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Three of these tales are newly written first-person prose variants of three of my YouTube shorts (The Jarprechaun, Server Unknown, and Sleeperette). The other two are very recent ideas that are first seeing the light of day...  

On Amazon now:

Knifepoint Horror, The Transcripts: Volume 8 (containing rink, sideswipe, endgame, chains,  traces, Devils Everywhere You Turn, detour, sabbatical, summoners, steps, doggo, crannies, and majesty) in both paperback and e-book versions.

or download the free, ridiculously gigantic Knifepoint Horror collection as a PDF here or directly from this update's attachments. (One project this year may be making the text collection more manageable.)

Also on Amazon now:

This is the horrifying tale of a gigantic severed hand bent on vengeance, and on top of that, there's wolves and ghost armies and Michael Myerses and--aw hell, I cannot lie. Paintings by Nadia Strause is a G-rated short novel so far away from horror that it's a wonder my name stuck to the cover without sliding right off. Thanks to you Patreon supporters, I was able to carve out time to follow this idea and hopefully create something a little inspiring, with artist Rebecca Finelli providing the book with some lovely sketch work. An audiobook version will come later.

...And maybe I'll have a little fun in the coming year adding some files to a Patreon shop; the first one I've posted is a collection of all eight Unchallenging Campfire Tales as a single-file .mp3 download, which should be totally free to Patreon supporters--click here to check that and see if I set everything up right! Or download it straight from this update's attachments and get on with your day...

:) -S

Comments

Jill E Merrill

Thanks for such a plethora of new listens. I've been stuck at home with bruised ribs that I got when my husband saved me from falling out a window while I was removing vines from our window screens. Sleeperette!!! Can't wait for your new novel to come out on audiobook. For those of you who like audiobooks: I ran out of Audible credits so I've been listening to public domain books. They're a mixed bag. Bram Stoker's Dracula and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein are great listens, but Wuthering Heights was more like Withering Heights.

Mike M.

Got Paintings and finished it last night! You got some real genre whiplash happening between that and the horror, but you excel at both. A lot of those deeper feelings carry over to your horror characters. Really gives them more depth than the typical scary stories.