The Horror Tree Recent Markets, Articles, Interviews, and Fiction!

Taking Submissions: A Breath of Time

Deadline: July 20th, 2025
Payment: 8 cents/6 pence per word for original stories, 6 cents/4 pence for reprints.
Theme: Love where time itself is conquered (time travel, time bending, etc)

We’re seeking short stories for our brand-new Romantic Fantasy series, a paid market for new and established writers. We’re looking for tales featuring strong-willed, independent women who are resilient, perhaps flawed or possess hidden powers, secrets or royal bloodlines. Such protagonists would not be defined solely by their love interests but grow through emotionally charged journeys. Friendships and love interests might be brooding, mysterious or dangerously alluring. Relationships might emphasize deep emotional connections, with lyrical, romantic scenes central to each character’s arc.

Ideal submissions will weave emotional tension such as longing, betrayal and love into epic fantasy worlds depicting prophecies, injustice and conflict. We welcome stories that explore moral dilemmas or sacrifices tied to love and duty, and will look out for richly imagined settings, from fae realms and alternate worlds to magical kingdoms, complete with unique magic systems, mythical creatures, royal courts and epic quests. Romance should be integral to the plot, with other elements such as slow-burn attraction, enemies who become lovers, forbidden love or fated matches. If you’re ready to immerse readers in unforgettable adventures where love and fantasy collide, we’d love to read your story. Read on for more tips on the specific titles…

A Breath of Time

Lost loves, love discovered, love unreachable unless Time itself is conquered, these and many other time-bending, time traveling, time feasting themes can spark your imagination for stories of alternate history, of ancient forests returning to haunt the present and great adventures through dreams and timeless mountain tops, all with hearts beating to the rhythm of romance. Let’s see where your stories take us!

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Epeolatry Book Review: Thin Slices by Melody E. McIntyre

Disclosure:

Our reviews may contain affiliate links. If you purchase something through the links in this article we may receive a small commission or referral fee. This happens without any additional cost to you.

Title: Thin Slices
Author: Melody E. McIntyre
Genre: Horror Literature
Publisher: Independent
Publication date: 12th January, 2025

Synopsis: Welcome to Thin Slices, the debut collection from Melody E. McIntyre, writer of short, dark fiction. With over 90 stories, all less than 1000 words apiece, this little book is bursting with scares. Melody drew her inspiration from history, mythology, science fiction, monsters, ghosts, and secret places only accessible by night.

These stories may be tiny, but the terrors they invoke are anything but.

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Taking Submissions: Diabolical Plots 2025 Window

Submission Window: July 7th-21st, 2025
Payment: 10 cents per word
Theme: Science fiction, fantasy, horror (everything must have a speculative element, even horror).

Submissions will be open from July 7-21, 2025!

Please do not query about when our next submission window will be. When we know when our next submission window will be, the first place we mark it is here. So if it is not noted here, then we do not know yet.

David Steffen is the editor, who you may also know from reading The Long List Anthology series or from the Submission Grinder, which you can use to find markets for your writing and track your submissions.  Diabolical Plots is a SFWA-qualifying market, so if you have a personal goal to join SFWA, making a sale here would help you toward that goal.

If you have already read our guidelines and are ready to submit, you can SUBMIT HERE.

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Taking Submissions: Carnage House Issue 8

Deadline: July 14, 2025
Payment: $5
Theme: Splatterpunk and extreme horror stories

This is your last chance to get into “The Best of Carnage House Year Two!” But to have a shot at making our second Best of… anthology, you first need to get into Issue #8 of the Carnage House e-zine, which is open for submissions through July 14.

We are looking for splatterpunk and extreme horror stories that run the gamut from humorous to gore to smut. Be creative, be wild, be plot-driven with solid character, but most of all, DO NOT be boring—save that for your English Lit survey class. If you can do all this stuff, you can make a whole $5.00 USD and don’t spend it all in one place.

We want solid, entertaining writing that evokes feelings. Carnage House is a splatter friendly web ’zine—so nothing against cozy, but cozy, we’re not.

We invite LGBTQIA and BIPOC themes, and we encourage authors from diverse backgrounds to submit to us.
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Epeolatry Book Review: The Midnight Muse by Jo Kaplan

Disclosure:

Our reviews may contain affiliate links. If you purchase something through the links in this article we may receive a small commission or referral fee. This happens without any additional cost to you.

