There's something inherently, and perhaps deceptively, simple in Nate Southard's premise that, like 30 Days of Night previously, makes you wonder why it hasn't been done before. Whereas the Steve Niles/Ben Templesmith comic book series took the brilliant premise of vampires attacking an Alaskan town...
Coming into Down, I was still trying to work out Nate Southard. After loving Red Sky and quite enjoying Scavengers, I found his more recent Lights Out to be a huge disappointment. So I was wary about this one. Another disappointment would probably see me abandon his writings and move in for greener ...
I bought this thinking it was another recent horror comic collection, but kept it because it looked interesting. There are many hooks in these stories, but I think it would be more memorable if less people had been included and the volume developed longer, stronger stories. it's hard to be horrifyin...
I bought this thinking it was another recent horror comic collection, but kept it because it looked interesting. There are many hooks in these stories, but I think it would be more memorable if less people had been included and the volume developed longer, stronger stories. it's hard to be horrifyin...
I received a copy of this book from Sinister Grin Press in exchange for an honest review. Things were going oh so well. Things were simple. Plane crash miles from civilization. Some dead on impact, some seriously injured, all absolutely screwed. Something lives in this woods. Something big, someth...
More Zombies! Zombies are starting to get overdone, but in this 3rd volume or Zombie Tales, there are still surprises to be found. Not every zombie fits the generic Romero zombie type, and it's fun to be inside the head of a zombie. These tales are collected from other magazines, novels, anthologi...
What do you get when to take several of the top splatter writers if our time to collaborate on a work for a great cause? Sixty-Five Stirrup Iron Road. This one starts of like a rocket of grodiness and just gets worse. And when I mean worse, I mean that in a good way. Vomit, Golden showers, llama jui...
This is a brutal novella, and a brutal bunch of short stories come after. Why? Mostly because it's pretty realistic: Nate Southard shows you why people become violent, and then follows through with gore that makes you cringe. It's horror that, for the most part, stays within the 'it could happ...
I enjoyed this book. It even mentions my old high school in one of the stories. Awesome!