Tag Archives: tbm horror

A Study in Unease — R. Jacob Honeybrook’s “Thaddeus Greene’s Spooktacular House of Horrors”

In Thaddeus Greene’s Spooktacular House of Horrors, R. Jacob Honeybrook transforms the spectacle of fear into something philosophical. His sixth horror work, released on October 20, 2025, doesn’t rely on the expected mechanics of terror. Instead, it builds a slow and deliberate unease, rooted in the question of whether redemption can truly exist.

The novella follows Mr. Belgrave, an ordinary man whose night takes a strange turn after he avoids a head-on collision. What begins as an accident spirals into a nightmare of spiritual symbolism. A wandering cat leads him to a cathedral, where a man dressed as a vampire, The Count, sells tickets to a carnival of grotesque displays. Yet as Belgrave explores its dark corridors, the line between theater and truth begins to collapse.

Honeybrook’s decision to write in a modernized 19th-century voice gives the story a haunting distance. The formality of the language contrasts with the modern setting, creating an atmosphere that feels unmoored from time. The result is a text that feels both familiar and alien, echoing gothic traditions while speaking to contemporary dread.

“This is the most surreal story I’ve written,” Honeybrook said. “It’s based on a dream I had, so I wanted everything to feel a bit off.” That intent permeates every paragraph, as if the narrative itself were caught between sleeping and waking.

Beyond his fiction, Honeybrook remains an active presence in modern horror. He co-hosts the Midnight Terrors Podcast with Kevin Roche and writes Honeycut, a weekly column for TBM Horror. Both platforms reveal the same intellectual curiosity that defines his prose.

Thaddeus Greene’s Spooktacular House of Horrors is now available as an eBook on Amazon, offering readers an experience that is both literary and unsettling.

To follow Honeybrook’s ongoing work, visit his Instagram page for updates on upcoming stories and collaborations.

Music for Films That Hurt Quietly: Why Inherit the Ashes Belongs on Your Mood Board

You can tell when music was made by someone who’s lived through something. Brandon Alvis’s Inherit the Ashes isn’t a film score, but it could be. It’s the kind of music that understands restraint, memory, and silence better than most licensed tracks you’ll find online.

The EP is instrumental. No lyrics, no narration. It’s just sound, clean, deliberate, and emotionally weighted. It’s available now on Spotify, YouTube, and Apple Music. And it deserves a spot on your next pre-production playlist.

Alvis is better known in the paranormal doc world, currently co-hosting Haunted Discoveries: Family Spirits. But this project stands apart. According to the release, it was created as a personal reckoning. And it shows. You don’t get bombast or horror tropes. You get emotional gravity. You get unresolved tension.

The track titles alone are powerful: A Ghost Story, Baptized in Blood. These aren’t genre gimmicks. They feel earned. And for filmmakers working with psychological drama, family trauma, or spiritual silence, they might be the reference tone you didn’t know you needed.

This isn’t about using the music directly, although you might. It’s about understanding what it sounds like to mean something with every note.