horror fiction
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Horror fiction: Tara has written some (in)famous romances featuring monsters. Now one is hunting her
Kritika Kapoor
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Fiction: Mamta learns of the bloodthirsty dakini while investigating mysterious deaths in a village
K Hari Kumar
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‘The One Legged’: This Bengali novel in translation is a shocking exploration of children’s psyches
Veeksha Vagmita
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Horror fiction: History repeats itself as Tunu turned slowly, but definitely, into someone else
Sakyajit Bhattacharya Rituparna Mukherjee
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Celebrating 75 years of Shirley Jackson’s taut, ambiguous, disturbing stories
Bernice M Murphy, The Conversation
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‘Shakchunni’: A supernatural thriller about how the zamindari system crumbled under its own weight
Debasmita Bhowmik
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Fiction: A zamindar’s young bride is possessed by a she-demon while the great famine ravages Bengal
Arnab Ray
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Horror fiction: What haunts Usha and Vishal’s home – the supernatural or the past?
Nikesh Murali
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Fiction: A real estate agent is a vampire, the house on sale is haunted, and its ghost was murdered
Olivia Blake
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Horror fiction: An idyllic town. A haunted manor. Five deaths. Is the zamindar’s ghost to blame?
Khayaal Patel
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‘Shurjo’s Clan’: In this novel, horrors of the 1971 Bangladesh war refuse to remain buried
Gemini Wahhaj
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New in horror: In an apocalyptic battle between good and evil, a young girl fights for her causes
Richa Lakhera
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Get over your fears. Horror fiction in Indian children’s literature is finally here
Rati Girish
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In praise of Stephen King, the eternal ‘horror master’ of serious light reading
Ari Mattes, The Conversation
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‘The Stepford Wives’: Why Ira Levin’s feminist horror novel is still relevant 50 years later
Michelle Arrow, The Conversation
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The rise, fall and resurrection of horror fiction in American popular entertainment
Ali Alizadeh, The Conversation
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‘Dakhma’ combines Mumbai, the tower of silence, and an apartment building into an eerie novel
K Hari Kumar
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‘Mortuary Tales’: A new book of uncanny stories from Mumbai of horror, real or imagined
Kashif Mashaik
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Shirley Jackson’s novels are eerie literary fiction. She left the best for the last
Nicholas Rixon
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The writer of the ‘greatest horror story of our time’ died and (almost) no one noticed
Nicholas Rixon