hodgson, Supernatural fiction, Terror Tales, Tom Johnstone, Vault Of Evil, William Meikle | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 29, 2013
Paull Finch (ed.) – Terror Tales Of The Seaside (Gray Friar, Oct. 2013)

Steve Upham
Reggie Oliver – Holiday From Hell
The Eerie Events At Castel Mare
Stephen Laws – The Causeway
The Kraken Wakes
Stephen Volk – The Magician Kelso Dennett
Forces Of Evil
Joseph Freeman – A Prayer For The Morning
Hotel Of Horror
Sam Stone – The Jealous Sea
The Ghosts Of Goodwin Sands
Ramsey Campbell – The Entertainment
The Horse And The Hag
Simon Kurt Unsworth – The Poor Weather Crossings Company
The Devil Dog Of Peel
R.B. Russell – Brighthelmstone
The Ghouls Of Bannane Head
Robert Spalding – Men With False Faces
This Beautiful, Terrible Place
Gary Fry – GG LUVS PA
In The Deep Dark Winter
Paul Finch – The Incident At North Shore
The Walking Dead
Paul Kane – Shells
Hellmouth
Kate Farrell – The Sands Are Magic
Wild Men Of The Sea
Christopher Harman – Broken Summer
Blurb:
The British Seaside – golden sands, toffee rock, amusement arcades. But also the ghosts of better days: phantom performers who if they can’t get laughs will get screams; derelict fun-parks where maniacs lurk; hideous things washed in on bitter tides …
The death ships of Goodwin …
The killer clowns of Bognor …
The devil fish of Guernsey …
The Night Caller of St. Derfyn …
The Black Mass at North Berwick …
The grisly revenge at Brighton …
The tortured souls of Westingsea …
And many more chilling tales by Stephen Laws, Ramsey Campbell, Stephen Volk, Sam Stone, Simon Kurt Unsworth and other award-winning masters and mistresses of the macabre.
Posted in *Gray Friar Press*, Paul Finch | Tagged: Christopher Harman, fiction, Gary Fry, Gray Friar, horror, Joseph Freeman, Kate Farrell, Paul Finch, Paul Kane, R. B. Russell, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Robert Spalding, Sam Stone, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Stephen Laws, Stephen Volk, Steve Upham, Terror Tales, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on February 8, 2013
Paul Finch (ed.) – Terror Tales Of East Anglia (Gray Friars, Sept. 2012)

Cover artwork: Steve Upham
Paul Meloy & Gary Greenwood – Loose
The Most Haunted House in England
Christopher Harman – Deep Water
Murder in the Red Barn
Roger Johnson – The Watchman
The Woman in Brown
Simon Bestwick – Shuck
The Witchfinder-General
Steve Duffy – The Marsh Warden
Beware the Lantern Man!
Mark Valentine – The Fall of the King of Babylon
The Weird in the Wood
Gary Fry – Double Space
The Dagworth Mystery
Paul Finch – Wicken Fen
Boiled Alive
James Doig – Wolferton Hall
The Wandering Torso
Johnny Mains – Aldeburgh
The Killer Hounds of Southery
Alison Littlewood – Like Suffolk, Like Holidays
The Demon of Wallasea Island
Edward Pearce – The Little Wooden Box
The Dark Guardian of Wandlebury
Reggie Oliver – The Spooks of Shellborough
Blurb:
East Anglia – a drear, flat land of fens and broads, lone gibbets and isolated cottages, where demon dogs howl in the night, witches and warlocks lurk at every crossroads, and corpse-candles burn in the marshland mist …
The giggling horror of Dagworth
The wandering torso of Happisburgh
The vile apparitions at Wicken
The slavering beast of Rendlesham
The faceless evil on Wallasea
The killer hounds of Southery
The dark guardian of Wandlebury
And many more chilling tales by Alison Littlewood, Reggie Oliver, Roger Johnson, Steve Duffy and other award-winning masters and mistresses of the macabre.
See Terror Tales of East Anglia thread on Vault Forum
Posted in *Gray Friar Press*, Paul Finch | Tagged: Alison Littlewood, Christopher Harman, Edward Pearce, Gary Fry, Gary Greenwood, Gray Friar, James Doig, Johnny Mains, Mark Valentine, Paul Finch, Paul Meloy, Reggie Oliver, Roger Johnson, Steve Duffy, Steve Upham, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 1, 2011
Gary Fry (ed.)- Death Rattles (Gray Friar Press, July 2011)
Stephen Volk – Rattling Cages: an Introduction
*Episode 1*: Scattered Ashes – *John Llewellyn Probert*
*Episode 2*: Seen And Not Heard – *Gary Fry*
*Episode 3*: Antlers – *Thana Niveau*
*Episode 4*: The Children of Moloch – *Simon Bestwick*
*Episode 5*: Cow Castle – *Paul Finch*
*Episode 6*: His Father’s Son – *Gary McMahon*
Blurb
DEATH RATTLES
Do you remember? And were you afraid?
Back in the mid-80s, a UK genre television show was aired on Channel 4 that pushed the boundaries of accepted broadcasting standards. As far as can be established, only six episodes were ever shown, but hardly anybody can remember seeing them.
Official records offer scant information, and no recordings of the episodes seem to exist. Rumours abound about brief clips on Youtube and water-damaged master tapes found in a media vault, but nobody has stepped forward with anything more solid than hearsay.
But six authors do remember watching the series, and their imperfect
recollections form the basis of the stories in this book . . . You’ll almost certainly never get to see the show in its original form, so this may be your only chance to experience . . .
DEATH RATTLES
. . . the notorious lost TV series.
see also Death Rattles thread on Vault forum
Posted in *Gray Friar Press*, Gary Fry, small press | Tagged: Death Rattles, Gary Fry, Gary McMahon, Gray Friar, Gray Friar Publications, John Llewellyn Probert, paperback, Paul Finch, Simon Bestwick, small press, Stephen Volk, Thana Niveau, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on September 21, 2011
NEWSDUSK: Farewell Interzone@TYPE, recent Books, Mags & Zines, Zardoz, etc.

