Posts Tagged ‘Joe R. Lansdale’
Posted by demonik on January 24, 2014
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Psycho-Mania! (Robinson, Oct. 2013)

Les Edwards
Robert Bloch – Introduction
John Llewellyn Probert – Prologue: Screams In The Dark
Joe R. Lansdale – I Tell You It’s Love
Reggie Oliver – The Green Hour
Steve Rasnic Tem – The Secret Laws Of The Universe
Basil Copper – The Recompensing Of Albano Pizar
David A. Sutton – Night Soil Man
Brian Hodge – Let My Smile Be Your Umbrella
Scott Edelman – The Trembling Living Wire
John Llewellyn Probert – Case Conference #1
Robert Silverberg – The Undertaker’s Sideline
Joel Lane – The Long Shift
Brian Lumley – The Man Who Photographed Beardsley
Lisa Morton – Hollywood Hannah
Paul McAuley – I Spy
Mike Carey – Reflections On The Critical Process
David J. Schow – The Finger
Lawrence Block – Hot Eyes, Cold Eyes
Jay Russell – Hush … Hush, Sweet Shushie
John Llewellyn Probert – Case Conference #2
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – The Gatecrasher
Robert Shearman – That Tiny Flutter of The Heart I Used To Call Love
Edgar Allan Poe – The Tell-Tale Heart
Dennis Etchison – Got To Kill Them All
Mark Morris – Essence
Michael Kelly – The Beach
Robert Bloch – Yours Truly, Jack The Ripper
John Llewellyn Probert – Case Conference #3
Ramsey Campbell – See How They Run
Conrad Williams – Manners
Christopher Fowler – Bryant & May And The Seven Points
Harlan Ellison® – All The Birds Come Home To Roost
Rio Youers – Wide Shining Light
Neil Gaiman – Feminine Endings
Peter Crowther – Eater
John Llewellyn Probert – Case Conference #4
Peter Crowther – Mr Mellor Comes To Wayside
Michael Marshall – Failure
Kim Newman – The Only Ending We Have
Richard Christian Matheson – Kriss Kross Applesauce
John Llewellyn Probert – Epilogue: A Little Piece Of Sanity
Case Notes
Blurb
WE ALL GO A LITTLE MAD SOMETIMES . . . When journalist Robert Stanhope arrives at the Crowsmoor asylum for the criminally insane to interview the institute’s enigmatic director, Dr Lionel Parrish, little does he realise that an apparently simple series of tests will lead him into a terrifying world of murder and insanity . . . In this chilling new anthology, compiled by multiple award-winning editor Stephen Jones, some of the biggest and brightest name in horror and crime fiction come together to bring you twisted tales of psychos, schizoids and serial-killers, many with a supernatural twist. Reggie Oliver revives Edgar Allan Poe’s wily French detective C. Auguste Dupin, there is a new “Bryant & May” London mystery from Christopher Fowler, child actor turned private eye Marty Burns investigates a quirky Hollywood case by Jay Russell, and international best-selling author Michael Marshall returns to The Straw Men conspiracy. With a never-before-published Introduction by Robert Bloch (author of Psycho), along with one of his most famous and iconic stories, this volume also features an original wraparound sequence in the style of the author by John Llewellyn Probert. Add classic reprints by R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Basil Copper and Dennis Etchison, along with original fiction by Peter Crowther, Brian Hodge, Richard Christian Matheson, Paul McAuley, Lisa Morton, Robert Shearman, Steve Rasnic Tem and many others, and you would have to be out of your mind not to take a stab at these stories!
