Why Horror Helps My Depression (and Happy Books Don’t)

For as long as I can remember, I have dealt with depression.

This is true for almost everyone these days, so most of you reading this are probably familiar with the feeling.

There is a particular exhaustion that comes with depression. It is an exhaustion that sleep, sunlight, or any of the well-meaning list of things friends will suggest to you can’t cure. These suggestions might be to exercise more, drink more water, or read something uplifting.

Depression, and its exhaustion, distorts everything. It gives everything a heaviness that doesn’t really exist. Even the things that are supposed to help. Maybe even especially those things.

When I was a teenager, my dad told me it was my choice of reading material that was making me “morbid.” He said I should read something different, something lighter. (Which ended up being “Clan of the Cave Bear” to appease him.)

When you are a fan of horror (books or movies) and people see you struggling, they try to steer you away from that. They point you toward softer, more hopeful stories. Books about healing. Romantic comedies with a happily ever after. They want you to see that the light can win, and that the world can be a clean and uncomplicated place.

If you’ve never struggled with depression, the logic sounds simple enough: if you feel bad, consume something good to balance the scales.

Too bad it doesn’t really work like that.

Well, maybe it does for some people, but when I’m in a depressive spiral, feeding my brain-meat something bright doesn’t lift the dimness inside; it only highlights the contrast. Every cheerful character is a reminder that I am not them. Hopeful endings feel distant and artificial. Things don’t happen that way in real life. Every act of happiness on the page sharpens the edges of what I am lacking, turning something meant to be soothing into a razor’s edge that hurts more than helps.

Why can’t I feel this? Why don’t things resolve for me like that?

It’s not unusual for those books to deepen my depression instead of offering me comfort. They show me a beautiful but uninhabitable alien landscape. One where I will never belong. It becomes a kind of spiritual isolation.

Horror, on the other hand, opens the door and invites you to come sit down somewhere more reality-based.

Horror has an honesty that other genres often avoid. Horror doesn’t pretend the world is fair. It doesn’t insist that suffering is temporary, purposeful, and neatly resolved. It acknowledges fear, dread, grief, and the knowledge that something is terribly, deeply wrong, and is probably going to stay that way.

For me, the atmosphere of horror matches my internal landscape, and that feels like a breath of fresh air. There is tension, unease, and the sense that something is lurking just beneath the surface, and these things are reflections of reality, not distortions of it.

Horror gives shape to the feelings we suffer that are otherwise difficult to articulate.

Living with depression can feel like being haunted. There is a presence that follows you room to room to room. It sits with you, presses into your thoughts, whispers things you don’t want to hear. It changes the way the world looks by dulling colors, flattening sounds, and stretching time into something unmanageable.

If horror understands anything, it is a good haunting.

Horror knows what it’s like to be pursued by something invisible. It knows how it feels to question your own mind. It knows that sometimes the threat isn’t external, because it’s already inside the house. Most of all, horror knows what it’s like to tell someone that something is wrong, and have them brush it off as a triviality.

There is comfort in that.

Not that horror “fixes” anything. It doesn’t. The monsters don’t cure me, and the stories don’t ease the heaviness or the exhaustion. But it validates it. Horror lets me know that the feeling is real enough to be named, shaped, and confronted.

Horror lets sadness, fear, and overwhelm exist without apology.

In many “happy” narratives, those negative emotions are obstacles to overcome as quickly as possible. They are stepping stones to be walked over on the way to a brighter end. But in horror, those emotions ARE the story. They are explored and lingered over, not rushed past as if they were nothing.

For someone with depression, the ability to linger with those negative emotions instead of feeling pressured to hide them under the rug matters.

It’s the difference between being told to “move on” and being told, “Everything you’re feeling is valid.”

Depression often thrives on vague, formless dread. There is a constant sense that something is wrong, but you can not put a name to it, can’t stop it.

When reading (or watching) horror, you can turn those same feelings into something concrete. There is a monster, or a curse, or a stalker in the dark. And when something has a shape, it can be faced.

In horror, as in reality, sometimes the characters don’t win. The ending can be bleak, but there is still a kind of catharsis in watching it happen at all. The narrative arc becomes something you can follow, rather than something that you can’t figure out.

Happy books (and movies) often skip confrontation, especially confrontation with negative outcomes. They leap from struggle to resolution in one graceful stride, smoothing over the mess in between. And when you are stuck forever in that messy middle, that leap feels like a cheat.

Horror doesn’t skip the mess; it revels in it. It laughs in your face and asks, “What if this doesn’t get better? What if it actually gets worse?” Paradoxically, that kind of bleak taunting can feel more comforting than forced optimism.

