Volume 1 Issue 2 of Grotesque Quarterly Magazine
IN THIS ISSUE:
Fiction: “Where Has My Mother Gone?” by Thomas L. Winters
Fiction: “Hollow of the Dolls” by Larry D. Thacker
Fiction: “Randall’s Noose” by N.D. COLEY
Fiction: “Dry Rot” by Maul Allan Hewish
Fiction: “Mister Midnight” by Dan Fields
Fiction: “The Current Downtown” by Bill Vernon
Fiction: “Molly’s Parasite” by Kevin Steffanson
Fiction: “Bad Day” by Michael McHenry
Fiction: “In The Sand They Feed” by Henry James Blizzard
Fiction: “Keezheekoni” by Sheila Rosart
Fiction: “Oh Death” by Jake W. Ford
Poetry: “Dots” by Gale Acuff
Poetry: “In the Desert” by Stephen Crane
Poetry: “The Intruder” by John Grey
Poetry: “A Mother’s Desire” by Tiffany Buck
Poetry: “A Carcass” by Charles Baudelaire
Poetry: “Hino” by Robert Beveridge
Poetry: “Across The Phosphorescent” by Richard King Perkins II
Poetry: “The Scare Is Everywhere” by Ramona Thompson
Poetry: “Mocking Laughter” by Jake Cosmos Aller
Art: “Blood Dress,” “Incubus,” and “Undone” by Melissa Trotter, Stolen Innocence Photography
Art: “Mr. Marshal” “Disease Man,” and “The Mind of a Gordino” by Rodrigo Montina.
Art: “Head of a Clown” by Joseph Kutter.
Art: “All is Vanity” by Charles Allan Gilbert.
Album Review: The Bathory Boys “Canned Goods and Ammunition.”
Album Review: Dead Vampires “The Day After Halloween.”
Article: Psychobilly & Horror-Punk Halloween written by Russell J. Dorn
Recipe: A spooky black noodle recipe courtesy of Chop Chop Choi.
Ghost stories from readers like you in The Obituary!
Comic: Felipe Femur & Friends – Read something cute to avoid nightmares after all this horror!
And more!
Grotesque Magazine is a quarterly publication for all things horror. The gory, the scary, the psychologically thrilling, and the supernatural can all find their homes here. Our magazine features contemporary and classic horror stories from both established and up-and-coming authors. From literary fiction to splatter-punk; flash fiction to poetry, Grotesque Magazine thirsts for it as long as it contains some aspect of horror. Beyond the strange horizons of horror fiction, Grotesque Magazine showcases nonfiction articles and reviews on Psychobilly, Death Metal, and Horror-punk music, as well as horror and horror-comedy movies and television shows. We’re also known to unearth the occasional gruesome drink or food recipes and enjoy art and comics in the horror genre. In our Obituary section we let readers tell us their ghost stories. (http://grotesque-magazine.com/)
This magazine contains adult content and themes and is not meant for readers under eighteen years of age.