Posts Tagged ‘Lisa Tuttle’
Posted by demonik on July 6, 2020
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Haunts: Reliquaries of the Dead (Ulysses Press, 2011)

what!design
Acknowledgments
Stephen Jones – Introduction: The Restless Dead
Richard L. Tierney – The Revenant (verse)
M. R. James – A Warning to the Curious
R. Chetwynd-Hayes – The Door
Reggie Oliver – Hand to Mouth
Richard Matheson – Two O’Clock Session
Paul McAuley – Inheritance
Sarah Pinborough – Grandmother’s Slippers
Peter Atkins – The Mystery
Christopher Fowler – Poison Pen
Ramsey Campbell – Return Journey
Lisa Tuttle – Grandfather’s Teeth
Basil Copper – Ill Met by Daylight
John Gordon – The Place
R. B. Russell – The Bridegroom
Kim Newman – Is There Anybody There?
Conrad Williams – Wait
Richard Christian Matheson – City of Dreams
Tanith Lee – A House on Fire
John Gaskin – Party Talk
Simon Kurt Unsworth – The Hurting Words
Robert Silverberg – The Church at Monte Saturno
Neil Gaiman – The Hidden Chamber (verse)
Robert Shearman – Good Grief
Karl Edward Wagner – Blue Lady, Come Back
Michael Marshall Smith – The Naughty Step
About the Editor
Blurb:
The Restless Dead.
Life is over but the dead live on. Within the drafty rooms of an old house, a tarnished locket tumbles to the floor. The haunted souls of the dearly departed are still among us. Ghosts, phantoms, revenants, lost souls — all these troubled spirits have unfinished business on this side of the veil. Doomed to seek out mortal answers, unable to rest until in death they accomplish what they failed to achieve in life.
This hair-raising collection of haunted tales brings together both new writers and celebrated masters — Ramsey Campbell, Christopher Fowler, Neil Gaiman, Richard Matheson, Michael Marshall Smith and others — for the ultimate collection from beyond the grave.
The characters in each chilling tale are spirits, without bodies but still floating in our world. Some are motivated by love, others by loss or guilt. But sometimes they are driven by much stronger emotions, menacing and diabolical motives that take us up from our reading to check the hallways, secure the locks and question how firmly anchored we ourselves are to our world.
Posted in Stephen Jones | Tagged: Basil Copper, Christopher Fowler, Conrad Williams, Haunts, John Gaskin, John Gordon, Karl Edward Wagner, Kim Newman, Lisa Tuttle, M. R. James, Michael Marshall Smith, Neil Gaiman, Paul McAuley, Peter Atkins, R. B. Russell, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Richard Christian Matheson, Richard L. Tierney, Richard Matheson, Robert Shearman, Robert Silverberg, Sarah Pinborough, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Stephen Jones, Tanith Lee, Ulysses Press, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on June 27, 2018
Conrad Williams (ed.) – Dead Letters: An Anthology Of the Undelivered, the Missing, the Returned (Titan, 2016)

Design by Julia Lloyd
Conrad Williams – Introduction
Steven Hall – The Green Letter
Michael Marshall Smith – Over to You
Joanne Harris – In Memoriam
Alison Moore – Ausland
Christopher Fowler – Wonders to Come
Pat Cadigan – Cancer Dancer
Ramsey Campbell – The Wrong Game
Claire Dean – Is—and
Andrew Lane – Buyer’s Remorse
Muriel Gray – Gone Away
Nina Allan – Astray
Adam LG Nevill – The Days of Our Lives
Lisa Tuttle – The Hungry Hotel
Nicholas Royle – London
Angela Slatter – Change Management
Maria Dahvana Headley & China Miéville – Ledge Bants
Kirsten Kaschock – And We, Spectators Always, Everywhere
Blurb:
The Dead Letters Office: the final repository of the undelivered. Love missives unread, gifts never received, lost in postal limbo. Dead Letters: An Anthology features new stories from the masters of horror, fantasy and science fiction, each inspired by an object from the Dead Letters Office.
Posted in Conrad Williams | Tagged: Adam LG Nevill, Alison Moore, Andrew Lane, Angela Slatter, China Miéville, Christopher Fowler, Claire Dean, Conrad Williams, Dead Letters, Joanne Harris, Kirsten Kaschock, Lisa Tuttle, Maria Dahvana Headley, Michael Marshall Smith, Muriel Gray, Nicholas Royle, Nina Allan, Pat Cadigan, Ramsey Campbell, Steven Hall, Titan, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on December 5, 2015
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Horrorology: The Lexicon Of Fear (Jo Fletcher, 2015)

