Writers on Writing

Demons of the Night: A horror novel about good, evil, and finding your own path

Demons of the Night is a horror novel that asks: who gets to decide what is good and what is evil? It follows Docia, a young woman whose parents have gone to great lengths to hide the truth about who she really is. They want her to be a “good Christian woman” and believe secrecy is the only way to protect her. But their plan is about to backfire.

The cover of Demons of the Night was designed by my friend, author and artist Lance Savage, who created a fictionalized version of Holy Hill to reflect the novel’s dark atmosphere. Visit Lance’s website to see more of his work.

Docia longs for independence, for a life beyond her family’s overprotection. She wants normal experiences—friendships, romance, freedom. When Blane appears at a church lecture on demons, Docia is intrigued. But he’s there for the wrong reasons, and she quickly realizes that the life she desires may require confronting truths her parents have worked so hard to conceal. As the story unfolds, Docia must grapple with her identity, her morality, and the question of whether she can define herself outside the rigid framework her family imposes.

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Accumulation by Aimee Pokwatka: A haunted house story that refuses to play by the rules

The first time something feels off in Accumulation by Aimee Pokwatka, it’s easy to dismiss—just like Tennessee Cherish does. A faucet left running. A misplaced object. A strange sense that something isn’t quite lining up. But as the novel unfolds, that quiet unease starts to loop in on itself, building into something far more deliberate—and far more unsettling—than it first appears.

Get your copy of Accumulation from my independent online bookstore today!

Set to release on May 5, 2026, Accumulation follows Tenn, a former documentary filmmaker turned stay-at-home mom, who relocates with her family to the kind of dream house that’s supposed to signal a fresh start. Instead, it becomes the backdrop for a slow, creeping unraveling. Her husband is largely absent, her children begin behaving in increasingly disturbing ways, and the house itself seems to resist settling into anything resembling normalcy.

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Author Interview

Author interview: Emily Persichetti Schuster on Beautiful and Terrifying, poetry, and writing through grief

In this contributor interview, poet Emily Persichetti Schuster discusses her work in Beautiful and Terrifying, the themes of grief and memory that shape her writing, and the creative process behind her deeply personal poetry.

Emily Persichetti Schuster writes with a quiet intensity, exploring grief, memory, and the fragile threads that connect identity, family, and place. Her work in Beautiful and Terrifying: Tales and Visions from the Edge of the Uncanny reflects a deep attentiveness to both the emotional and the everyday, drawing inspiration from poets like Marie Howe and Mary Oliver while carving out a voice distinctly her own. In this interview, she shares how early reading shaped her imagination, how she balances writing with the demands of daily life, and why poetry remains a powerful way to hold both individual moments and larger, unfolding stories.

Emily Persichetti Schuster, is a contributor to Beautiful and Terrifying.

Q: What’s a memory of a story or book that made you realize you wanted to be a writer?
A: Roald Dahl’s The BFG is the first book I remember reading completely on my own, when I was in early elementary school. I loved all Roald Dahl’s books when I was a kid, and I love reading them to my kids now. Through all the creepy, uncanny, and seemingly hopeless events of his books, the heroes always prevail because they’re never willing to give up. His books taught me to face my own fears and build resilience in the face of adversity.

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Five by Ilona Bannister: A tense moral experiment that puts the reader on trial

There’s something quietly unsettling about the opening premise of Five by Ilona Bannister—five strangers on a train platform, one of whom will be dead in minutes—and the novel wastes no time making you complicit in that outcome. From the first pages, you’re not just observing these characters; you’re weighing them.

Get your copy of Five from my independent online bookstore today!

Set against the ticking clock of an approaching train, the novel stretches a matter of minutes across its entire length. It’s an ambitious structural choice, and at times, a challenging one. Bannister intersperses the present-moment tension with flashback chapters that unpack each character’s history—the struggling gambler, the abrasive elderly woman, the overwhelmed mother and her volatile child, the polished yet fractured businessman. These glimpses into their lives are essential to the book’s central question: who deserves to live?

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The Hill by Harriet Clark: A searching, unsettling novel about who gets to have a life

What if your life never quite begins—because you’ve been living inside someone else’s choices from the very start?

The Hill by Harriet Clark (releasing May 5, 2026) is the kind of novel that circles its questions rather than answering them outright, returning again and again to the same emotional terrain: what makes a life a life, and who gets to claim one. Through Suzanna Klein—whose mother is serving a life sentence in a hilltop prison for a failed act of radicalism—Clark builds a story that is at once intimate and expansive, tracing the quiet, often invisible ways generations shape one another.

Get your copy of The Hill from my independent online bookstore today!

