Night Terrors Vol. 19: Short Horror Stories Anthology by Scare Street


Night Terrors Vol. 19: Short Horror Stories Anthology
Title : Night Terrors Vol. 19: Short Horror Stories Anthology
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : -
Language : English
Format Type : Kindle Edition
Number of Pages : 199
Publication : First published October 20, 2021

Trick or treat, trick or treat! Hungry ghouls crave fresh meat…

A recovering addict faces the ultimate test when an old friend puts him through a terrifying ordeal. Two brave souls spend the night in a haunted house, only to emerge forever changed. And a cursed photographer goes to horrific lengths when their vision slowly decays…

Scare Street is proud to present a new collection of diabolical delights. Twelve nightmarish tales of terror lurk within this sinister tome. Each one is a treat for shivers and shrieks. And the only tricks you’ll find are the ones your mind plays on you, as you feverishly turn another page…

Were those footsteps you heard, creaking across the floorboards? Was that whispering outside the window? Or just the whistling of the wind?

The sounds grew closer, louder. A horde of tiny ghouls scamper into your room, saliva dripping from their razor-sharp fangs. And you realize there is only one treat they crave.

The sweet taste of human flesh…

This volume features to following
1. Poor Boys in Poorhouses by Peter Kelly
2. Bitten by A. J. Hartson
3. A Night in the Kohler House by Donna Marie West
4. Hank's Murder by S. B. Duncan
5. Filtered by Sarah Stegall
6. A Case of the Creeps by Melinda Long
7. In the Rearview by Nikki R. Leigh
8. An Old Friend by Montgomery England
9. New Arcadia by Kristen Reid
10. Godbeetle by Mike Morgan
11. Joe Baker Closes Up by Jackson Robinson
12. Millie's Lore by Ron Ripley and Kevin Saito


Night Terrors Vol. 19: Short Horror Stories Anthology Reviews


  • David

    In this volume we get a great variety of frights. We have giant leeches, overprotective nannies, intelligent giant beetles and a host of other insane scenarios. This is what I like most about this series - that even after 19 volumes, the stories never get stale or repetitive. Sure, there are a lot of ghosts but they come in many different flavors. Terrors don't have to be presented in "familiar" forms (werewolves, zombies, ghosts, etc) to make you keep the lights on at night. In fact, it's finding monsters in nontraditional guises that provides the most memorable reads.
    None of that would mean squat if the stories themselves weren't well written , and these are. They rarely have predictable endings and many will make the reader sit up and say "whoa!"

  • Cobwebby Eldritch SpookyReads Reindeer

    Halloween is close, so warm your heart and scare yourself with this 12-story collection in Scare Street's NIGHT TERRORS Series. From a Haunting that is actually healing to a new kind of Haunting never before encountered by eidetic Jimmy Hsu, there's appeal here to all to "get your scares on," stay awake all night...and ponder on a possible other cause of wasting disease. Jump in and enjoy these Scares.

  • Jennifer Roth

    Enjoyable eerie!

    This is an interesting anthology of horror stories, widely varied to ensure there's something to creep out everyone! I found Sarah Stegall's contribution especially horrific!

  • Nancy

    Some stories were very good, particularly Sarah Stegall’s. Others I wasn’t as keen on. Still worth a read.