Posted in "Constable-Robinson*, *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Basil Copper, Brian Hodge, Brian Lumley, Christopher Fowler, Conrad Williams, Constable, David A. Sutton, David J. Schow, Dennis Etchison, edgar allan poe, Harlan Ellison, horror, Jay Russell, Joe R. Lansdale, Joel Lane, John Llewellyn Probert, Kim Newman, Lawrence Block, Les Edwards, Lisa Morton, Mark Morris, Michael Kelly, Michael Marshall, Mike Carey, Neil Gaiman, Paul McAuley, Peter Crowther, Psycho-Mania!, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Richard Christian Matheson, Rio Youers - Wide Shining Light, Robert Bloch, Robert Shearman, Robert Silverberg, Robinson, Scott Edelman, Stephen Jones, Steve Rasnic Tem, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on September 24, 2013
Coming in October 2013
Stephen Jones (ed.) – The Mammoth Book Of Best New Horror 24 (Robinson, October 2013)

Cover: Vincent Chong
Stephen Jones – Introduction: horror In 2012
Neil Gaiman – Witch Work
Alison Littlewood – The Discord Of Being
Dale Bailey – Necrosis
Joe R. Lansdale – The Hunt: Before, And The Aftermath
Simon Kurt Unsworth – The Cotswold Olympicks
Lynda E. Rucker – Where The Summer Dwells
Ramsey Campbell – The Callers
Thana Niveau – The Curtain
Mark Valentine – The Fall Of The King Of Babylon
Terry Dowling – Nightside Eye
Helen Marshall – the Old and The New
Steve Rasnic Tem – Waiting At The Crossroads Motel
Glenn Hirschberg – His Only Audience
Claire Massey – Marionettes
Reggie Oliver – Between Four Yews
Gemma Files – Slick Black Bones And soft Black Stars
Evangeline Walton – The Other One
Joel Lane – Slow Burn
Stephen Volk – Celebrity Frankenstein
Robert Shearman – Blue Crayon, Yellow Crayon
Michael Kelly – October Dreams
Alison Littlewood – The Eyes Of Water
Stephen Jones & Kim Newman – Necrology: 2012
Useful addresses
Blurb
The World’s Longest-Running Annual Showcase Of Horror & Dark Fantasy
Here is the annual selection of some of the very finest, and most disturbing, short stories of horror and the supernatural published in the past year by both contemporary masters of horror and exciting newcomers, including Terry Dowling, Gemma Files, Joel Lane, Claire Masset, Thana Niveau, Lynda E. Rucker, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Mark Valentine, and a bewitching poem by Niel Gaiman.
The latest volume of the record-breaking and multiple award-winning anthology series also offers an in-depth introduction covering the year in horror, an informative Necrology of notable names who are no longer with us, and a useful contact directory that is an indispensable resource for every dedicated horror fan and writer.
The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror is the world’s leading annual anthology dedicated solely to showcasing the very best in contemporary horror fiction in all its many frightening forms.
`Yet another celebration of the diversity of the horror genre.’ – Locus
`A top-quality body of short stories.’ – Writing Magazine
See also the Best New Horror 24 thread on the Vault Forum
Thank you Sam! XXX
Posted in "Constable-Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: "Constable-Robinson*, Alison Littlewood, Claire Massey, Dale Bailey, Evangeline Walton, fiction, Gemma Files, Glenn Hirschberg, Helen Marshall, horror, Joe R. Lansdale, Joel Lane, Kim Newman, Lynda E. Rucker, Mark Valentine, Michael Kelly, Neil Gaiman, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Robert Shearman, Robinson, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Stephen Jones, Stephen Volk, Steve Rasnic Tem, Terry Dowling, Thana Niveau, Vault Of Evil, Vincent Chong | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 25, 2012
Coming soon ….
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Mammoth Book Of Best New Horror 23 (Robinson, Oct. 2012)

Cover Illustration: Vincent Chong
Stephen Jones – Introduction: Horror In 2011
Ramsey Campbell – Holding The Light
Christopher Fowler – Lantern Jack
Paul Kane – Rag And Bone
Gemma Files – Some Kind Of Light Shines From Your Face
Joel Lane – Midnight Flight
Tim Lebbon – Trick Of The Light
Gregory Nicoll – But None Shall Sing For Me
Alison Littlewood – About The Dark
Daniel Mills – The Photographer’s Tale
Mark Samuels – The Tower
Peter Atkins – Dancing Like We’re Dumb
Simon Strantzas – An Indelible Stain Upon The Sky
Joan Aiken – Hair
Steve Rasnic Tem – Miri
Geeta Roopnarine – Corbeaux Bay
Michael Marshall Smith – Sad, Dark Thing
Robert Silverberg – Smithers And The Ghost Of The Thar
Reggie Oliver – Quieta Non Movere
Joe R. Lansdale – The Crawling Sky
Conrad Williams – Wait
Simon Kurt Unsworth – The Ocean Grand, North West Coast
Evangeline Walton – They That Have Wings
Thana Niveau – White Roses, Bloody Silk
John Ajivide Lindqvist – The Music Of Bengt Karlsson, Murderer
Ramsey Campbell – Passing Through Peacehaven
David Buchan – Holiday Home
Stephen Jones & Kim Newman – Necrology: 2011
Blurb
The latest volume of the world’s longest-running annual showcase of Horror and Dark Fantasy fiction.
