Orrin Grey is a skeleton who likes monsters. He’s also the author of Never Bet the Devil & Other Warnings and Painted Monsters & Other Strange Beasts. His stories about monsters, ghosts, and sometimes the ghosts of monsters, have appeared in dozens of anthologies, including The Best Horror of the Year, and he (ir)regularly writes about horror movies and other nonsense at orringrey.com. When he was a kid, he read every Choose Your Own Adventure book he could get his hands on. This may have had some effect on him...
Jason Heller is the author of the alt-history novel Taft 2012; the Goosebumps tie-in Slappy’s Revenge; and the Pirates of the Caribbean tie-in The Captain Jack Sparrow Handbook. He’s the former nonfiction editor of Clarkesworld and won a Hugo Award for Best Semiprozine as part of that editing team. His science fiction/fantasy/horror short stories have appeared in Apex Magazine, Farrago’s Wainscot, Sybil’s Garage, Expanded Horizons, and others, and he’s the co-editor of Hex Publishers’ Cyber World anthology. He’s a 2009 graduate of the Odyssey Writing Workshop, and he writes about genre fiction for NPR, Clarkesworld, and The Onion A.V. Club (where he’s a Senior Writer). His writing on speculative fiction has also appeared in Weird Tales, Entertainment Weekly, at Tor.com, and in Ann and Jeff VanderMeer’s The Time Traveler’s Almanac. Jason lives in Denver with his wife, Angie.
Jonathan L. Howard is the author of the Johannes Cabal, Russalka Chronicles, Goon Squad, and Carter & Lovecraft series. He is in no way haunted by horrors beyond the Abyss, and there are perfectly good reasons why he is usually to be found sitting in darkened rooms, speaking in a buzzy voice. He just doesn’t care to go into them right now, that’s all.
John Hornor Jacobs is the author of Southern Gods, This Dark Earth, The Twelve-Fingered Boy, The Shibboleth, The Conformity, The Incorruptibles, and Foreign Devils. He makes his home in the South of America. You can learn more about him at JohnHornorJacobs.com or on Twitter @johnhornor.
John Langan is the author of two collections of stories, The Wide, Carnivorous Sky and Other Monstrous Geographies (2013) and Mr. Gaunt and Other Uneasy Encounters (2008), and a novel, House of Windows (2009). With Paul Tremblay, he has co-edited Creatures: Thirty Years of Monsters (2011). Forthcoming in 2016 is a new collection, Sefira and Other Betrayals. He is one of the founders of the Shirley Jackson Awards, for which he served as a juror during its first three years. He teaches classes in creative writing and Gothic literature at SUNY New Paltz. He lives in upstate New York with his wife, younger son, a trio of ambitious dogs, and a trio of suspicious cats.
L. Lark is a writer and artist living in Portland, Oregon, who is prone to daydreaming and sunburns. She especially enjoys writing about ghosts, old houses, and all manners of eldritch abomination. Links her to projects and publications may be found at l-lark.com.
Remy Nakamura grew up in Greece, the United States, and Japan, near the graves of young people felled by spear, handgun and atomic bomb. He has dressed a body in burial clothes and handled the burned bones of his grandfather. He writes about foodie zombies, mushroom maidens, and Prohibition-era witch hunters. He is currently trapped in the terrifying suburban mass of Orange County, California, just a few miles from the so-called "Happiest Place on Earth."
Carlos Orsi is a Brazilian writer and journalist. His horror and sf short stories have won some of the major awards for speculative fiction in his native country. In English, his work has appeared in places as diverse as Crypt of Cthulhu and Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. He lives in the state of São Paulo with his wife Renata and Violet, a big, mysterious cat that probably hails from Ulthar.
M. K. Sauer lives in Boulder, Colorado, where she owns a coffee shop and spends entirely too many hours of the day caffeinated. She received a degree in Russian Literature from the University of Colorado at Boulder. Believing that everyone should have at least one party trick, she has finally decided that hers is talking about Stalin for three hours straight. She has self-published her novel Star-Crossed: The Confounding Calamities of Byron the Cad and Marietta the Zombie; you can find it on her website mksauer.com.
A resident of the dark and frozen reaches of northern England, Ben Stewart is an aspiring writer who cites the pulp greats like Howard, Lovecraft, Wagner, and Burroughs as his main influences. He is an inveterate geek with a love of Japanese kaiju movies, superhero comics, and miniature wargaming, but despite this he’s somehow married with three kids. Ben has had a handful of his short stories published in various anthologies, though his ultimate goal of actually completing a novel-length work still eludes him.
Molly Tanzer’s debut novel, the steampunk weird western Vermilion, was an NPR Best Book of 2015. She is also the author of the British Fantasy and Wonderland Book Award-nominated collection A Pretty Mouth, the cocktail-themed collection Rumbullion and Other Liminal Libations, and the historical crime novel The Pleasure Merchant. She is also the co-editor (with Nick Mamatas) of the forthcoming flash fiction and cocktail recipe gift book Mixed Up!, due out in late 2017. Molly lives in Boulder, Colorado, where she mostly writes about fops arguing with each other. She tweets @molly_the_tanz, and blogs — infrequently — at mollytanzer.com, where her full bibliography can be found.
E. Catherine Tobler has never banded together with other lady fighters to put down or accidentally free an ancient evil — unless it was on a D&D board. Her fiction has appeared, among other places, in Clarkesworld, Lightspeed, and on the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award ballot. You can find her online at ecatherine.com and @ecthetwit.
Jeremiah Tolbert is a writer, web designer, and sometimes photographer. He lives in Lawrence, Kansas, with his wife and son.
Laurie Tom is a third-generation Chinese American. She was introduced to the Chinese classic Romance of the Three Kingdoms via the video game series, and only read the book much later. She apologizes to Zhuge Liang for never defeating Wei in the Northern Expeditions, as her player avatar had other ideas. Laurie’s fiction has appeared in other anthologies, including Streets of Shadows and The Mammoth Book of Dieselpunk.