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  1. We have original short fiction from Ray Nayler (“The Summer Castle”) and Jonathan L. Howard (“In the Walls and Beneath the Fridge”). Our Horror Lab originals include a flash story (“Fenworth City Municipal Watersheds Field Survey”) from A.L. Goldfuss and a poem (“Nineveh”) from Belicia Rhea. We also have the latest installment of our column on horror, “The H Word,” plus ...

  2. If you enjoy reading Nightmare, please consider supporting the magazine via one of the following methods.. Subscribe Direct. Billing: $17.96 (6 months), $33.52 (12 months), $62.24(24 months), or $500 ()

  3. Please use the email addresses below to contact Nightmare departments: Editorial: submissions@nightmare-magazine.com | If you’re interested in writing for Nightmare, please visit our guidelines page before inquiring. Note that we do not publish book reviews, so please do not inquire where to send review copies. Art Department: art@nightmare ...

  4. Interview: Victor LaValle. Victor LaValle is the author of the short story collection Slapboxing with Jesus, three novels, The Ecstatic, Big Machine, and The Devil in Silver, and two novellas, Lucretia and the Kroons and The Ballad of Black Tom. He has been the recipient of numerous awards including a Whiting Writers’ Award, a United States ...

  5. Jul 30, 2022 · NIGHTMARE is a digital horror and dark fantasy magazine. In NIGHTMARE's pages, you will find all kinds of horror fiction, from zombie stories and haunted house tales, to visceral psychological horror. Welcome to issue 119 of NIGHTMARE!

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    • Nightmare Magazine, Wendy N. Wagner
  6. Waiting for Jonah. Once upon a time, there was you and there was Jonah. “Jonah!” you would call out. “Jonah, it’s me! Let me in!”. But he’d never let you in. Before you turned ten, the inside of Jonah’s room remained as opaque as the inside of his thoughts. And he would always, always make you wait. You’d stand there, bouncing ...

  7. I work in a tall brick room with peaked cathedral ceilings. At one end of the room there is a brick-lined chute, chimneylike, that opens up out of the ceiling seventy-five or a hundred feet above a yawning pit in the floor. Every so often, without much warning, a body will fall from the chute and tumble through the air.

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