Presenting a selection of the very best, and most chilling, short stories and novellas of horror and the supernatural by both established masters of horror and exciting newcomers.
See also the Best New Horror 23 thread on the Vault forum
Posted in "Constable-Robinson*, *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Alison Littlewood, Best New Horror, Christopher Fowler, Conrad Williams, Daniel Mills, David Buchan, Evangeline Walton, fiction, Geeta Roopnarine, Gemma Files, Gregory Nicoll, Joan Aiken, Joe R. Lansdale, Joel Lane, John Ajivide Lindqvist, Kim Newman, Mark Samuels, Michael Marshall Smith, Paul Kane, Peter Atkins, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Robert Silverberg, Robinson, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Simon Strantzas, Stephen Jones, Steve Rasnic Tem, Thana Niveau, Tim Lebbon, Vault Of Evil, Vincent Chong | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 2, 2012
Forthcoming Mammoth publications from Constable-Robinsons. October & November 2012.
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Zombie Apocalypse: Fightback (Robinson, October 2012)

Sequel to the bestselling Zombie Apocalypse! – 18,000 copies sold in the UK
This long-awaited follow-up to Zombie Apocalypse! is once again a ‘mosaic novel’ that weaves together contributions from big-name horror writers in the form of essays, reports, letters, official documents and transcripts to create a coherent and compelling narrative. In volume one, old-school, flesh-eating zombies spread ‘The Death’ around the world. Now, the fightback begins, spearheaded by an equally stellar line-up of contributors, from Neil Gaiman, Sarah Pinborough and Michael Marshall Smith to Lisa Tuttle, Roz Kaveney and Christopher Fowler, and master-minded by multi award-winning horror anthologist Stephen Jones.
This will be a must-have for the many fans of the first book as well as the ever-expanding legions of zombie and horror fans..
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Best New Horror 23 (Robinson, October 2012)

New volume in a series now into its 23rd year and winner of the World Fantasy Award, British Fantasy Award and International Horror Guild Award
Every single horror writer of note has contributed at some point to the Best New Horror series, compiled by internationally acclaimed horror anthologist Stephen Jones and dedicated to presenting the best in contemporary horror and dark fantasy fiction.
This year’s darkest, most exceptional tales of terror showcase new short stories from both contemporary masters of the macabre as well as exceptional newcomers. With top-name contributors – such as Joan Aitken, Ramsey Campbell, Christopher Fowler, Joe R. Lansdale, John Ajvide Lindqvist, Robert Silverberg, Michael Marshall Smith and Evangeline Walton – a comprehensive overview of the horror year, a necrology of recently departed luminaries and an exhaustive list of indispensable addresses, this series remains the world’s leading annual horror anthology and the key event in the horror calendar for all horror fans, young and old.
Peter Normanton – The Mammoth Book of Slasher Movies (Robinson, October 2012)

A classic gorefest for all horror lovers – the most gloriously gory slasher and splatter horror movies of the past sixty years.
You can scream all you want, but it won’t make them stop in this compendium of more than 60 grisly, gruesome years of slasher and splatter movies – from genre-hopping Danny Boyle’s first horror film, 28 Days Later, to gore-meister Lucio Fulci’s Zombie Flesh Eaters. Here you will find the low-down on some 250 movies, with entries from 23 different countries – assembled by born-again slasher fan Peter Normanton.
This wonderfully macabre compilation is a definite must-have for all aficionados of the slasher and splatter movie sub-genres and general horror fans alike. The index, which includes every movie mentioned in the A–Z and accompanying notes, runs to 540 movies. The book includes the full list of video nasties that the UK government has attempted to ban.