Clive Barker
Stephen Jones – Introduction: The Library Of The Damned
Robert Shearman – Accursed
Clive Barker – Afraid
Michael Marshall Smith – Afterlife
Pat Cadigan – Chilling
Mark Samuels – Decay
Joanne Harris – Faceless
Muriel Gray – Forgotten
Kim Newman – Guignol
Ramsey Campbell – Nightmare
Reggie Oliver – Possessions
Angela Slatter – Ripper
Lisa Tuttle – Vastation
Epilogue
Blurb:
In the Library of the Damned, hidden away amongst that vast depository of ancient wisdom, there exists a certain bookcase where the most decadent, the most blasphemous of tomes sit upon a dusty shelf. And amongst those titles that should never be named, there is one volume that is he most terrible, the most hideous of them all. That book is the very Lexicon of Fear itself. But, long ago, some of its pages were ripped from the binding and spirited away by a lowly student of the ancient science of Horrorology, determined that one day the secrets contained therein would be shared with the world. And now that day has come. These are the words that comprise the very language of horror itself, and the tales they tell are not for the fainthearted. But be warned: once you have read them, there is no turning back. Soon, you too will know the true meanings of fear . . .
Posted in *Jo Fletcher*, Jo Fletcher, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Angela Slatter, Clive Barker, fiction, horror, Jo Fletcher, Joanne Harris, Kim Newman, Lisa Tuttle, Mark Samuels, Michael Marshall Smith, Muriel Gray, Pat Cadigan, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Robert Shearman, Stephen Jones, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 16, 2015
Stephen Jones & David A. Sutton (eds.) – Darker Terrors: A Best of Dark Terrors (Spectral Press, October, 2015)

Les Edwards
Foreword – Stephen Jones
Michael Marshall Smith – More Tomorrow
Karl Edward Wagner – I’ve Come to Talk with You Again
Brian Lumley – A Really Game Boy
Caitlin R. Kiernan – To This Water
Harlan Ellison – The Museum on Cyclops Avenue
Ray Bradbury – Free Dirt
Poppy Z. Brite – Self Made Man
Neil Gaiman – The Wedding Present
Stephen Baxter – Family History
Dennis Etchison – Inside the Cackle Factory
Lisa Tuttle – My Pathology
Christopher Fowler – At Home in the Pubs of Old London
Richard Christian Matheson – Barking Sands
Gwyneth Jones – Destroyer of Worlds
Ramsey Campbell – The Retrospective
Glen Hirshberg – The Two Sams
Don Tumasonis – The Prospect Cards
Afterword – David A. Sutton
Appendix: Index to Dark Terrors
Posted in *Spectral Press*, David Sutton, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Brian Lumley, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Christopher Fowler, Darker Terrors, David A. Sutton, Dennis Etchison, Don Tumasonis, fiction, Glen Hirshberg, Gwyneth Jones, Harlan Ellison, horror, Karl Edward Wagner, Les Edwards, Lisa Tuttle, Michael Marshall Smith, Neil Gaiman, Poppy Z. Brite, Ramsey Campbell, Ray Bradbury, Richard Christian Matheson, Spectral Press, Stephen Baxter, Stephen Jones, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 22, 2014
Mark Morris (ed.) – The Spectral Book of Horror Stories (Spectral Press, Sept. 2014)

Vincent Cheong
Ramsey Campbell – On The Tour
Alison Littlewood – The Dog’s Home
Helen Marshall – Funeral Rites
Tom Fletcher – Slape
Steve Rasnic Tem – The Night Doctor
Gary McMahon – Dull Fire
Reggie Oliver – The Book And The Ring
Alison Moore – Eastmouth
Robert Shearman – Carry Within Some Small Slither Of Me
Conrad Williams – The Devil’s Interval
Michael Marshall Smith – Stolen Kisses
Brian Hodge – Cures For A Sickened World
Angela Slatter – The October Window
Stephen Laws – The Slista
Rio Youers – Outside Heavenly
John Llewellyn Probert – The Life Inspector
Lisa Tuttle – Something Sinister In Sunlight
Nicholas Royle – This Video Does Not Exist
Stephen Volk – Newspaper Heart
Posted in *Spectral Press*, Mark Morris | Tagged: Alison Littlewood, Alison Moore, Angela Slatter, Brian Hodge, Conrad Williams, fiction, Gary McMahon, Helen Marshall, horror, John Llewellyn Probert, Lisa Tuttle, Mark Morris, Michael Marshall Smith, Nicholas Royle, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Rio Youers, Robert Shearman, Spectral Press), Stephen Laws, Stephen Volk, Steve Rasnic Tem, Tom Fletcher, Vault Of Evil, Vincent Cheong | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on January 31, 2014
Stephen Jones & David Sutton (eds.) – Dark Terrors 4 (Gollancz, 1998)

