An anthology of brand new Underground Horror
Former editor-in-chief at Abaddon and Solaris, Jonathan Oliver has
had stories published in a variety of magazines and anthologies in
the UK and the US. He wrote two novels for Abaddon Books – The Call
of Kerberos and The Wrath of Kerberos – and his four anthologies
for Solaris received widespread critical acclaim and awards
nominations.
Born in Greenwich, London, Christopher Fowler has written for film,
television, radio, graphic novels, and for national newspapers. He
is a regular columnist for both UK The Independent on Sunday and
the Financial Times. Fowler is the multi-award winning author of
more than thirty novels and ten short-story collections, including
the lauded Bryant & May Peculiar Crimes Unit mystery novels. In
2010 was nominated for eight national book awards.
Gary McMahon’s fiction has appeared in magazines and anthologies in
the U.K. and U.S and has been reprinted in both The Mammoth Book of
Best New Horror and The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror. He is the
British-Fantasy-Award-nominated author of Rough Cut, All Your Gods
Are Dead, Dirty Prayers, How to Make Monsters, Rain Dogs, Different
Skins, Pieces of Midnight and To Usher, The Dead, and has edited an
anthology of original novelettes titled We Fade to Grey. For
Abaddon Books and Solaris he has written Hungry Hearts and the
Concrete Grove trilogy, and for Angry Robot he has written the
Thomas Usher books.
Paul Meloy was born in 1966 in South London. He is the author of
Islington Crocodiles and Dogs with Their Eyes Shut, and the
collection Electric Breakfast. His work has been published in Black
Static, Interzone and a variety of award winning anthologies. He
lives in Devon with his family.
Rebecca Levene has been a writer and editor for fifteen years. In
that time she has storylined Emmerdale, written a children's book
about Captain Cook, several science fiction and horror novels, a
novelisation and making-of book for Rebellion's Rogue Trooper video
game, and a Beginner's Guide to Poker. She has also edited a range
of media tie-in books. She was associate producer on the ITV1 drama
Wild at Heart, story consultant on the Chinese soap opera Joy Luck
Street, script writer on Family Affairs and Is Harry on the Boat?
and is part of the writing team for Channel 5's Swinging. She has
had two sit-coms optioned, one by the BBC and one by Talkback, and
currently has a detective drama in development with Granada
Television.
Simon Bestwick was born in 1974. His short fiction has popped up
all over the place, in the UK and the States, and is collected in A
Hazy Shade of Winter. His first novel, Tomes of The Dead: Tide of
Souls, received wide critical praise and, more recently, he has
been nominated for the Bram Stoker award.
Al Ewing has been a Judge Dredd aficionado since the age of nine,
and is best known in the UK for his work on Dredd in 2000 AD, where
he also co-created Zombo and Damnation Station. In addition, Ewing
has written various novels for Solaris and Abaddon Books, including
The Fictional Man, Pax Omega and Gods of Manhattan, and is
currently writing Mighty Avengers and Loki: Agent of Asgard for
Marvel Comics.
James Lovegrove is the author of nearly 60 books, including the New
York Times bestselling Pantheon series, the Redlaw novels and the
Dev Harmer Missions. He has produced five Sherlock Holmes novels
and a Conan Doyle/Lovecraft mashup trilogy, The Cthulhu Casebooks.
He has also written tie-in novels for the TV show Firefly. James
has sold well over 50 short stories and published two collections,
Imagined Slights and Diversifications. He has produced a dozen
short books for readers with reading difficulties, and a
four-volume fantasy saga for teenagers, The Clouded World, under
the pseudonym Jay Amory. James has been shortlisted for numerous
awards, including the Arthur C. Clarke Award, the John W. Campbell
Memorial Award, the Bram Stoker Award, the British Fantasy Society
Award and the Manchester Book Award. His short story “Carry The
Moon In My Pocket” won the 2011 Seiun Award in Japan for Best
Translated Short Story. His work has been translated into fifteen
languages, and his journalism has appeared in periodicals as
diverse as Literary Review, Interzone, BBC MindGames, All About
History and Comic Heroes. He contributes a regular fiction-review
column to the Financial Times and lives with his wife, two sons and
tiny dog in Eastbourne.
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