Marie O’Regan – Mammoth Book Of Ghost Stories By Women (Robinson, November 2012)

A mesmerizing spin on the modern dark tale – 25 haunting stories showcasing writing by women on the supernatural and the macabre
Ghost stories are a perennial favourite, and British Fantasy Award-nominated horror and dark fantasy writer Marie O’Regan has put together this unforgettable selection of dark, sensational, horrifying stories by acclaimed female writers.
Alongside a handful of reprints, both classic and contemporary, are spectral tales by outstanding talents, such as Kelley Armstrong, Muriel Gray, Nancy Holder, Nancy Kilpatrick, Sarah Langan, Gail Z. Martin, Elizabeth Massie, Yvonne Navarro, Sarah Pinborough, Lilith Saintcrow, Lisa Tuttle among others.
This haunting anthology is subtly beguiling, yet brings a new sense of daring to the modern dark tale and a hard-edged twist to traditional horror.
Details and, most likely, individual threads on each to follow over coming days/ weeks/ months. Five very exciting prospects, i’m sure you’ll agree.
Posted in "Constable-Robinson*, News, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Best New Horror, Christopher Fowler, Constable, Elizabeth Massie, Evangeline Walton, fiction, Gail Z. Martin, Ghost Stories, horror, Joan Aitken, Joe R. Lansdale, John Ajvide Lindqvist, John Llewellyn Probert, Kelley Armstrong, Lilith Saintcrow, Lisa Tuttle, Mammoth, Marie O'Regan, Michael Marshall Smith, Muriel Gray, Nancy Holder, Nancy Kilpatrick, Neil Gaiman, Peter Normanton, Ramsey Campbell, Robert Silverberg, Robinson, Roz Kaveney, Sarah Langan, Sarah Pinborough, Splatter Films, Stephen Jones, Vault Of Evil, Yvonne Navarro, Zombie Apocalypse | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 1, 2012
Christopher Golden (ed.) – Zombie: An Anthology Of The Undead (Piatkus, Feb. 2012)

Cover: Per Haagensen
Christopher Golden – Introduction
John Connolly – Lazarus
David Liss – What Maisie Knew
Stephen R. Bissette – Copper
Tim Lebbon – In the Dust
Kelley Armstrong – Life Sentence
Holly Newstein – Delice
Max Brooks – Closure, LTD
Brian Keene – The Wind Cries Mary
Jonathan Maberry – Family Business
M.B. Homler – The Zombie Who Fell From the Sky
Derek Nikitas – My Dolly
Mike Carey – Second Wind
Aimee Bender – Among Us
Rick Hautala – Ghost Trap
Tad Williams – The Storm Door
James A. Moore – Kids and Their Toys
Joe R. Lansdale – Shooting Pool
David Wellington – Weaponized
Joe Hill – Twittering from the Circus of the Dead
Blurb:
RESURRECTION
The hungry dead have risen. They shamble down the street. They hide in backyards, car lots, shopping centres. They devour neighbors, dogs and policemen. And they are here to stay. The real question is, what are you going to do about it? How will you survive? How will the world change when the dead begin to rise?
Bram Stoker-award-winning author Christopher Golden has assembled an original anthology of zombie stories from an eclectic array of today’s most popular horror, fantasy, thriller and literary writers. Inside are tales about military might in the wake of an outbreak, survival in a wasteland, the ardor of falling in love with a zombie, and a family outing at the circus. Here is a collection of new views on death and resurrection.
With stories from Joe Hill, John Connolly, Max Brooks, Kelley Armstrong and many others, this is a wildly diverse and entertaining collection – the Last Word on the undead.
Posted in *Piatkus* | Tagged: Aimee Bender, Brian Keene, Christopher Golden, David Liss, David Wellington, Derek Nikitas, fiction, Holly Newstein, horror, James A. Moore, Joe Hill, Joe R. Lansdale, John Connolly, Jonathan Maberry, Kelley Armstrong, M.B. Homler, Max Brooks, Mike Carey, Per Haagensen, Piatkus, Rick Hautala, Stephen R. Bissette, Tad Williams, Tim Lebbon, Vault Of Evil, Zombie | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on January 9, 2012
Otto Penzler (ed) – Zombies: A Compendium of the Living Dead (Corvus, 2011: originally US, Zombies! Zombies! Zombies!, Vintage Crime/Black Lizard, Sept. 2011)

Otto Penzler – INTRODUCTION
W. B. Seabrook – Dead Men Working In The Cane Fields
David A. Riley – After Nightfall
Hugh B. Cave – Mission To Margal
Chet Williamson – The Cairnwell Horror
Arthur Leo Zagat – Crawling Madness
Lisa Tuttle – Treading The Maze
Karen Haber – Red Angels
Michael Marshall Smith – Later
Vivian Meik – White Zombie
Guy de Maupassant – Was It A Dream?
