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Reviews, Articles, and Special Features:

The Mother of a Monster, A Fairy Tale, by Christina Rosso
Short Story, Women In Horror Month Dead Head Reviews Social Media Short Story, Women In Horror Month Dead Head Reviews Social Media

The Mother of a Monster, A Fairy Tale, by Christina Rosso

Once upon a time, there was a woman, a wife and mother, who was a master of herbs and tinctures. She lived in a small cottage in a small village where superstition filled the air like fog. Her husband, a war hero, succumbed to an infection after returning home with one less appendage. The woman’s potions failed to save him, leaving her a widow and her son fatherless. The villagers began to twist her healing into something sinister.

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Book Review: β€œGoddess of Filth” by V. Castro
Women In Horror Month, Book Review, Elle Turpitt Dead Head Reviews Social Media Women In Horror Month, Book Review, Elle Turpitt Dead Head Reviews Social Media

Book Review: β€œGoddess of Filth” by V. Castro

Goddess of Filth is the first book I’ve read by V. Castro, and it definitely won’t be the last. Five friends, Lourdes, Fernanda, Ana, Perla, and Pauline, perform a sΓ©ance, mimicking what they’ve seen in The Craft, looking to have a little fun before they graduate and their lives change.

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When We No Longer Need WIHM, I Will Rejoice
Non-Fiction, Essay, Women In Horror Month Dead Head Reviews Social Media Non-Fiction, Essay, Women In Horror Month Dead Head Reviews Social Media

When We No Longer Need WIHM, I Will Rejoice

Here’s something I will say, quite regularly, and will absolutely always stand by. Women have always been part of Horror. Some of (though not the first) the first horror novels were written by women – Ann Radcliffe’s The Italian was published in 1796, inspired by The Castle of Otranto (1764) by Horace Walpole, and of course Frankenstein is still a hugely popular classic, written by Mary Shelley. Even some of the classics contain elements of horror, seeping into novels penned by women, because let’s face it, a woman’s life contains a multitude of horrors. Who can ever forget the imagery of a woman trapped in an attic, simply because she is unwell, while her husband brings in a new, younger woman?

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