
The March-April issue contains new horror fiction by Michael Wehunt, E. Catherine Tobler, Jack Westlake, Kay Chronister, and David Martin. The cover art is by Jim Burns, and interior illustrations by Jim Burns, Ben Baldwin, and Richard Wagner. Regular features include Into the Woods by Ralph Robert Moore, Notes from the Borderland by Lynda E. Rucker, Case Notes by Peter Tennant (book reviews, including an interview with Anna Tambour), Blood Spectrum by Gary Couzens (film reviews). Cover Art: 'Sanguinary Scar' by Jim Burns Fiction: Sanguinary Scar by E. Catherine Tobler illustrated by Jim Burns Bury Me with Broken Light Bulbs, Bury Me in Shattered Glass by Jack Westlake Things Behind the Sun by David Martin illustrated by Ben Baldwin Your Clothes a Sepulcher, Your Body a Grave by Kay Chronister Caring for a Stray Dog (Metaphors) by Michael Wehunt illustrated by Richard Wagner Columns: Notes From the Borderland by Lynda E. Rucker FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD Into the Woods by Ralph Robert Moore DISAPPOINTING GEORGE NEWS Reviews: Case Notes: Book Reviews by Peter Tennant TWO FROM TARTARUS Seven Strange Stories by Rebecca Lloyd; Holidays from Hell by Reggie Oliver TWO NOVELS Pseudotooth by Verity Holloway; Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant TWO SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS WITH A DIFFERENCE Exploring Dark Short Fiction #1: A Primer to Steve Rasnic Tem edited by Eric J. Guignard; The Ghost Club by William Meikle MAGNIFICENT INSIGNIFICANTS WITH ANNA TAMBOUR The Finest Ass in the Universe; Smoke Paper Mirrors; in-depth interview Blood Spectrum: Film Reviews by Gary Couzens Twin Peaks; Carrie; Thelma; When the Wind Blows; Witchhammer; The Witch Who Came from the Sea; Malatesta's Carnival of Blood; The Premonition; Mother!; A Ghost Story; The Ritual; Atomic Blonde; Annabelle: Creation; House (Hausu); Kills on Wheels; The Housemaid; Game of Thrones; Hounds of Love; and more
Authors


Michael Wehunt grew up in North Georgia, close enough to the Appalachians to feel them but not quite easily see them. There were woods, and woodsmoke, and warmth. He did not make it far when he left, falling sixty miles south to the lost city of Atlanta, where he lives today, with fewer woods but still many trees. He writes. He reads. Robert Aickman fidgets next to Flannery O’Connor on his favorite bookshelf. His short fiction has appeared in venues such as Cemetery Dance, The Dark, Shadows & Tall Trees, The Mammoth Book of Cthulhu, The Year's Best Dark Fantasy & Horror, and Year's Best Weird Fiction. His debut collection, Greener Pastures, was nominated for both the Shirley Jackson Award and the Crawford Award. It is available now from Apex Book Company.