Steve Rasnic Tem – Bodies And Heads
Dale Bailey – Death And Sufferage
Henry Kuttner – The Graveyard Rats
Edgar Allan Poe – The Facts In The Case of M. Valdemar
Yvonne Navarro – Feeding The Dead Inside
Charles Birkin – Ballet Negre
Geoffrey A Landis – Dead Right
Graham Masterton – The Taking of Mr. Bill
Jack D‘Arcy – The Grave Gives Up
H. P. Lovecraft – Herbert West: Reanimator
H. P. Lovecraft – Pickman’s Model
Robert Bloch – Maternal Instinct
Kevin J. Anderson – Bringing The Family
Richard Laymon – Mess Hall
J. Sheridan Le Fanu – Schalken The Painter
Thorpe McClusky – While Zombies Walked
Mary A. Turzillo – April Flowers, November Harvest
Mort Castle – The Old Man And The Dead
Henry S. Whitehead – Jumbee
Peter Tremayne – Marbh Bheo
Thomas Burke – The Hollow Man
Anthony Boucher – They Bite
Gahan Wilson – Come One, Come All
Ramsey Campbell – It Helps If You Sing
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – The Ghouls
Seabury Quinn – The Corpse-Master
F. Marion Crawford – The Upper Berth
Ralston Shields – Vengeance Of The Living Dead
Harlan Ellison & Robert Silverberg – The Song The Zombie Sang
John H. Knox – Men Without Blood
Uel Key – The Broken Fang
Theodore Sturgeon – It
Day Keene – League Of The Grateful Dead
Garry Kilworth – Love Child
Edith & Ejler Jacobson – Corpses On Parade
Richard Christian Matheson – Where There’s A Will
Michael Swanwick – The Dead
Manly Wade Wellman – The Song of The Slaves
H. P. Lovecraft – The Outsider
Robert R. McCammon – Eat Me
Joe R. Lansdale – Deadman’s Road
Robert E. Howard – Pigeons From Hell
Scott Edelman – Live People Don’t Understand
August Derleth & Mark Schorer – The House In The Magnolias
Stephen King – Home Delivery
Arthur J. Burks – Dance Of The Damned
Theodore Roscoe – Z Is For Zombie
Posted in Corvus, Otto Penzler | Tagged: Anthony Boucher, Arthur J. Burks, Arthur Leo Zagat, August Derleth, Charles Birkin, Chet Williamson, Dale Bailey, David A. Riley, Day Keene, edgar allan poe, Edith & Ejler Jacobson, F. Marion Crawford, fiction, Gahan Wilson, Garry Kilworth, Geoffrey A. Landis, Graham Masterton, Guy de Maupassant, H. P. Lovecraft, Harlan Ellison, Henry Kuttner, Henry S Whitehead, Hugh B. Cave, J. Sheridan Le fanu, Jack D‘Arcy, Joe R. Lansdale, John H. Knox, Karen Haber, Kevin J. Anderson, Lisa Tuttle, Manly Wade Wellman, Mark Schorer, Mary A. Turzillo, Michael Marshall Smith, Michael Swanwick, Mort Castle, Otto Penzler, Peter Tremayne, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ralston Shields, Ramsey Campbell, Richard Christian Matheson, Richard Laymon, Robert Bloch, Robert E. Howard, Robert R. McCammon, Robert Silverberg, Scott Edelman, Seabury Quinn, Stephen King, Steve Rasnic Tem, Theodore Roscoe, Theodore Sturgeon, Thomas Burke, Thorpe McClusky, Uel Key, Vault Of Evil, Vivian Meik, W. B. Seabrook, Yvonne Navarro, Zombies | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on January 6, 2012
Jonathan Oliver (ed.) – House of Fear (Solaris 2011)

Lisa Tuttle – Objects in Dreams may be Closer than they Appear
Stephen Volk – Pied-a-terre
Terry Lamsley – In The Absence of Murdock
Adam L.G. Nevill – Florrie
Weston Ochse – Driving The Milky Way
Rebecca Levene – The Windmill
Garry Kilworth – Moretta