The Vault forum doesn’t leave me as much time as i’d like to post regular news updates, but there’s been plenty to report of late so lets get down to business.
Firstly, it is our sad duty to report that interzone books are no longer an ongoing concern. The TYPE shop still stands and is always worth a visit but, alas, no more row upon row of beloved pulp paperbacks to wade through! It was brilliant while it lasted and we thank Milan for all the effort he put in and wish him well with his future endeavours. We understand he is still planning for the Zardoz Book Fair on November 6th and it is highly likely there will be a scowling vault contingent staggering about the Plaza basement.
On the anthology front, personal favourite of recent months has been, predictably enough, Charles Black’s Eighth Black Book Of Horror. I hope to have copies of the Paul Finch edited Terror Tales Of The Lake District and Gary Fry’s Death Rattles (both Gray Friar Publications) shortly, so avoid our forum for next few weeks unless you wanna be subjected to my entirely worthless verdict on same.
Lots of magazines! As posted earlier, Justin Marriott’s indispensable Paperback Fanatic has now clocked up twenty superb issues in five years, an incredible achievement! The second issue of Martin Jones’ Bedabbled!: British Horror and Cult Cinema is imminent – a ‘Cult Of Satan’ special and, from a rough pdf i’ve seen, a very impressive beast it is, too. Have also received the first five issue’s of Cranston McMillan’s wildly entertaining a-bit-of-everthing-really! fanzine, Kontinental X. The links for these last two lead straight back to the Vault forum, mainly because neither mag has much of a web presence just yet though you can catch up with Martin on faceache.
Sara of the very beautiful My Love Haunted Heart is interviewed at some length on her passion for vintage Gothic Romance over at the impressive After Dark In The Playing Fields. And good luck to The Outdoor Co-ed Topless Pulp Fiction Appreciation Society in their quest to “make reading sexy.”
thanks for reading
Bloody kisses,
gloomy sundae
Posted in interzone books, News, Paperback Fanatic, small press | Tagged: After Dark In The Playing Fields, Bedabbled!, Black Book Of Horror, Charles Black, Cranston McMillan, Gary Fry, Gray Friar, Gregory Pendennis, Interzone Books, iPaperback Fanatic, Justin Marriott, Kontinental X, Martin Jones, My Love Haunted Heart, Outdoor Co-ed Topless Pulp Fiction Appreciation Society, Paul Finch, Sara, Type, Vault Of Evil, Zardoz Book Fair | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on April 11, 2009
John Llewellyn Probert – The Faculty Of Terror (Gray Friar, 2006)
![[image]](https://i0.wp.com/img.photobucket.com/albums/v683/panspersons/facultyofterror.jpg)
Zach McCain
Paul Finch – Introduction
Foreword: An Author’s Warning To The Curious
Prologue
Overtime
Faculty Interlude No. 1
Asphyx In Glass
Faculty Interlude No. 2
A Family Affair
Faculty Interlude No. 3
Set In Stone
Faculty Interlude No. 4
The States Of The Art
Faculty Interlude No. 5
The Kreutzenberg Sonata
Finale
Extras:
About The Author
Interview With The Author: conducted by Gary McMahon
Story Notes
Blurb:
Take a Diploma in Fear….
Four secretaries working a late shift in a deserted office block….
A young man who sees the ghost of his dead father in wet glass….
The British underworld boss who will do anything to restore his tortured wife’s good looks…
The old cottage in the Wye Valley whose walls are soaked with blood…
An art gallery where patrons become part of the paintings….
A shop where you can buy anything your heart desires, but at a terrible price….
When music graduate Paul Dearden accepts an invitation to dinner at his old university the last thing he expects is an evening of the macabre. Over the finest food and drink he learns that the institution has a history steeped in blood. Paul cannot believe that the tales he is told by his dining companions are true, even though none of them are as cruel or as terrifying as the story he needs to tell.
In the tradition of classic British anthology horror films like The House that Dripped Blood, AsylumFrom Beyond the Grave, John Llewellyn Probert’s The Faculty of Terror offers six tales of terror linked by a framework story, the climax of which will earn all who survive it a first class degree in spine tingling horror! and
“It’s time for terror”!
The Faculty Of Terror attracted keen attention on Vault Mk I, but me being such a slowcoach, I only just snapped it up along with The Catacombs Of Fear as part of the Right Hon. John Probert funpack from Gray Friars Press. These are the first Gray Friars books i’ve seen and I have to say, they’re a very attractive proposition. The covers, by Zach McCain and Gary Fry respectively, strike exactly the right note – put me in mind of the montage on the back of Jack Oleck’s Tales From The Crypt novelisation.
see also the Faculty Of Terror thread on the Vault Forum
Posted in *Gray Friar Press*, John Llewellyn Probert | Tagged: Amicus, book, fiction, Gary McMahon, Gray Friar, horror, John Llewellyn Probert, Paul Finch, Vault Of Evil, Zach McCain | Leave a Comment »