Posts Tagged ‘Rosalie Parker’
Posted by demonik on August 23, 2014
Paul Finch (ed.) – Terror Tales Of Yorkshire (Gray Friars Press, Sept. 2014)

Neil Williams
Simon Avery – In October We Buried The Monsters
The Decapitation Device
Keris McDonald – The Coat Off His Back
Haunting Memories of the Past
Mark Morris – They Walk As Men
The Yorkshire Witches
Alison Littlewood – On Ilkley Moor
The Black Monk of Pontefract
Stephen Laws – The Crawl
The Woman in the Rain
Gary McMahon – Ragged
The Hobman
Christopher Harman – A True Yorkshireman
The Town Where Darkness Was Born
Mark Chadbourn – All Things Considered, I’d Rather Be In Hell
A Feast For Crows
Chico Kidd – The Demon of Flowers
City of the Dead
Stephen Bacon – The Summer of Bradbury
Radiant Beings
Rosalie Parker – Random Flight
Death in the Harrying
Simon Clark – The Rhubarb Festival
The Alien
Gary Fry – The Crack
The Boggart of Bunting Nook
Jason Gould – A Story From When We Had Nothing
Blurb:
Yorkshire – a rolling landscape of verdant dales and quaint country towns. But where industrial fires left hideous scars, forlorn ruins echo the shrieks of forgotten wars, and depraved killers evoke nightmare tales of ogres, trolls and wild moorland boggarts…
The stalking devil of Boroughbridge
The murder machine at Halifax
The hooded horror of Pontefract
The bloody meadow at Towton
The black tunnel of Renfield
The evil trickster of Spaldington
The shadow forms at Silverwood
And many more chilling tales by Alison Littlewood, Mark Morris, Stephen Laws, Simon Clark, Mark Chadbourn, and other award-winning masters and mistresses of the macabre.
Posted in *Gray Friar Press*, Paul Finch | Tagged: Alison Littlewood, Chico Kidd, Christopher Harman, fiction, Gary Fry, Gary McMahon, Gray Friars Press, Jason Gould, Keris McDonald, Mark Chadbourn, Mark Morris, Neil Williams, non-fiction, Paul Finch, Rosalie Parker, Simon Avery, Simon Clark, Stephen Bacon, Stephen Laws, Terror Tales Of Yorkshire, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on May 21, 2013
Paul Finch (ed) – Terror Tales Of London (Gray Friars Press, 2013)

Cover Illustration: Steve Upham
Nina Allan – The Tiger
London After Midnight
Roger Johnson – The Soldier
Queen Rat
Nicholas Royle – Train, Night
The Horror At Berkeley Square
Adam Nevill – The Angels Of London
Boudicca’s Bane
Gary Fry – Capital Growth
The Black Dog Of Newgate
Rosalie Parker – The Thames
The Other Murderers
Mark Morris – The Red Door
The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street
Barbara Roden – Undesirable Residence
Nosferatu In Highgate
Jonathan Oliver – The Horror Writer
Butchery In Bleeding-Heart Yard
Christopher Fowler – Perry In Seraglio
The Monster Of Hammersmith
Marie O’Regan – Someone To Watch Over You
The Black Death Returns
David J. Howe – The Outcast Dead
What Stirs Below?
Anna Taborska – The Bloody Tower
Blurb:
The city of London – whose gold-paved streets are lost in choking fog and echo to the trundling of plague-carts, whose twisting back alleys ring to cries of “Murder!”, whose awful tower is stained with the blood of princes and paupers alike.
The night stalker of Hammersmith
The brutal butchery of Holborn
The depraved spirit of Sydenham
The fallen angel of Dalston
The murder den of Notting Hill
The haunted sewer of Bermondsey
The red-eyed ghoul of Highgate
And many more chilling tales from Adam Nevill, Mark Morris, Christopher Fowler, Nina Allen, Nicholas Royle, and other award-winning masters and mistresses of the macabre
Coming soon: Available for Preorder from Gray Friar Press
Posted in *Gray Friar Press*, Gary Fry, Paul Finch | Tagged: Adam Nevill, Anna Taborska, Barbara Roden, Christopher Fowler, David J. Howe, fiction, Gary Fry, horror, Jonathan Oliver, London, Marie O'Regan, Mark Morris, Nicholas Royle, Nina Allen, Paul Finch, Roger Johnson, Rosalie Parker, Terror Tales, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on September 22, 2010
Stephen Jones (ed.) – Mammoth Book Of Best New Horror #21 (Robinson, 28 October 2010)