Title: The Midnight Muse

Author: Jo Kaplan

Genre: Horror; Mystery and Thrillers

Publisher: CLASH Books 

Publication Date: March 10th, 2026

 

Synopsis:

When a metal band’s lead singer vanishes in the woods, the mushrooms in the forest might know more than they’re letting on in this mycelium-metal horror novel from Shirley Jackson Award-nominated author Jo Kaplan.

The dead collect in low places. That’s what Brynn Werner, lead singer of metal band Queen Carrion, wrote in her notebook before she vanished while staying at a cabin in Oregon’s Umpqua National Forest.

A year later, on the anniversary of her disappearance, the rest of her bandmates visit the cabin to remember her and find a way to move on. But tensions arise over who should be their new singer and who is responsible for Brynn’s disappearance—tensions that boil over as they realize not all is as it seems at Trail Creek Cabin.

Strange entries in the guestbook write about visions of a pale form that moves through the trees, figures wearing gas masks lurk in the distance, and there’s a strange fungus growing from the wall of a tunnel in the cabin’s basement. Then they hear Brynn’s voice echo impossibly through the forest—and the pale form that emerges from the trees is her perfect likeness. Is it her ghost…or something else?

Brynn knew there was a secret in these woods. It’s why she chased her muse here to finish her masterpiece. The Midnight Muse is an alluring and grotesque dissection of self and fungus. Kaplan delivers an ominous spiral of psychological torment as the members of Queen Carrion slip into a more natural skin.

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Trembling With Fear 6-22-25

Greetings, children of the dark. I’m currently melting here in south London, mid-way through a heatwave forecast to last through to next week. And I’m not happy about it. So, to save you my grumping all over the internet, I’m going to hand over briefly to the editor of our summer special, John Nugent—because, yes, it’s almost that time. Some of you have already been sending in your dark tales for the summer season, but it’s time to do the official big call-out. John would like your best and darkest ASAP; submissions officially close in mid-July. Here’s what will get him to stand up and take notice (aside from a hockey mask and a machete by the lake, of course):

“Game changers for me include strong prose, weird elements, and scares that feel earned,” says John. “I also like twists on the classic tropes!”

Get your sun-drenched darkness to us, and see if John feels that scare is earned… And remember, you can meet the whole TWF team over here, in case you’ve ever wondered who’s behind the emails.

OK, back to the reason you’re here: the dark and speculative stuff. For our main course, JH Tomen takes us into a world where ghosts are very real—and very unwelcome. That’s followed by the short, sharp speculations of:

  • Santiago Exemino’s maternal needs,
  • Yanina Sanchez’s hungry entity, and
  • Alejandro Gonzales’s password issues.

Over to you, Stuart

Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

Hi all.

Wow, what a busy week. I’ve been working quite a bit on a new section that we’re adding to the site and preparing for the new layout, as well as working on the pieces of the new layout that we haven’t quite completed yet. While most of this isn’t visible quite yet, one thing that you will notice is that our menu has slightly changed at the top of the site. Previously, it was a bit fractured, but now all writing opportunities can be found under ‘Opportunities,’ and a couple of outdated links have been removed. We’ll be making a couple of other changes here as well in the near future!

As previously stated, our next goals are to get the newsletter swapover done, the new layout put in place live, and finish Trembling With Fear: Year 8, which is this year’s release. Fun fact, that last one we’ve got a digital copy to start proofing. Hopefully, that’ll begin soon! 

Just a reminder that Trembling With Fear: Year 7 and More Tales From The Tree: Volume 5 are now available for order! Again, a huge shout out and a big thank you to all of the authors who contributed to it and all of our editing staff for helping push this one live!

Now, for the standards:

  • Thank you so much to everyone who has become a Patreon for Horror Tree. We honestly couldn’t make it without you all!

Offhand, if you’ve ordered Trembling With Fear Volume 6, we’d appreciate a review!

For those who are looking to connect with Horror Tree as we’re not really active on Twitter anymore, we’re also in BlueSky and Threads. *I* am also now on BlueSky and Threads.

