 |
FH#11 April 2009
From the high and low places, the banshees and demons, come the 11th issue’s pets and uncles gone wild as well as a map of Hell, a vision of Glasgow and a motley crew of other horrors. |
|
 |
FH#10 February 2009
On this Friday the 13th enjoy thirteen mind-bending chillers including Ambrose Bierce’s classic “The Damned Thing”—plus his new shrine in the Hall of Creators—and the usual ecclectic mix of poetry, illustration and bite-size weirdness to help you stave off pesky reality for another month or two. |
|
 |
FH#9 December 2008
Just in time for the holidays, the latest issue of Fantastic Horror has scams, parasites, barbarians and horrifying dinners—a lot like real life but more stylish. Take time out from the fear of shopping to be afraid of something else and enjoy the snow- and ice-encrusted FH#9. |
|
 |
FH#8/SLM#4 October 2008
In cooperation with The Southern Literary Messenger we proudly present a seasonal cornucopia of fine reading material. Enjoy an unprecedented range of content from text fiction to video documentary, from immovable classics to irresistible novelties.
Also hear Matthew Ewald’s audio theater production of John Di Rosa’s “Beat the Devil” originally featured in FH#1, and go back to the saloon in FH#6 to meet Kyle Burles’s “Gunslinger”! |
|
 |
FH#7 August 2008
The most packed issue to date comes bursting with deadly aquatic mystery, dueling lunatic scoundrels, a ghoulish toast to the classic "Cask," irresistible imperatives, inescapable mortality, torment of the innocent, awakening of mindless souls, suburban mayhem, unholy piety, and things that are generally not as they should be. Also enjoy a selection of new and time-tested artwork, and be sure to listen to our first-ever audio story production! |
|
 |
FH#6 June 2008
Enjoy Lovecraftian horror in “The Horror in the Traquair Maze”—inhuman humanity in “Gray”—and other terrifying delights in stories and poems of pumpkin-carving, home-buying, ancient woods, Latin Kings, bartenders, predators, journeys and sleep—not to mention 4 new artistic renderings of the otherworldly. |
|
 |
FH#5 April 2008
Death governs a small town; ancient evil presides in the jungle; horror resides in the sounds of ringing and a stranger’s voice; long-forgotten stones conceal a gateway; infinite gateways of doors are finally shut; a son remembers the dark lesson of his father; verses speak of what is gratefully fallen and what thing that fell must gloat upon the depth; and images speak of timeless ruins, cosmic deserts and a phantasmal race. |
|
 |
FH#4 February 2008
In this issue, witness a strange visitation on the Allegheny in “A Terrible Binding”—riches concealed among rubbish in “Clutter”—a terrible return in “Stained”—the secret interrogations of “Rough Justice”—the sinister commune of “The Discovery”—plus poetry, the fourth installment of “House of a Thousand Doors,” classic art by Dürer, Doré and Goya, and new art by Jon Ethridge and Alex Ledante. |
|
|
FH#3 December 2007
The cryptic and shocking conclusions of “Hypnagogia,” “Coyman Manuscript” and “Rime of the Ancient Mariner”—the penultimate installment of the darkening “Willows”—a new poem from John Di Rosa—new artistic visions of earth, sea and distant worlds—and four new stories of obscurity, terror and the unnatural, including Ron Wright’s harrowing “Inheritance”—await the intrepid reader in Fantastic Horror’s third full-length issue. |
|
 |
FH#2 August 2007
Brace yourself for five new startling stories of ghosts and floods, as well as of the dead, dreaming and horribly alive—for continuations of the mysterious “Coyman Manuscript,” the phantasmal “House of a Thousand Doors,” the twilit “Hypnagogia” and Richard Eline’s cultic and occult adventures—for ancient and modern poetry of soundlessness and shadow—an annotated classic by Poe—and three new works of art, including Pino*’s “Flesh” which graces the cover. |
|
 |
FH#1 June 2007
This first full-length issue includes the first nine installments of “Hypnagogia”—eight illustrative chimeras (including the cover by Moraine)—poems about death and demoniac imps—the continuation of Blackwood’s “Willows” and a history of the Necronomicon—a “lost” tale by Fitz-James O’Brien—plus seven original fictions of inconceivable variety, including a story from Mark Samuels’s Black Altars. |
|
 |
FH#0 April 2007
Fantastic Horror’s debut features tales of the sea and urban decay—classics from Arthur Machen and Algernon Blackwood—dueling essays on the writing of supernatural horror—pictures by Bruegel and Thomas Cole—a poem about an extremely unfortunate road trip—and Edgar Poe’s introduction to the FH series “Hypnagogia.” |