Because when you’re depressed, hope usually isn’t believable.

Not that horror is everyone’s refuge. Some people out there might actually have their pain and trauma soothed by the “happily ever after”. But if you’re like me and the cheerful stories end up making you feel worse for every good thing that happens to the characters, maybe you should try horror.

Because horror offers something that is comforting without demanding that we feel better before we’re ready. It allows us to sit with the darkness without pretending it will blow away like a bad dream when the sun comes up. Because there is relief in opening a book and finding that the world inside is just as haunted as you feel.

It makes you feel less alone in the dark.

Chills Without the Gore: Reviewing the Horror Anthology A Twinge of Terror

Horror doesn’t always have to shock, gore, or terrify you into sleepless nights. Sometimes, the most enduring chills come from subtle unease, clever twists, and eerie atmospheres instead. A Twinge of Terror embraces that gentler side of horror with 16 light horror stories. These tales offer stories that are more about shivers than screams. Each story in this anthology tiptoes along the line between the unsettling and the whimsical, proving that fear can be delivered without blood or brutality. Sometimes, the most haunting stories are the ones that play with your imagination rather than your stomach.

The stories in this collection were gathered by The Butchered writers as part of their first anthology that wasn’t written by group members alone, so it offers up some new and different horror talent from their past collections.

Originally aimed at a young adult audience, A Twinge of Terror might not have anything for the splatter loving horror fan, but is good for someone just easing into the genre.

The stories inside include.

  1. TAPPED IN – First things around her house start being destroyed under mysterious circumstances.  Then the trees start tapping…..
  2. THE CANDLE IN THE WINDOW – An old fashioned haunted house story where one girl becomes a self appointed guardian.
  3. A GILDED BUTTERFLY – A woman on the run from her husband finds herself living in a boarding house with some unusual occupants.
  4. THE BELDAM OF BEDLAM – A man set on disproving the existence of witches visits an accused witch in the asylum that houses her.
  5. BLANKY – A unique take on a child’s favorite blanket and the monster in the closet.
  6. CRUISING WITH HONEY DOWN DIABLO ROAD – A young man on the hunt for his estranged mother finds her, on Diablo Road.
  7. FRIEND – A girl bullied by her older brother asks her imaginary friend for help, only to find out it might not be that helpful after all.
  8. SALLY’S RIDE – A classic radioactive creature feature, and the family dog gone wrong.
  9. THE FEBRUARY PACT – An old family curse means someone is lost every February. Leah is determined to break the curse, but will the price be too much to pay?
  10. THE GIRL WITH THE FLOWER BONNET – When a family acquires an antique painting, and the family dog immediately hates it, you know it’s not going to end well.
  11. THE GOOD PEOPLE – A man becomes a census taker in an attempt to escape a more dangerous job, only to find there are some jobs you can’t get away from.
  12. THE HANDPRINT – There is civil unrest among the humans and the paranormal citizens and a proposition on stronger rights is up for vote. But people keep turning up dead, and solving the case might be the turning point in the vote. 
  13. THE HANDS OF OTHERS – A man purchase a place he worked at once, to revisit a tragic past.
  14. THE PERFECT WORLD DOESN’T NEED YOU – In a future where strong emotions are forbidden, a teenager must face the consequences of hers.
  15. THE SURPRISE PASSENGER – A young man picks up a very surprising hitchhiker.
  16. THE TENNENT – The moral of this story might be, be careful what you invite in with a Ouija board.

Taken together, the stories in A Twinge of Terror show that horror doesn’t always need blood and brutality to work. Sometimes a strange knock on the door, a cursed painting, or an imaginary friend that might be a little too real is more than enough to raise the hairs on the back of your neck. If you’re looking for a collection that leans into eerie concepts and classic spooky storytelling rather than graphic scares, this anthology is an easy and entertaining read.

The Butchered Writers is a global writing collective with over thirty members who explore many different corners of the horror genre. When you open a volume from The Butchered Writers Presents (formerly Terror Monthly), you might encounter quiet psychological horror, creature features, paranormal stories, or splatterpunk. There’s a wide range of styles and themes, ensuring that each volume offers something different for horror fans.

Readers can also sample the group’s work through the free stories available on their Patreon.

Dark Web Horror Done Right: Reviewing Caught in the Web

If you enjoy dark web horror stories, extreme horror anthologies, and disturbing internet-themed fiction, Caught in the Web from The Butchered Writers dives deep into the most terrifying corners of the online world. This collection explores the hidden side of the internet through brutal, unsettling stories perfect for fans of dark fiction and splatterpunk.

