Year's Best Hardcore Horror Volume 6 - Randy Chandler

Year's Best Hardcore Horror Volume 6

By Randy Chandler

  • Release Date: 2021-05-21
  • Genre: Horror

Description

Welcome to the masquerade.
Two thousand twenty was a reality horror show. And like most obnoxious entertainment reality shows, this one had its own idiosyncratic rules and penalties. Call it The Big Lockdown. We were forced to go to ground, to hide in our holes. Some went underground and never came back. Uncertainty ruled because the rules kept changing. Were we following the science or the mad scientists? Was the light at the end of the tunnel the fiery mouth of hell? We couldn’t say for sure, so we ventured out for food, booze and sundries like scavengers in a slow-motion apocalypse, keeping our distance from fellow human beings because you never knew who might be carrying that heavy viral load.
And everywhere we went, we went behind the mask. So, it became obvious: The theme of our offering of extreme horror tales from 2020 had to be masquerade.
Our masquerading storytellers nevertheless did what they do best. They went deep into the belly of the beast and sent up fictions reflective of these “trying” times. Their stories peel away the masks (or in some cases, the skin) to reveal the inner workings of darkest hearts and minds and deeper fears.
Table of contents
Hey Valentine by Amanda Cecelia Lang /thestrangethingwebecome by Eric La Rocca The Pogonip Fog by Sean Patrick Hazlett The Nipples in Dad’s Tool Box by Ronald Kelly The Happiest Man in the World by Matthew Brockmeyer Otto Hahn Speaks to the Dead by Octavia Cade In Subspace, No One Can Hear You Scream by Hailey Piper Her Wounded Eyes by Robert Guffey Gunfire and Brimstone by Alicia Hilton Going Green by Christine Morgan The Drinking-Horn by Christine Morgan Full Moon Shindig by Patrick C. Harrison III All the Stars in Her Eyes by Deborah Sheldon Synaesthete by Melanie Harding-Shaw The Saint by Alessandro Manzetti The Village by Matias F. Travieso-Diaz The Smell of Night in the Basement by Wendy N. Wagner Whiskey to the Wound by Rachel Nussbaum