Terror in the Shadows Vol. 11: Horror Short Stories Collection with Scary Ghosts, Paranormal & Supernatural Monsters
Terror in the Shadows • Book 11
by Kathryn St. John-Shin, Scare Street, Ron Ripley, David Longhorn, Sara Clancy, Anna Sinjin, Johnny Raven, Bronson Carey
Why You'll Love This
Thirteen authors, thirteen ways to get under your skin — and at least one of these stories will follow you to bed.
- Great if you want: varied horror from a roster of genre-dedicated indie authors
- The experience: quick, punchy reads that build dread fast and don't overstay
- The writing: each contributor brings a distinct voice — no two stories feel alike
- Skip if: you prefer a single sustained narrative over anthology variety
About This Book
Darkness comes in thirteen varieties in this installment of the long-running Terror in the Shadows series, and each one finds a fresh way under your skin. A filmmaker pulls at a thread from a bully's mysterious suicide and discovers something far worse waiting at the other end. A routine medical procedure opens a door that shouldn't exist. An environmental crime triggers a revenge that is cold-blooded in every sense. These aren't tales about monsters lurking in obvious places — they're about the moment ordinary life cracks open and something wrong spills through.
What distinguishes this collection is the range its eight contributors bring without sacrificing cohesion. Ron Ripley, Sara Clancy, David Longhorn, and the rest each carry a distinct voice, yet the anthology reads with the pacing and intentionality of a single, well-curated vision. The stories are lean and efficient, building dread through restraint rather than spectacle, and the variety of settings and threats keeps readers off-balance in the best possible way. By the time the final story closes, the cumulative effect is something a single novel rarely achieves — a slow, creeping certainty that the shadows have been watching all along.