Caught in the web book cover

Most of the internet we use every day exists on the visible “surface web.” These are sites easily found through search engines like Google. Beneath that lies the far larger Deep Web, made up of private databases, email accounts, and password-protected pages. Deeper still is the Dark Web, a small but infamous corner of the internet accessed with tools like the Tor Browser. Designed to allow anonymous communication, it has become surrounded by rumors of secret markets, hidden communities, and disturbing content—making it the perfect setting for modern horror stories about curiosity, anonymity, and the dangers of clicking the wrong link.

The Butchered Writers deliver all of that and much more with Caught in the Web: A Dark Web Anthology. This collection contains fourteen stories exploring the darkest corners of the internet, along with a bonus story that takes the idea of the “dark web” a little more literally.

This anthology goes extremely dark, and readers should be aware that it contains graphic horror, extreme violence, and sexual assault.

The stories included are:

ROOM_404.EXE – A sneak peek at a brand-new virtual game turns out to be far more real than expected.
HIGHEST BIDDER – After a night of partying with friends, a young man wakes up strapped to a trolley and caught in a bidding war.
THE DEVIL’S FOOT FETISH – Malcolm is tired of his girlfriend nagging him to find a job, so he discovers a way to make money from one of their shared interests—even if she doesn’t know about it.
CUNT HUNT – Wealthy men pay to hunt women for sport. But what happens when the hunters become the hunted?
NIGHTGLASS – A college student steals a tablet from a thrift store, only to find it has one mysterious app that will change his life forever.
UNICORN – A man searching for a new high orders a designer drug from the dark web, with devastating consequences.
DEAD MAN LIVE – A father will do absolutely anything to keep his family alive.
THE FACILITATOR – The perfect family man hides a dark side hustle.
HOW DARK CAN IT GET – Two young girls believe they’re meeting boys from a dating app. They couldn’t be more wrong.
THE BABY MAMA SHOW – A man discovers a way to profit from his pregnant girlfriend—without her knowledge.
IDENTITY THEFT – Digital stalking and revenge show how the dark web can both harm and help.
DANNY BOY – A once-in-a-lifetime trip to Hawaii might turn out to be a journey “to die for.”
JEFFREY – An epicurean traveler searches the world for the ultimate taste. This story reveals what happens when he finally finds it.
PAY IT DARKWARD – A novella-length story and one of my favorites in the collection. What happens when the dark web gets under your skin… literally?
THROUGH RUSTLING WILLOWS THE SPIDER MAN COMES – Inspired by the dark web from a different perspective, this tale follows a young man’s grim fate and his encounter with Anansi, the trickster.

Overall, Caught in the Web delivers exactly what fans of dark web horror, and extreme horror in general, are looking for: unsettling, inventive, and unapologetically grim stories. From psychological terror to shocking splatterpunk, there’s something in this anthology to disturb and captivate every kind of horror reader. If you’re ready to dive into the darkest corners of the internet, this collection is not to be missed.

The Butchered Writers is a global writing collective with over thirty members who explore many different corners of the horror genre. When you open a volume from The Butchered Writers Presents (formerly Terror Monthly), you might encounter quiet psychological horror, creature features, paranormal stories, or splatterpunk. There’s a wide range of styles and themes, ensuring that each volume offers something different for horror fans.

Readers can also sample the group’s work through the free stories available on their Patreon.

WULFSHAUPT Review: A Dark Werewolf Tale

WULFSHAUPT by Nick Hendricks is a short story at only 28 pages. It just takes one look at the cover to know that it is a werewolf themed horror tale.

A pair of brothers (Jakob and Matthias) find their dog, and all of their sheep, slaughtered.

They, and the men of the town, think it is a pack of wolves, though the brothers notice something odd about some of the tracks. They were too large, too broad. Not normal.

Matthias is old enough now that his father and the other men let him come on a hunting party. The party ends in yet more slaughter, with only Matthias returning home.

Then, along with the younger Jakob, he goes back out in an effort to find his father, but Jakob and Matthias find something more. They find out about a cursed bloodline and the truth that sometimes monsters come through inheritance, and with age.

In an age where werewolves have become romantic partners more than evil beasts WULFSHAUPT by Nick Hendricks brings the bite back to werewolf themed horror.

I have the sequel Wulfshaupt Thaw already loaded on my kindle and ready to go.

(This post contains affiliate links that may earn me a commission at no extra cost to you. This post is cross posted to my substack Wild Verbs. Follow me at Wild Verbs if you want more reading, writing and horror related content.)

Bonemeal – a review

Bonemeal: Limited Preview Release by Michael Hernandez is a short preview of a longer collection to be released in 2026. It gives us 3 short stories to tease us until the full collection is released. I bought the kindle version, but you can get the paperback for just a penny more!