Les Edwards
Stephen Jones & David Sutton – Introduction
Richard Christian Matheson – The Great Fall
Christopher Fowler – Normal Life
Neil Gaiman – The Wedding Present
Ramsey Campbell – Never To Be Heard
Donald R. Burleson – Tumbleweeds
Stephen Baxter – Family History
David J. Schow – The Incredible True Facts In The Case
Roberta Lannes – Mr. Guidry’s Head
Dennis Etchison – Inside The Cackle Factory
Poppy Z. Brite – Entertaining Mr. Orton
Joel Lane – The Country Of Glass
Lisa Tuttle – My Pathology
Thomas Tessier – Curing Hitler
James Miller – Weak End
Jay Russell – Sullivan’s Travails
Conrad Williams – The Suicide Pit
Geoff Nicholson – Making Monsters
Michael Marshall Smith – A Place To Stay
Terry Lamsley – Suburban Blight
Posted in *Gollancz*, David Sutton, Stephen Jones | Tagged: *Gollancz*, Christopher Fowler, Conrad Williams, Dark Terrors, David J. Schow, David Sutton, Dennis Etchison, Donald R. Burleson, fiction, Geoff Nicholson, Hiorror, James Miller, Jay Russell, Joel Lane, Les Edwards, Lisa Tuttle, Michael Marshall Smith, Neil Gaiman, Poppy Z. Brite, Ramsey Campbell, Richard Christian Matheson, Roberta Lannes, Stephen Baxter, Stephen Jones, Terry Lamsley, Thomas Tessier, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on October 31, 2012
Marie O’Regan (ed.) – The Mammoth Book Of Ghost Stories By Women (Robinson, Nov. 2012)

Acknowledgements
Marie O’Regan – Introduction
Kim Lakin-Smith – Field Of The Dead
Sarah Pinborough – Collect Call
Kelley Armstrong – Dead Flowers By The Roadside
Mary Elizabeth Braddon – The Shadow In The Corner
Caitlan R. Kiernan – The Madam Of The Narrow Houses
Mary E. Wilkins Freeman – The Lost Ghost
Sarah Langan – The Ninth Witch
Elizabeth Massie – Sister, Shhh …
Alex Bell – The Fifth Bedroom
Alison Littlewood – Scairt
Nina Allan – Seeing Nancy
Lisa Tuttle – The Third Person
Nancy Holder – Freeze Out
Yvonne Navarro – Return
Mary Cholmondeley – Let Loose
Marion Arnott – Another One In The Cold
Lilith Saintcrow – My Moira
Nancy Kilpatrick – Forgive Us
Muriel Gray – Front Row Rider
Cynthia Asquith – God Grant That She Lye Still
Amelia B. Edwards – The Phantom Coach
Elizabeth Gaskell – The Old Nurse’s Story
Gail Z. Martin – Among The Shoals Forever
Edith Wharton – Afterward
Gaie Sebold – A Silver Music
Author Biographies
Posted in *Constable/Robinson*, Marie O'Regan | Tagged: Alex Bell, Alison Littlewood, Amelia B. Edwards, Caitlan R. Kiernan, Cynthia Asquith, Edith Wharton, Elizabeth Gaskell, Elizabeth Massie, fiction, Gaie Sebold, Gail Z. Martin, Ghost Stories, Kelley Armstrong, Kim Lakin-Smith, Lilith Saintcrow, Lisa Tuttle, Marie O'Regan, Marion Arnott, Mary Cholmondeley, Mary E. Wilkins (Freeman), Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Muriel Gray, Nancy Holder, Nancy Kilpatrick, Nina Allan, Robinson, Sarah Langan, Sarah Pinborough, Vault Of Evil, Yvonne Navarro | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 20, 2012
Coming in October
Stephen Jones (Creator) – Zombie Apocalypse! Fightback (October, 2012)