From childhood, Suzanna’s world is split cleanly in two. There is the prison, where Saturdays feel almost ceremonial, filled with children dressed as if for a party, and where life and death exist side by side in the form of a nursery and a cemetery. And then there is home, where she is raised by a grandmother who refuses to visit her own daughter and instead surrounds Suzanna with a rotating cast of elderly women—friends, acquaintances, and relics of a political past that still hums beneath their conversations. These women, many of them shaped by histories they rarely name outright, spend their days debating ideology and their nights quietly reckoning with the lives they did and didn’t live.

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Elderfly Press

Beautiful and Terrifying releases today: Step into the uncanny!

It’s here—and it’s been a long time coming. Beautiful and Terrifying: Tales and Visions from the Edge of the Uncanny officially releases today, and I couldn’t be more excited (or a little unsettled) to finally share it with you.

This anthology brings together a collection of short fiction, poetry, and black-and-white art that all live in that uneasy space where beauty and horror overlap. These are stories that don’t just aim to scare—they linger. They follow you. They ask you to look a little closer than you’re comfortable with.

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Ways to Find Yourself by Angela Brown: A thoughtful, quietly surreal novel about identity, memory, and starting over

At 33, Grace Whittaker is convinced she’s finally figured herself out. By 38, that certainty has unraveled completely. In Ways to Find Yourself by Angela Brown (releasing May 1, 2026), that shift—subtle at first, then all-consuming—becomes the foundation for a story that explores how fragile our sense of self really is.

Get your copy of Ways to Find Yourself from my independent online bookstore today!

The novel opens with Grace at 33, secure in who she believes herself to be. But when the narrative moves forward five years, everything has changed. Her mother has died, her writing career has stalled, and her marriage is quietly falling apart. Returning to Sea Drift, the beach town of her childhood, feels less like a retreat and more like a last attempt to make sense of a life that no longer fits.

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Dark is When the Devil Comes by Daisy Pearce: A chilling, slow-burn horror that burrows under your skin

I knew exactly what I was getting into when I picked up Dark Is When the Devil Comes by Daisy Pearce—or at least I thought I did. After how deeply Something in the Walls unsettled me (to the point that I had to stop reading it before bed), I expected dread. I expected unease. What I didn’t expect was just how suffocating this story would feel once it took hold.

Get your copy of Dark is When the Devil Comes from my independent online bookstore today!

Set in the English countryside, the novel follows Hazel, who returns to her hometown of Idless after a traumatic divorce, intending to quietly rebuild her life. But when she fails to reconnect with her sister Cathy as planned, concern quickly turns into something darker. The town whispers. The woods loom. And the sense that something has gone very, very wrong settles in almost immediately.

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Mrs. Shim Is a Killer by Kang Jiyoung: A darkly funny thriller where chaos, connection, and a cleaver collide

Desperation, dark humor, and a wildly tangled web of secrets collide in Mrs. Shim Is a Killer by Kang Jiyoung, a novel that transforms a grieving widow’s fight for survival into something far more unexpected—and undeniably entertaining.

Mrs. Shim is simply trying to keep her family afloat after losing both her husband and her job at a butcher shop. But when she answers a vague job listing and discovers her knife skills are needed for something far more dangerous, her life takes a sharp turn into the world of contract killing. What follows is less a straightforward thriller and more a darkly comedic descent into chaos, where misunderstandings, hidden motives, and unlikely connections drive the story forward.

Get your copy of Mrs. Shim is a Killer from my independent online bookstore today!

One of the most striking elements of this novel is its tone. There’s an almost slapstick quality to the violence and the situations Mrs. Shim finds herself in, giving the story a surreal edge. The idea that her transition from butcher to assassin feels oddly natural is part of the book’s charm—it leans fully into its premise and invites the reader to do the same.

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Japanese Gothic by Kylie Lee Baker: A haunting premise that never quite sinks its teeth in

The promise of Japanese Gothic by Kylie Lee Baker is immediate and irresistible: a blood-soaked, myth-laced horror novel where two lives—separated by centuries—intersect through a house that shouldn’t exist.

Set across two timelines, the novel follows Lee Turner in 2026, fleeing to his father’s secluded home in Japan after a brutal, inexplicable act of violence, and Sen, a young samurai in 1877 living in fear of both imperial soldiers and something far worse within her own home. The house behind the sword ferns becomes the connective thread between them—a place where reality bends, ghosts linger, and something buried refuses to stay that way.

Get your copy of Japanese Gothic from my independent online bookstore today!

Despite the title, though, this isn’t quite the gothic experience I expected. Going in, I anticipated the kind of creeping dread that lingers long after you’ve put the book down—the kind that makes you think twice about turning off the lights. Instead, the horror here leans heavily into blood and gore, but never quite lands with emotional or psychological weight. There’s a noticeable fairy tale quality to the storytelling that creates distance rather than immersion. It’s vivid, yes—but it rarely feels real enough to truly unsettle.

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