In DRIVE a mother and son on a road trip are hunted by something unexpected and deadly on the road. I enjoyed this one for its unique creature.
In BLOOD DRIVE an office blood drive turns out to not be quite what it seems. While I knew what the outcome was going to be from about the 2nd sentence, I still enjoyed the read.
Lastly, in NIGHT AT THE OPERA, our MC finds himself to be the main attraction. I will admit to not knowing exactly what is going on, even by the end, but it was still a creepy atmospheric read.

I’m looking forward to finding out what the full version of the collection has to offer.

Fifteen Eyes by Tyler Downs

I have a confession to make…. I am a notorious judger of books by their covers. There, I said it. I do the thing they always tell you not to do.

Just look at the amazing cover on Fifteen Eyes by Tyler Downs and tell me that it doesn’t make you want to put it right at the top of your TBR as well!

When I started seeing this particular cover pop up in a couple of the horror reading groups I frequent, I was intrigued. When I grabbed it up on KU and started reading it, I was smitten.

This is the author’s debut collection, and I will be surprised if you don’t see the name Tyler Downs going big places in the horror community.

On Amazon, the description of this collection is this:

Solomon Northcutt enjoys the simple things in life: a nice sweater vest, trivia night with co-workers, and using the eyeballs of the deceased to transcribe horrific deaths for his bosses’ reading pleasure.

Tag along with our happy-go-lucky tour guide, Solomon, as he cracks open a fresh batch of 15 sordid tales. There’ll be all sorts of fun stuff inside…Astrology cults. Bodily theft. Cowboys. A whole ton of ants. Cosmic gods the size of skyscrapers. Religious pilgrimages. Arsonists. A traveling guitarist who grants wishes. Desert cannibals. People floating away on balloons. Addiction. A trip to Heaven. Mental hellscapes. The end of the world. A puppet made from decaying body parts and household appliances. Oh, and maybe a werewolf.

“Maybe a werewolf” he says. Oh, yes, there is a werewolf, but before that there is Solomon, who bookends this collection. There is Fallon and Ed and and a whole eclectic cast of supporting characters in Solomon’s office who all deserve their own tales.

There is a method actress preparing for the role of -this- lifetime.
There is a lonely woman willing to risk it all to maybe not be so lonely anymore.
There is a little girl, some bad guys, and a lot of ants just like the description promised.
Also as promised, there is the end of the world, but also a heated revenge story, an intermission to check in on our host Solomon, a screwed up idea of what happiness is, a man on a religious pilgrimage, proof that lies are not the best way to start a relationship, a hellish peek at heaven, wishes with no strings attached, and somebody who just wants to reunite with their old man.

My descriptions can’t do justice to how each of these stories made me feel, and how I kept not picking the book up to read because I didn’t want to reach the end of it.

After all the tales were told, it was mentioned that Downs is hoping for a couple of novel released in 2026, and I’m looking forward to them.

Fifteen Eyes gets 5 stars.

Week End Review – 11-9-25

Happy Sunday friends! This week seems to have gone by amazingly fast, and horribly slowly all at the same time. Its all a blur I don’t remember too much of. Not that I do much anyway. I work. I sleep. I get up and do it again.

Lets face it though….I’m in it just to make the faux newspapers every week. Look! This week there are cow jokes:

  1. I was interviewed by Nora B. Peevy.
  2. I wrote a story for an upcoming Christmas special for The Butchered Writers. Ya’ll have to wait ’til December to read it.
  3. I read 4 Thanksgiving themed short stories and wrote a little bit about them: 4 Short Reads Filled with Family, Fear, and Feast Gone Wrong
  4. I’m still plugging away at The Butchered Writers Pinterest board. Its dropping in impression since the 31 Days of Free Horror ended. But even the best of us can’t put out a story a day infinitely (at least not if we want them to be any good.)

I have no major plans for the upcoming week really.

I have a doctors appointment tomorrow. Hopefully it will end up with me being able to come off my diabetes medicines. Or at least one of them. My at home tests have all been in range for a while now.

I want to write a story for the Horror flash fiction contest since I skipped the last 2 months. And there is a Butchered Writers anthology that a story is due for I need to get knocked out. (As soon as I get an idea)

Due to working several 6 day stretches and not having 2 days off in a row my mental health isn’t where it out to be. That means with my AuDHD I have an onslaught of doom piles growing, an I plan to tackle those this week, so you might have some before/after blogs coming up.

I also need to start working on crafting projects. I’ve started a TikTok that I hope to dedicate to my “Feral Crafts” and want to have at least one day a week here where I share what I’ve made, which means I actually have to make something. I have SO much craft stash built up I need to use it all.