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A Box Full of Darkness by Simone St. James
Eminence Front by Rebecca Rowland
Hemlock by Melissa Faliveno
Ballad of the Bone Road by A.C. Wise
On Sundays She Picked Flowers by Yah Yah Scholfield
We Should Have Left Well Enough Alone by Ronald Malfi

New year, new nightmares. From ghost-haunted towns to snowbound streets whispering ancient secrets, this month’s horror lineup explores the dark threads of grief, inheritance, and transformation. Whether you’re craving short stories or queer Southern Gothic, January kicks off the year with fresh chills that linger well past the final page.

 

A Box Full of Darkness by Simone St. James

A Box Full of Darkness by Simone St. James

When three estranged siblings are lured home by the sudden reappearance of their missing brother, they must confront the ghosts of their past—some literal, some not—before the ghosts of Fell consume them all.


Eminence Front by Rebecca Rowland

Eminence Front by Rebecca Rowland

A brutal winter storm awakens an ancient malevolence buried beneath a quiet New England street. As the snow falls, the residents hear the storm whisper through their darkest regrets—and not everyone will survive its call.


Hemlock by Melissa Faliveno

Hemlock by Melissa Faliveno

A woman returns to her family’s crumbling forest cabin to confront the addition and ancestral rot still lurking there. The wilderness creeps in and her body begins to change in this haunting tale of transformation, inheritance, and monstrous rebirth.


Ballad of the Bone Road by A.C. Wise

Ballad of the Bone Road by A.C. Wise

In ghost-drenched Port Astor, two haunted investigators uncover a supernatural conspiracy that links a demon, a cursed hotel and a long-vanished fae queen. A lush, eerie blend of queer love, doomed glamour and dangerous magic that refuses to be forgotten.


On Sundays She Picked Flowers by Yah Yah Scholfield

On Sundays She Picked Flowers by Yah Yah Scholfield

In this feral Southern Gothic debut, a woman builds a haunted life of healing in the Georgia woods—until a mysterious stranger arrives and awakens the violence she thought she’d buried. A tale of ghosts, trauma and transformation rooted in blood and blooming with vengeance.


We Should Have Left Well Enough Alone by Ronald Malfi

We Should Have Left Well Enough Alone by Ronald Malfi

Twenty eerie tales where grief, addiction and unsettling encounters peel back reality’s skin to reveal the horrors beneath. From Halloween revelations to shark-infested getaways, this collection proves that the darkness inside us is always the most terrifying.



The Chill Quill is a monthly roundup of thriller, horror, mystery, and dark fantasy titles released each month by Lindy Ryan. Read previous editions here.

Lindy Ryan

Lindy Miller Ryan is a Bram Stoker Awards®-nominated and Silver Falchion Award-winning editor, author, short-film director, and professor whose books have received starred reviews from Booklist and Library Journal. She is the current author-in-residence at Rue Morgue, the world’s leading horror culture and entertainment brand, and a columnist at​ BookTrib. Her guest articles and features include NPR, BBC Culture, Irish Times, Daily Mail, and more. Ryan is the founder and president of Black Spot Books, an independent press focused on amplifying underrepresented voices in horror. She served from 2020 to 2022 on the Board of Directors for the Independent Book Publishers Association and was named a Publishers Weekly Star Watch Honoree in 2020. In 2022, Ryan was named one of horror's most masterful anthology curators, alongside Ellen Datlow and Christopher Golden, and has been declared a "champion for women's voices in horror" by Shelf Awareness (2023). Her animated short film, TRICK OR TREAT, ALISTAIR GRAY, based on her children's book of the same name, won the Grand Prix Award at the 2022 ANMTN Awards. Ryan grew up cutting her teeth on Goosebumps and universal monsters. She has published numerous academic texts and also writes clean, seasonal romance under the name​ Lindy Miller, where her books have been adapted for screen.