Celebrating Halloween with Hunter Shea #HalloweenMonth #Horrortober


Halloween is a big deal in my house. In fact, for us, it’s more than just a single day – it’s an entire month! We’ve even given it a name – Horrortober. We spend the rest of the year preparing for Horrortober and the big capper, Halloween itself. 

What to Read – Since we’re all big readers, during the year we’ll come across certain books, short stories and magazines that we feel have that perfect Halloween vibe. So we’ll set them aside to be read during the month of Horrortober. But we have to be mindful of our time, because there’s always so much to do. It won’t do to have a TBR pile taller than Leprechaun, because we want to get through them all by Halloween night. 

What to Watch – This is very important. About 15 years ago, I said I was going to watch one horror movie a day for the month of October. It was a fun little challenge guaranteed to fill my days and nights with my favorite frights. I even bought a notebook to track the movies I watched, while giving them each a rating on my unique scale. All movies are rated between 1 and 9 tana leaves (the brew that keeps the Mummy alive!). It didn’t take long for 31 movies to be the low bar. Now, I usually watch between 70 and 80 movies during Horrortober. It’s a full time job and I love it. There are certain classics that are always in the rotation (like The House of the Devil, The Fog, Halloween, Trick r Treat, etc) and a smattering of new or newly found releases. 

What to Write – Despite all of the books I want to read and movies I want to watch, I always seem to have a writing project to tackle during Horrortober as well. Carving out an hour a day to scribble, I escape deeper into the genre I love best. Though for the past couple of years, I’ve been on deadlines with non-horror writing projects. I’ll need to change that this year. 

What to Do – When I was a kid, there weren’t many fun choices for the Halloween season. You bought your costume at Woolworth, went trick or treating and checked your candy before eating it. The days leading up to it were just like any other day. Now, there are tons of fun things to do like visit a haunted house (constructed for the season or real) or cemetery (I highly recommend visiting historic Sleepy Hollow Cemetery for their night tours at least once in your life). Horror conventions abound where you can grab cool merch, movies, and meet some of your favorite horror actors and creators. Some amusement parks go full on Halloween for the season. Movie theaters and drive-ins bring back classics that most people have never seen on the big screen (and they go toward your Horrortober movie watch goals!). Imagine seeing The Shining or The Thing at a drive-in on a cold fall night. Brrrr AND awesome. And let’s not forget decorating the house. Between pop up Spirit Halloween stores and Home Depot, you can really glam the ol homestead up. Back when I was a kid, your mother bought some cardboard witches to tape to the wall. That was it. We’ve come a long way! 

The Big Night – We are very fortunate to live in a location that sees a ton of trick or treaters. I’m talking 600 or more little visitors craving treats. Halloween night becomes a kind of block party where most of the houses are decorated and loaded with goodies, with music echoing across the night, adults all dressed up (I’m usually Bigfoot, or, one year, Elvira) and the tiny cries of “Trick or Treat!” heard everywhere. We’re known as the house that gives out juice boxes. You get real thirsty bopping from house to house. Some years, we’ll even prepare for the parents, having beer on hand and cigars. I mean, they deserve a treat, too! I love giving out treats while acting like a lunatic in my costume to make the kids laugh (or scream in fright at the sight of Bigfoot in their suburban neighborhood). By the time Halloween night is over, we’re all tapped out, with barely enough energy to shuck off our costumes, crawl into bed, and fall asleep to one last movie before the clock strikes midnight. 

Combustible
Hunter Shea 

Genre: Horror/Post Apocalyptic/Dark Humor
Publisher: Dark Wolf Books
Date of Publication: 6/17/2025
ISBN: 979-8895678923
ASIN: B0F7Z8X3C5
Number of pages: 374
Word Count: 94,000

Tagline: POST-APOCALYPTIC HORROR MEETS THRILLER IN A DYSTOPIAN NIGHTMARE OF FIRE AND ASH.

