Featured Stories
Explore the dark corners of the mind with our thrilling stories
A Little Chin Music tells the story of Dani Marroquin, a barber, who possesses a rare gift. She soothes her client’s minds of stress and sorrow when she shaves them. Little did she know that she would find herself having to bring peace and comfort to the man who brought unspeakable tragedy into her life. Dani’s quiet, regular world of hourly appointments, replete with diverse customers and idiosyncratic barbers, is shattered when her estranged son, a major league baseball player, suddenly comes back into her life.
Dr. Manwell's opus, his memory extraction machine, has brought relief to soldiers suffering from PTSD and to crime victims scarred by sexual assault. The process is simple - take away the horrible memories and replace them with benign, soothing ones. There's only one problem - the memories the doctor extracts from the soldiers and victims can be used to punish those who inflict the pain.
Green Serpent is a story about the distant future where people visit the Green Serpent, a business that lets them experience a virtual reality of previous memories of others in order to act out their wildest fantasies. All appears to be well, unless they try to change the outcome and deviate from the virtual reality.
Our Writing Style
Strange fiction is the award winning writing team of Caitlin Hawker and Roger Arsht that brings together the influences of Edgar Allen Poe, Mario Puzo and Joseph Conrad with notes of folk horror, film noir, and ghost stories. Our novels, screenplays and prose are profoundly original, delightfully eccentric and thoroughly entertaining.
Whether you are a long time lover of modern horror, a professional looking for content, or someone seeking chills, we’re the writers to hire! We guarantee that Strange Fiction will give you something to sink your teeth into. Caution: it may bite back.
It was a beautiful May morning for the wedding of Kaybri Lynn and Noah Stoltzfus at the Stoltzfus Farm. The joyous event was attended by hundreds. Cars were parked for a mile in every direction. Young boys and girls were assigned to tend the hundred or so horses and buggies that assembled on a newly harvested field near the barn. Spare bedrooms in Amish homes were hard to find as friends and relatives drove their buggies for days to reach the Stoltzfus Farm.