Stories by @horrorbloodhound
23 stories

Memorials
Memorials by Richard Chizmar is a 2024 horror novel about three college students filming a documentary on roadside memorials in 1983 Appalachia, who uncover a sinister, supernatural secret tied to the memorials, leading to paranoia, strange symbols, and a terrifying, occult-based threat. The book is noted for its 80s nostalgia, well-developed characters, and slow-burn tension that builds to a suspenseful climax, blending coming-of-age themes with supernatural horror.

We Came to Welcome You
We Came to Welcome You by Vincent Tirado is a 2024 suburban horror novel about a queer couple, Sol and Alice, who move into a seemingly idyllic gated community, Maneless Grove, only to find the neighbors' "welcome" is sinister and cult-like, forcing them to confront systemic racism and the pressure to assimilate or face terrifying consequences. The book is described as a psychological thriller with horror elements, drawing comparisons to The Other Black Girl and Midsommar, and explores themes of racism, assimilation, and identity through its main characters, a Black, Dominican butch and her Korean wife.

The Running Man
The Running Man is a 1982 dystopian novel by Stephen King, written under the pseudonym Richard Bachman. The story is set in a future where a ruined economy and social inequality are controlled by a government that uses violent reality TV to distract the public. The protagonist, Ben Richards, enters the deadly game show The Running Man to win a billion-dollar prize to pay for his daughter's medical care. He must survive for 30 days while being hunted by a team of professional killers, with the ultimate goal of reaching the "Games Building".

Ballad of Black Tom
The Ballad of Black Tom is a 2016 novella by Victor LaValle that reimagines H.P. Lovecraft's "The Horror at Red Hook" from a Black perspective. Set in 1920s Harlem, it follows Charles Thomas Tester as he navigates racism and poverty before a delivery to a sorceress in Queens opens him to a world of cosmic horror. The novella is a critical and popular success, winning the 2016 Shirley Jackson Award and the 2017 British Fantasy Award for Best Novella.

Everything is Fine
Based on the webcomic

Hell House
Richard Matheson's 1971 horror novel, Hell House, is about a group of four people who investigate the notoriously haunted Belasco House to prove the existence of life after death. The group includes a physicist, his wife, and two mediums, who are hired by a wealthy publisher to explore the mansion's secrets. The novel is known for its graphic content, blending supernatural horror with psychological terror as the house's evil influence attempts to destroy the investigators.

The Pallbearers Club
The Pallbearers Club is a 2022 horror novel by Paul Tremblay that blurs the lines between reality and memory through a unique "found footage" style. The story is presented as a memoir by a shy teenager named Art Barbara, which is then "edited" by his mysterious friend, Mercy Brown, who adds her own notes and corrections. The novel explores a complex and unsettling friendship, a parasitic creature, and a New England folklore about digging up the dead.

The One with the Cannibals
A mix of Friends and horror

The Children of Red Peak
The Children of Red Peak is a 2020 psychological horror novel by Craig DiLouie about three adult survivors of a doomsday cult who must confront their traumatic past. The story, told through dual timelines, follows David, Deacon, and Beth as they reunite after a fellow survivor's suicide to share their repressed memories and return to the mountain where the cult's horrific final days took place. The book explores themes of faith, trauma, and the blurred line between religious belief and cult-like fanaticism.

From Below
From Below is a 2022 horror novel by Darcy Coates about a documentary dive team that discovers the sunken wreck of the SS Arcadia, a ship that vanished years earlier. As the team explores the eerie, underwater graveyard, they uncover the terrifying secret of the ship's disappearance, facing a claustrophobic and suspenseful underwater environment. The story alternates between the modern-day dive and the events leading up to the ship's sinking in 1929.

My Best Friend's Exorcism (But It's Actually the 80s)
Basically what the title says

My Best Friend's Exorcism
My Best Friend's Exorcism is a 2016 horror novel by Grady Hendrix that blends 1980s nostalgia, teen angst, and demonic possession into a story about enduring friendship. Set in 1988, the story follows high school sophomores Abby and Gretchen, whose friendship is tested when Gretchen begins to act strangely after a night of skinny-dipping, leading Abby to believe her best friend is possessed. The book is known for its blend of horror and humor, with comparisons to The Exorcist and Heathers, and explores themes of female friendship, self-image, and the challenges of the 1980s.

Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires
The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires is a 2020 horror novel by Grady Hendrix that blends supernatural thrills with social commentary on the lives of 1990s suburban housewives. The story follows Patricia Campbell, a bored housewife whose book club becomes her only joy, until a handsome new neighbor, James Harris, arrives and is suspected of being a vampire. The novel explores themes of sexism, classism, and the repression of women, all while delivering a suspenseful story with a satisfying, action-packed resolution.

Ghost Eaters
Ghost Eaters: A Novel by Clay McLeod Chapman is a 2022 horror novel about a woman named Erin who, after her reckless ex-boyfriend Silas dies of an overdose, takes a new drug called "Ghost" that allows her to see the dead. The drug, which functions as a "pill-popping séance," leads to terrifying supernatural encounters and forces Erin to confront the dark history of her hometown, Richmond, Virginia, as well as themes of addiction, grief, and white guilt.

Wake Up and Open Your Eyes
Wake Up and Open Your Eyes is a 2025 social horror novel by Clay McLeod Chapman about a demonic possession epidemic spread through media, focusing on Noah Fairchild as he tries to save his family from a far-right cable news channel that turns people into violent monsters. The book explores themes of political division and media corruption through graphic, transgressive horror, though some critics find its social commentary heavy-handed and its horror exploitative.

Mapping the Interior
Mapping the Interior is a 2017 horror novella by Stephen Graham Jones about a Native American boy named Junior who encounters the ghost of his deceased father, leading him to discover his house is larger and more complex than he knew. The story explores themes of grief, loss, cultural identity, and the blurred lines between reality and the supernatural as Junior tries to map his home and understand his father's legacy.

Wuthering Heights
Wuthering Heights is the only novel by the English author Emily Brontë, initially published in 1847 under her pen name "Ellis Bell". It concerns two families of the landed gentry living on the West Yorkshire moors, the Earnshaws and the Lintons, and their turbulent relationships with the Earnshaws' foster son, Heathcliff. The novel, influenced by Romanticism and Gothic fiction, is considered a classic of English literature.

The Long Walk
The Long Walk is a dystopian horror novel by American writer Stephen King, published in 1979, under the pseudonym Richard Bachman. Set in a dystopian alternative version of the United States ruled by a totalitarian regime, the plot follows the contestants of a grueling annual walking contest.

How to Make a Horror Movie and Survive
"How to Make a Horror Movie and Survive" is a novel by Craig DiLouie that explores the dark side of filmmaking, specifically within the horror genre. The story follows a 1980s slasher director, Max Maurey, who discovers a cursed camera that films real-life horrors. He uses this camera to create a movie, but the camera's deadly intentions begin to manifest, blurring the lines between fiction and reality.

Horror Movie
Horror Movie" by Paul Tremblay is a novel about a group of young filmmakers who create a disturbing art-house horror film in 1993, with only a few scenes ever released to the public. Thirty years later, a reboot is attempted, and the sole surviving cast member, "The Thin Kid," confronts the secrets of the original film's production and the blurring lines between reality and fiction as the past resurfaces. The story delves into the psychological impact of the original film, the obsession surrounding it, and the potential dangers of art and its creation.