Chaz Brenchley – Hortus Conclusus
Robert Shearman – The Dark Space in The House in The House in The Garden at The Centre of The World
Nina Allan – The Muse of Copenhagen
Christopher Fowler – An Injustice
Sarah Pinborough – The Room Upstairs
Paul Meloy – Villanova
Christopher Priest – Widow’s Weeds
Jonathan Green – The Doll’s House
Nicholas Royle – Inside/Out
Eric Brown – The House
Tim Lebbon – Trick of The Light
Joe R. Lansdale – What Happened to Me
Blurb:
The tread on the landing outside the door, when you know you are the only one in the house. The wind whistling through the eves, carrying the voices of the dead. The figure glimpsed briefly through the cracked window of a derelict house. Editor Jonathan Oliver brings horror home with a collection of haunted house stories by some of the finest writers working in the horror genre
Thanks to John Llewellyn Probert for providing the cover scan and details
more information on Vault of Evil forum
Posted in *Solaris*, Jonathan Oliver | Tagged: Adam L. G. Nevill, Chaz Brenchley, Christopher Fowler, Christopher Priest, Eric Brown, fiction, Garry Kilworth, horror, Joe R. Lansdale, Jonathan Green, Jonathan Oliver, Lisa Tuttle, Nicholas Royle, Nina Allan, Paul Meloy, Rebecca Levene, Robert Shearman, Sarah Pinborough, Solaris, Stephen Volk, Terry Lamsley, Tim Lebbon, Vault Of Evil, Weston Ochse | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on July 22, 2010
Allyson Bird & Joel Lane (eds.) – Never Again (Gray Friar Press, September 2010)

cover by Daniele Serra
Nina Allen – Feet of Clay
R.J. Krijnen-Kemp – Volk
Lisa Tuttle – In the Arcade
John Howard – A Flowering Wound
Tony Richards – Sense
Alison Littlewood – In On The Tide
R.B. Russell – Decision
Mat Joiner – South of Autumn
Rosanne Rabinowitz – Survivor’s Guilt
Rhys Hughes – Rediffusion
Simon Kurt Unsworth – A Place For Feeding
Joe R. Lansdale – The Night They Missed the Horror Show
Kaaron Warren – Ghost Jail
Steve Duffy – The Torturer
Gary McMahon – Methods of Confinement
Rob Shearman – Damned If You Don’t
Carole Johnstone – Machine
Stephen Volk – After the Ape
David Sutton – Zulu’s War
Thana Niveau – Death of Dreams
Andrew Hook – Beyond Each Blue Horizon
Ramsey Campbell – The Depths
Simon Bestwick – Malachi
From Press Release:
Never Again is an attempt to voice the collective revulsion of writers in the weird fiction genre against political attitudes that stifle compassion and deny our collective human inheritance. The imagination is crucial to an understanding both of human diversity and of common ground. Weird fiction is often stigmatised as a reactionary and ignorant genre – we know better. The anthology will be published by Gray Friar Press in September 2010, and edited by Allyson Bird and Joel Lane.
It will be a mixture of original stories and reprints from Ramsey Campbell, Lisa Tuttle and Joe R. Lansdale amongst others. Never Again is a non-profit initiative aimed at promoting awareness of these issues among readers and writers of weird fiction. The editors, authors/artist and publisher will receive no fees for this work. Any profits made from sales will be donated to anti-racist or human rights organizations, e.g. The Sophie Lancaster Foundation.
