Search Books

Sanitarium Magazine Issue #37: Bringing you the Best Short Horror Fiction, Dark Verse and Macabre Entertainment

Author Barry Skelhorn, DC Mallery, Christine Lajewski, Kathleen Wolak, Patrick Winters, Jesse Morrison, Christopher J. Ferguson, Craig Meinhart, CR Brooks
Publisher Sanitarium Press
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
Price not listed
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸
Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASINB0160HHPSQ
ISBN-13978B0160HHPS3
Sales Rank385,922
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Welcome to the Sanitarium

The perfect length for your in-between reading, you’ll love the portability of this little slice of damnation as you tremble while you wait for the doctor, fear for your life over lunch, and lose yourself in the mesmerizing poetry of oblivion. It’s that easy to dive into these short horror fiction reads. Discover new authors and awake new nightmares each and every month. Sound too crazy to be true?

Within Sanitarium (Horror Fiction and Dark Verse) Magazine Issue 37 you will find the horror fiction your deepest fears crave:

  • The Trauma Eater by DC Mallery
  • Katy Did by Christine Lajewski
  • Guest by Kathleen Wolak
  • The Stranger by Patrick Winters
  • Gorge by Jesse Morrison
  • Solitudo by Christopher J. Ferguson
  • Lethargica by Craig Meinhart
  • Where Do I Go by CR Brooks
  • Pier Paolo Pasolini Takes Me to Hell by Justin Holliday

On the record with:

  • Tales to Terrify
  • Flipping Zombies
  • A Classic Case of Lycanthropy

A little word from our readers:

One of the great things about Sanitarium Magazine is the effort they put into discovering new authors. Many horror magazines favor work of King or other "proven" authors, but by reaching out the the next generation, Sanitarium opens the door to really new ideas. - DL SHANNON // DEVER, CO

Sanitarium is an excellent high quality horror magazine full of new, emerging writers and some old faces. All the stories are very good. However, my personal favourite by Lex Sinclair stands out as the best. It has elements of Edgar Allen Poe. - SAM // LONDON, UK