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

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Serial Saturday: Caught Looking by Marcus Field, Chapter Two

  1. Serial Saturday: Caught Looking by Marcus Field, Chapter One
  2. Serial Saturday: Caught Looking by Marcus Field, Chapter Two
  3. Serial Saturday: Caught Looking by Marcus Field, Chapter Three
  4. Serial Saturday: Caught Looking by Marcus Field, Chapter Four Scheduled for July 5, 2025

Chapter Two

                                                          

I met Cassie on the tenth of February the next year while listening to an audiobook on the steps leading up to the school library. I was alone when she approached me. I was almost always alone. After a full year of blindness I’d given up on ever swinging a bat again, watching a ball fly over the fence, seeing the moon and the stars, seeing someone smile at something I said. I’d given up on a lot of things. For most of that year, I’d given up on being happy.

Right after it happened, the baseball team, my high school, the whole town, rallied around me with school assemblies denouncing violence, fundraisers to help with medical expenses, articles written about me appeared in the local paper, the police publicly vowed to bring my assailants to justice, and I was even gifted a baseball signed by all the members of the Boston Red Sox. But what gave me the most hope and the most comfort in those initial days were the eye specialists who told my parents and me that the blindness might be temporary. For a while I held out hope, but days turned into weeks, weeks into months, and then somehow half a year had passed without even the slightest improvement. My sight was long gone. 

Friends from the ball field stopped calling. Invites to dinners and parties and hangouts dwindled. Doctors no longer ended appointments with encouragement. My assault, once a subject of intense public outrage, became a sensitive topic to avoid and dodge, something spoken about in whispers. I realized that once everyone went through the motions of expressing their outrage, once they did something to prove they cared, people wanted life to go back to normal. But there was no going back to normal for me. I was alone in the darkness.

I don’t want to make it sound like I was shunned by the world. A few old friends and a few old coaches tried to keep in touch, but I pushed them away. I stopped taking calls, stopped talking to people at school, and when my parents asked how I felt I either ignored them or replied with sarcasm. I’m not proud of how I behaved. I was young, immature, and it wasn’t just my vision that was stolen. My identity, my future, my entire life had been taken away in a senseless act of violence by complete strangers. I became something of a loner, a ghost of that boy who wanted nothing more than to swing a bat and hear the crack of the baseball against it.

Towards the end of that year, something changed. Maybe I just got tired of being miserable, of feeling helpless, of wallowing in self-pity while millions of other people were out there living full and meaningful lives without sight. Those boys didn’t just take away my ability to see, what they took was my will, my drive, my desire to make something of myself, and I was determined to take it back.

 It started with an urge to understand what happened to me. I don’t mean the motives of those boys from the field. Any interest I’d ever had in them had long ago dwindled into nothingness. No. I wanted to understand the biology behind what happened to my vision. I realized that I didn’t know the first thing about why staring into the sun had blinded me. What was the exact mechanism behind it? I wanted to understand the gears and circuits of it all.

When I asked Dad about it, he admitted he didn’t really know the science, but after a few days he gave me several audiobooks about the biology and physics of human vision. For hours and hours I laid on my bed and learned about rods and cones, the retina, the prefrontal cortex, that the human brain fills the blind spots in our vision with what it expects and predicts should be there, all kinds of fascinating things. Things my old teachers probably talked about while I daydreamed about the big leagues.

My parents were concerned when I locked myself away in my room, coming out only for meals and to ask for more audiobooks. Mom, who never before pushed me towards baseball, even suggested I try Beep Baseball, a version of the great game using beeps and buzzes to guide the blind to the ball and the bases. It was interesting. I tucked that idea away in the back of my mind, but it was too late. A new obsession held sway over me.

As I listened to that audiobook on the tenth of February, a memoir by a man slowly losing his sight to a condition called retinitis pigmentosa, someone tapped my shoulder, pulled back my headphones, and whispered in my ear.

“Would you be my Valentine?”

Her warm breath, her husky voice, tickled my inner ear and a pleasurable excitement rippled through my body. That was how I fell in love with her. At that age, that’s about all it takes.

“Who are you?” I asked, removing the headphones.

Her giggle was girly. A small, soft hand touched my forearm. She said her name was Cassie and that she had been working up the courage to talk to me for a long, long time.

 

***

 

Things moved fast with Cassie. Too fast. Not that I minded, at the time. We met in front of the library after school almost every day then went to her house where no one was home. Before I met Cassie I’d never even kissed a girl but after a couple of weeks there was very little left to the imagination. It was all I thought about. Every class was an eternity. I had no appetite for lunch. Sometimes I lay awake at night thinking about seeing Cassie the next day, the feel of her body against mine, the low moans into my ear.

Ever since I lost my vision, Mom and Dad drove me everywhere I needed to go, which was mostly home, school, and the doctor. When I told them Cassie could drive me home after school so they wouldn’t have to leave work early, they were silent. I hated those silences in which they communicated in secret using facial expressions, mouthing words, maybe even jotting down notes on a napkin. Sometimes I heard whispers, an exasperated sigh, the click of my mom’s jewelry when she shook her head. I know they didn’t mean anything by it, but it hurt to have my blindness used against me. In the end they didn’t object. Maybe they thought a girlfriend would be good for me, or maybe they were tired of watching me mope around the house. Their only condition was that I bring Cassie over for dinner some evening.

I didn’t know it at the time but Cassie was never coming over for dinner.

 

***

 

The first time Cassie brought me home and pulled me into her bed I thought there was nothing else in the world that I needed to stay happy, but no matter how young a man is, eventually the all-consuming potency of sex dwindles and evaporates. Something deeper was needed if the relationship was going to survive, and I had some concerns about Cassie. I hardly knew anything about her. Our conversations felt superficial, distant, like talking to a stranger on an airplane or a relative who only appears on major holidays. Outside of those few hours after school we never spent time together. There were other things too, things she said that never made sense, things she didn’t seem to know about sports and music and politics, as if she lived someplace where the wider currents of the world never reached.

One Friday afternoon while I lay beside Cassie in her bed, I decided to get some answers.

“Can I ask you something?” I asked.

“If it’s for another round, that’ll cost another shoulder rub.”

I forced a smile.

“No, it’s something I’ve been thinking about for a while.”

I felt her body tense. I cleared my throat and took a deep breath.

“Why um… why don’t we ever talk at school?”

Cassie sat up.

“Do you ever try to find me at school?” she asked.

“As best I can,” I said, tapping my eyes. “Do you ever try to find me?”

“Well,” Cassie said, pulling the blankets tight around her body as she lay back down, “I was worried you might be… ashamed. If anyone knew. I never mentioned it but I’m not what you would call a looker. That’s why it was so hard to talk to you.”

I laughed. A cruel thing to do but I couldn’t help it. She slapped my arm but it wasn’t hard and I suspected she was smiling.

“Why the hell would I care about that?”

“Men always care.”

“Well, I don’t care what other people say, you’re beautiful to me.”

For a long time we lay in silence. I felt good. Relieved. That was one concern that had a reasonable explanation, even if it was silly. The rest of my worries could wait for another day.

Cassie broke the silence.

“I hope this isn’t a terrible thing to ask, but would you like to see me?”

“Why? You have a spare set of eyes I could borrow?”

She didn’t laugh.

“I’m just curious. If there was a way you could see me, would you do it?”

“Well, yeah, but why even ask something like that?”

“There might be something I could do.”

I scoffed and rolled onto my side. 

“I’m serious,” Cassie said, poking my back. “Don’t roll away from me, mister. If there was a way to get your vision back, would you do it? Even if it had some consequences?”

I didn’t like the question. The long silence that followed it was uncomfortable.

“You could play ball again,” Cassie said.

Less than a year ago, regaining my sight, returning to the field, would have been a dream come true. Not only did the idea no longer have the same appeal, it felt like stepping back into a life I’d already left behind.

“Sorry I asked about school, alright? Let’s just drop it.”

After a moment she pressed her warm naked body against mine. Her fingers swam through my hair. We didn’t talk much the rest of that afternoon.

Indie Bookshelf Releases 06/20/2025

Got a book to launch, an event to promote, a kickstarter or seeking extra work/support as a result of being hit economically by life in general?

Get in touch and we’ll promote you here. The post is prepared each Tuesday for publication on Friday. Contact us via Horror Tree’s contact address or connect via Twitter or Facebook.

Click on the book covers for more information. Remember to scroll down to the bottom of the page – there’s all sorts lurking in the deep.

 

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