PREORDERS NOW BEING TAKEN
UK, £10 + £2 P&P
USA, $18 + $6 P&P (airmail)
Gray Friar Press
Posted in *Gray Friar Press* | Tagged: *Gray Friar Press*, Alison Littlewood, Allyson Bird, Andrew Hook, Carole Johnstone, Daniele Serra, David Sutton, Gary McMahon, Joe R. Lansdale, Joel Lane, John Howard, Kaaron Warren, Lisa Tuttle, Mat Joiner, Nina Allen, R. B. Russell, R.J. Krijnen-Kemp, Ramsey Campbell, Rhys Hughes, Rob Shearman, Rosanne Rabinowitz, Simon Bestwick, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Stephen Volk, Steve Duffy, Thana Niveau, The Sophie Lancaster Foundation, Tony Richards | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on March 19, 2010
Peter Haining (ed.) – Death on Wheels (Souvenir 1999)

Introduction – Peter Haining
1. Auto Mania: The Machinery of Death
Trucks – Stephen King
The Dust-Cloud – E. F. Benson
Second Chance – Jack Finney
Used Car – H. Russell Wakefield
Duel – Richard Matheson
Who’s Been Sitting in My Car? – Antonia Fraser
Not from Detroit – Joe R. Lansdale
2. Motorway Madness: Murder in the Fast Lane
Never Stop on the Motorway – Jeffrey Archer
The Death Car – Peter Haining
Night Court – Mary Elizabeth Counselman
Accident Zone – Ramsey Campbell
The Last Run – Alan Dean Foster
The Hitch-Hiker – Roald Dahl
Crash – J. G. Ballard
3. Chrome Killers: The Future Autogeddon
The Racer – Ib Melchior
Along the Scenic Route – Harlan Ellison
Auto-da-Fé – Roger Zelazny
Violation – William F. Nolan
Thy Blood Like Milk – Ian Watson
Thanks to Steve Goodwin for providing the table of contents!
Posted in *Souvenir*, Peter Haining | Tagged: *Souvenir*, Alan Dean Foster, Antonia Fraser, E. F. Benson, fiction, H. Russell Wakefield, Harlan Ellison, horror, Ian Watson, Ib Melchior, J. G. Ballard, Jack Finney, Jeffrey Archer, Joe R. Lansdale, Mary Elizabeth Counselman, murder, Mystery, Peter Haining, Ramsey Campbell, Richard Matheson, Roald Dahl, Roger Zelazny, Stephen King, suspense, Vault Of Evil, William F. Nolan | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 9, 2008
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Mammoth Book Of Best New Horror #19 (Robinson, 2008)
![[image]](https://i0.wp.com/img.photobucket.com/albums/v683/panspersons/bnh19.jpg)
Carlos Kastro
Stephen Jones – Introduction: Horror in 2007
Michael Marshall Smith – The Things He Said
Simon Kurt Unsworth – The Church On The Island
Christopher Fowler – The Twilight Express
Ramsey Campbell – Peep
Tim Pratt – From Around Here
Gary McMahon – Pumpkin Night
Simon Strantzas – The Other Village
Mike O’Driscoll – 13 O’Clock
Joel Lane – Still Water
Joe Hill – Thumbprint
Nicholas Royle – Lancashire
Marc Lecard – The Admiral’s House
Tony Richards – Man, You Gotta See This!
David A. Sutton – The Fisherman
Reggie Oliver – The Children Of Monte Rosa
Neil Gaiman – The Witch’s Headstone
Joel Knight – Calico Black, Calico Blue
Steven Erikson – The Rich Evil Sound
Glen Hirshberg – Miss Ill-Kept Runt
Joe R. Lansdale – Deadman’s Road
Mark Samuels – A Gentleman From Mexico
Tom Piccirilli – Loss
Christopher Harman – Behind The Clouds: In Front Of The Sun
Caitlin R. Kiernan – The Ape’s Wife
Conrad Williams – Tight Wrappers
Kim Newman – Cold Snap
Stephen Jones & Kim Newman – Necrology: 2007
Posted in *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Books, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Christopher Fowler, Christopher Harman, Conrad Williams, Constable, David A. Sutton, Gary McMahon, Glen Hirshberg, horror fiction, Joe Hill, Joe R. Lansdale, Joel Knight, Joel Lane, Kim Newman, Mammoth, Marc Lecard, Mark Samuels, Michael Marshall Smith, Mike O'Driscoll, Neil Gaiman, Nicholas Royle, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Robinson, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Simon Strantzas, Stephen Jones, Steven Erikson, Tim Pratt, Tom Piccirilli, Tony Richards, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »