dark horse
/ˈdärk ˈˌhôrs/
noun
1. a candidate or competitor about whom little is known but who unexpectedly wins or succeeds.
“a dark-horse candidate”
Join us for a bi-monthly tour of writers who give as good as they get. From hard science-fiction to stark, melancholic apocalypses; from Lovecraftian horror to zombies and horror comedy; from whimsical interludes to tales of unlikely compassion--whatever it is, if it's weird, it's here. So grab a seat before the starting gun fires, pour yourself a glass of strange wine, and get ready for the running of the dark horses.
In this issue:
“In the Forests of the Night” by Wayne Kyle Spitzer
“The Devil's Playground” by Kurt Newton
“Death Before Birth” by James Harper
“People of the Land” by Alistair Rey
“A Whisperer Among the Graves, Prt. 2” by Bill Link