Vincent Chong
Stephen Jones – Introduction: Horror in 2009
Michael Kelly – The Woods
Joe Hill & Stephen King – Throttle
Barbara Roden – Out And Back
Ramsey Campbell – Respects
Simon Stranzas – Cold To The Touch
M. R. James & Reggie Oliver – The Game Of Bear
Chris Bell – Shem-El-Nesime: An Inspiration In Perfume
Michael Marshall Smith – What Happens When You Wake Up In The Night
Nicholas Royle – The Reunion
Simon Kurt Unsworth – Mami Wata
Richard Christian Matheson – Venturi
John Gaskin – Party Talk
Terry Dowling – Two Steps Along The Road
Mark Valentine – The Axholme Toll
Robert Shearman – Granny’s Grinning
Rosalie Parker – In The Garden
Stephen Volk – After The Ape
Brian Lumley – The Nonesuch
Michael Kelly – Princess Of The Night
Stephen Jones & Kim Newman – Necrology: 2009
Useful Addresses
As far as i’m aware you’ll have to wait a few weeks for this to hit the shops although i gather it was pre-launched at FantasyCon over weekend. To the best of my knowledge this is the first time the contents have appeared online, so don’t forget not to give Vault a credit when you rip it off for your site/ blog/ messagebore, etc.
Posted in "Constable-Robinson*, *Constable/Robinson*, Stephen Jones | Tagged: Barbara Roden, Best New Horror, Brian Lumley, Chris Bell, fiction, horror, Joe Hill, John Gaskin, Kim Newman, M. R. James, Mark Valentine, Michael Kelly, Michael Marshall Smith, Nicholas Royle, Ramsey Campbell, Reggie Oliver, Richard Christian Matheson, Robert Shearman, Robinson, Rosalie Parker, Simon Kurt Unsworth, Simon Stranzas, Stephen Jones, Stephen King, Stephen Volk, Terry Dowling, Vault Of Evil, Vincent Chong | 3 Comments »
Posted by demonik on September 6, 2009
Out now from Mortbury Press ….
Charles Black (ed.) – The Fifth Black Book Of Horror (Mortbury Press, Sept. 2009)

Illustration: Paul Mudie
Reggie Oliver – Mrs. Midnight
Marcus Gold – The Man With A Hole In His Head
Ian C. Strachan – Starlight Casts No Shadow
Craig Herbertson – Leibniz’s Last Puzzle
Paul Finch – Hangman Wanted: Apply In Writing
Rosalie Parker – In The Garden
David A. Riley – Their Own Mad Demons
Raymond Vaughn – Winter Break
John Llewellyn Probert – De Vermis Infestis
Richard Staines – No Such Thing As A Friendly
Anna Taborska – Schrodinger’s Human
David Williamson – The Chameleon Man
John Llewellyn Probert – Two For Dinner
“Thirteen morsels of the macabre for those with a taste for terror”
Get a blow-by-blow account of the stories on the Vault Of Evil forum’s 5th Black Book Of Horror thread.
Posted in *Mortbury Press*, Charles Black, Vault Product Placement | Tagged: *Mortbury Press*, Anna Taborska, Charles Black, Craig Herbertson, David A. Riley, David Williamson, fiction, horror, Ian C. Strachan, John Llewellyn Probert, Marcus Gold, Mark Samuels, Paul Finch, Paul Mudie, Raymond Vaughn, Reggie Oliver, Richard Staines, Rosalie Parker, Vault Of Evil | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 25, 2008
Mark Valentine (ed.) – The Black Veil And Other Tales of Supernatural Sleuths (Wordsworth Mystery & the Supernatural, July 2008)

Introduction – Mark Valentine
Robert Eustace & L.T. Meade – The Warder of the Door
E. & H. Heron – The Story of Sevens Hall
William Hope Hodgson – The Gateway of the Monster
Arthur Machen – The Red Hand
Allen Upward – The Haunted Woman
Robert Barr – The Ghost with the Club-foot
Vernon Knowles – The Curious Activities of Basil Thorpenden
Donald Campbell – The Necromancer
L. Adams Beck – Waste Manor
John Cooling – The House of Fenris
Mark Valentine – The Prince of Barlocco
Colin P. Langeveld – The Legacy of the Viper
Mary Anne Allen (Rosemary Pardoe) – The Sheelagh-na-gig
A.F. Kidd – The Black Veil
R.B. Russell – Like Clockwork
Rosalie Parker – Spirit Solutions
The Gateway of the Monster… The Red Hand… The Ghost Hunter
To Sherlock Holmes the supernatural was a closed book: but other great detectives have always been ready to do battle with the dark instead. This volume brings together sixteen chilling cases of these supernatural sleuths, pitting themselves against the peril of ultimate evil. Here are encounters from the casebooks of the Victorian haunted house investigators John Bell and Flaxman Low, from Carnacki, the Edwardian battler against the abyss, and from horror master Arthur Machen’s Mr Dyson, a man-about-town and meddler in strange things. Connoisseurs will find rare cases such as those of Allen Upward’s The Ghost Hunter, Robert Barr’s Eugene Valmont (who may have inspired Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot) and Donald Campbell’s young explorer Leslie Vane, the James Bond of the jazz age, who battles against occult enemies of the British Empire. And the collection is completed by some of the best tales from the pens of modern psychic sleuth authors.
Thanks to Alan Frackelton for providing the contents of both this and The Wolf Pack!
Posted in *Wordsworth" | Tagged: *Wordsworth", A.F. Kidd, Allen Upward, Arthur Machen, Books, C.P. Langeveld, Donald Campbell, E. & H. Heron, Ghosts & Scholars, horror fiction, L. Adams Beck, Mark Valentine, Mary Anne Allen, R. B. Russell, Robert Barr, Robert Eustace & L.T. Meade, Rosalie Parker, Rosemary Pardoe, Supernatural Sleuths, Vault Of Evil, Vernon Knowles, William Hope Hodgson, Wormwood | Leave a Comment »