JoeRoberts.co.uk
Jo Fletcher – Tabloid Tales
Christopher Fowler – From Prof. Margaret Winn
Christopher Fowler – From Simon Wesley #1
Reggie Oliver – Lord Of The Fleas
Jo Fletcher – The Hobbs End Horror
Christopher Fowler – From Simon Wesley #2
Brian Hodge – Morphogenesis
Jo Fletcher – Hard News
Paul Finch – Dead Air
Amanda Foubister – Consent Form
Christopher Fowler – From Simon Wesley #3
Christopher Fowler – The Well Of Seven
Christopher Fowler – From Simon Wesley #4
Anne Billson – Paris When It Sizzles
Guy Adams – Pages From A British Army Field Manual
Sarah Pinborough – Peace Land Blood
John Llewellyn Probert – ZZ Experiment Camp
Neil Gaimon – Down Among The Dead men
Simon Strantzas – #zOmBEY
Paul McAuley – Rendition
Brian Hodge – Fright Club
Peter Crowther – The World According To Bernie Maughmstein #1
Pat Cadigan – In The Cloud
Peter Crowther – The World According To Bernie Maughmstein #2
Peter Crowther – Corpse Gas
Peter Crowther – The World According To Bernie Maughmstein #3
Michael Marshall Smith – Getting It Right
Peter Crowther – The World According To Bernie Maughmstein #4
Roz Kaveny – A Shamble Of Zombies
Lisa Morton – Day Of The Dead
Amanda Foubister – To Serve Man
Peter Atkins – You Are What You Eat
Peter Crowther – The World According To Bernie Maughmstein #5
Robert Shearman – The Play’s The Thing
Peter Crowther – The World According To Bernie Maughmstein #6
Lisa Tuttle – Island Life
Peter Crowther – The World According To Bernie Maughmstein #7
Nancy Holder – My Fellow Americans
Picture credits: Reggie Oliver, Les Edwards, (MM) Smith & (S) Jones, Leonardo da Vinci & ‘Thomas Moreby’, Simon Strantzas, Shuttercock com.
Blurb:
Science Fiction
THERE IS NOTHING TO FEAR BUT FEAR ITSELF …. AND ZOMBIES!
Following the outbreak of Human Reanimation Virus — more commonly known as “The Death”— from a hidden crypt beneath a south London church, the centuries-old plague quickly spreads throughout the world, turning its victims into flesh-eating zombies.
As we learn more about the mysterious Thomas Moreby — “Patient Zero”— the surviving members of the human race begin their fightback against the legions of the walking dead, and the Infected themselves begin mutating into something … different.
Told through interconnected eyewitness accounts — emails, text messages, reports, diaries, found video footage, and graphic adaptations — the remnants of humanity battle to survive in a world gone mad.
Posted in "Constable-Robinson*, *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: "Constable-Robinson*, Amanda Foubister, Anne Billson, Brian Hodge, Christopher Fowler, fiction, Guy Adams, horror, Jo Fletcher, John Llewellyn Probert, Leonardo da Vinci & 'Thomas Moreby', Les Edwards, Lisa Morton, Lisa Tuttle, Mammoth, Michael Marshall Smith, Nancy Holder, Neil Gaimon, Pat Cadigan, Paul Finch, Paul McAuley, Peter Atkins, Peter Crowther, Robert Shearman, Robinson, Roz Kaveny, Sarah Pinborough, Simon Strantzas, Stephen Jones, Vault Of Evil, Zombie Apocalypse, Zombies | 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 February 10, 2012
Stephen Jones (ed.) – A Book Of Horror (Jo Fletcher, 2011)

Cover: Les Edwards
Stephen Jones – What Ever Happened To Horror
Stephen King – The Little Green God Of Agony
Caitlin R. Kiernan – Charcloth, Firesteel, and Flint
Peter Crowther – Ghosts With Teeth
Angela Slatter – The Coffin Maker’s Daughter
Brian Hodge – Roots and All
Dennis Etchison – Tell me I’ll See You Again
John Ajivide Lindqvist – The Music Of Bengt Karlsson, Murderer
Ramsey Campbell – Getting It Wrong
Robert Shearman – Alice Through The Plastic Sheet
Lisa Tuttle – The Man In The Ditch
Reggie Oliver – A Child’s Problem
Michael Marshall Smith – Sad, Dark Thing
Elizabeth Hand – Near Zennor
Richard Christian Matheson – Last Words
Blurb:
Stephen Jones, Britain’s most acclaimed horror editor, has gathered together masters of the macabre from across the world in this cornucopia of classic chills and modern menaces. Within these pages you will discover the most successful and exciting writers of horror and dark fantasy today, with a spine-chilling selection of stories displaying the full diversity of the genre, from classic pulp style to more contemporary psychological tales, to cutting-edge terror fiction that will leave you uneasily looking ovcr your shoulder, or in the wardrobe, or under the bed …
A BOOK OF HORRORS: an original anthology of all-new horror and dark fantasy fiction, in all of its many and magnificent guises, by those devoted to the Dark Side.
Posted in Jo Fletcher, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Angela Slatter, Brian Hodge, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Dennis Etchison, Elizabeth Hand, fiction, horror, John Ajivide Lindqvist, Les Edwards. Jo Fletcher, Lisa Tuttle, Michael Marshall Smith, Peter Crowther, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Richard Christian Matheson, Robert Shearman, Stephen Jones, Stephen King, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »