My library button
  • Book cover of Night Terrors Vol. 16

    Beware of what’s creeping in the dark… An elderly farmer learns the horrifying truth beyond the phrase “True love never dies”. Something sinister lurks behind the distant eyes of a mother’s traumatized son. And a gravedigger slowly descends into madness, as he grows obsessed with the corpse of a little girl… Scare Street’s latest collection shines a flickering candle on the terrifying forces of darkness that haunt our dreams. Death, madness, obsession… The darker side of the human psyche is revealed with each bone-chilling page of these fourteen macabre tales. Come along on a journey into the eternal night. Delve into the secrets and mysteries that hide in the darkness, just beyond the light. They’re reaching out for you, grasping at your flesh, pulling you closer, whispering in your ear. And once you give in to their siren song of shadows, there’s no turning back… Featuring the following short stories: 1. Jelly by P. D. Williams 2. This New Creature by Georgia Cook 3. Stargazer by Laszlo Tamasfi 4. Ant Traps by William Presley 5. Sarah Jane by Don Gillette 6. My Dead Brother by Raymund P. Reyes 7. Metamorphosed by Ross S. Simon 8. It Happened on Sunday Street by Bryson Richard 9. The Delicate Sound of Music by Justin Boote 10. The Briefcase by K. C. Dunford 11. Something Juicy by Jon Clark 12. Charlie in the Attic by Russell Richardson 13. Prodigal Son by John Gallant 14. The Dreamcatcher by Ron Ripley and Kevin Saito

  • Book cover of The Conduit
  • Book cover of Caliber Presents - Volume 4

    Caliber Comics acclaimed anthology series returns with all new stories. In order to fulfill the last wishes of his eccentric millionaire uncle, James has to spend a night in a long-abandoned observatory and confirm the existence of the mysterious Planet X.A celestial object that is unknown to modern science, but was more than familiar to the ancient tribes of the Amazon who worshiped bloodthirsty gods all those centuries ago. While waiting for the planet to reveal itself, James kills time reading his uncle's dream journal...just to find out firsthand that the visions that tortured him at night were more than mere figments of his imagination. Written by Laszlo Tamasfi and illustrated by Jeremy Ray, Lost Arno, Branko Jovanovic and many more, Caliber Presents Volume 4: The Observatory collects stories from that strange corner of the horror genre where anything can happen and nothing is off limits! Where the secret behind the family's famous meatball recipe is even more stomach-turning than you feared; the mascots in front of the shopping mall are not wearing costumes; and an elevator knows how to shake the strollers between floors so the babies never grow up to be annoying teenagers.

  • Book cover of Dracula's Death

    The first motion picture to ever feature the character of Dracula was Dracula's Death, a Hungarian silent film made in 1921. It was not based on Bram Stoker's novel, but rather it was an original story about a young woman, who encounters the famous vampire during her stay at a mental asylum. The movie, just like so many others from the silent film era, is considered lost. Luckily, a prose adaptation was published in 1924, which has survived in its entirety. We present an English translation of this novelization, with stunning new illustrations by Jozsef Svab. This publication also features The Devil Flew Away, a comprehensive essay on the history of Dracula's Death., written by Laszlo Tamasfi.