Book Description:

The world didn't end with a bang or a whimper...it ended with people bursting into flames.

Across the globe, spontaneous human combustion (SHC) is turning ordinary citizens into living infernos. Governments collapse, cities fall silent, and the air itself tastes like ash. Society burns while the lucky few are left to wonder: When will it be me?

Sam and Aja were already falling apart before the fires came. Now, trapped in a crumbling apartment and suffocating under the weight of isolation, their love feels just as doomed as the rest of humanity. But when whispers spread of a small Canadian town called Consumption, untouched by the inferno, hope flickers.

Stealing an RV and refusing to leave Aja behind, Sam sets out on a desperate, ash-streaked journey through a burned-out North America. With his best friend in tow and a growing crew of strange, unforgettable survivors, they chase rumors through a landscape warped by horror, madness, and the heat of human combustion.

Perfect for fans of The Gone-Away World by Nick Harkaway and Warm Bodies by Isaac Marion, Combustible is a harrowing, darkly tender exploration of what survives when everything else burns. Will love endure in a world destined to ignite?

Excerpt:

There were shouts within and then banging, followed by the distinctive sound of splintering wood. I watched a man rush into the room and douse the flames with a handheld fire extinguisher. I got to walking before the smoke settled. I had a pretty good idea of what I’d see and my day was already shit enough.

I hurried around the corner and almost whooped out a hallelujah when I saw the gate to Singa’s was up.

My enthusiasm was tempered when I looked through the window. The place had been ransacked.

Singa, at least that’s what I assumed his name was since he was always there, sat behind the counter reading an old newspaper.

“What happened in here?” I said.

The shelves had all been knocked down, glass to the cold cases reduced to pebbles, boxes, bottles and cans strewn about as if the entire store had been invaded by a mosh pit.

Singa, who had been old to begin with, looked like he’d aged twenty years. The bags under his eyes were dark and had an almost crispy texture. Those umber eyes held back tears that threatened to fall any second. He looked around the remains of his store in a daze.

“Humanity happened,” he said, his voice, like his gaze, far, far away.

I put a fifty-dollar bill on the counter. “You mind if I see if there’s anything worth saving?

“Keep your money.” He either avoided my gaze or thought he was talking to a ghost. “Money burns. We all burn.”

I snatched a reusable bag from the floor and got on my hands and knees, looking for anything that had been left whole. I came up with a box of elbow macaroni, a can each of beets, sliced potatoes and artichoke hearts, three bottles of off-brand water, and a box of stuffing mix. It wasn’t much, but it was better than nothing.

I slung the bag over my shoulder. “Is…is there anything I can do for you?”

His eyes slowly found mine. “Yes.” He opened his palm. In the center, I saw a tiny pile of black specks. “Run.”

Singa dipped his head and inhaled the powder like a cokehead fresh from rehab.

The sneeze came instantly.

The flames seemed to burst from every pore of his body.

I jumped back and slipped on a pile of debris, sure that the heat had singed my eyebrows.

Poor Singa slumped into his chair and burned without a sound.

It took a few attempts to get to my feet and run out of the store. In my mad dash back home, my heavy breathing popped the tampons loose. I didn’t stop to look for them.

I noticed fires in other windows.

The one that had been put out earlier was back, blazing again. SHC was like that sometimes. Someone on the radio had called it ‘almost sentient.’ It didn’t like it when people put it out. So, it came back with a vengeance. This time, no one tried to extinguish it.

In fact, there were tendrils of smoke everywhere as far as I could see. And nowhere could you hear the sound of a single fire engine. What was the point?

Oddly, what disturbed me most was when one of the feral cats hiding under a car gave a loud sneeze. It burst into flame immediately. The fleeing blur of burning hair and flesh went headfirst into a wall, made a sharp turn and disappeared down an alley, leaving grayish smoke in its wake.

 

About the Author:

Often called THE KING OF THE CRYPTIDS, Hunter Shea is a lifelong horror hound and NY Times bestselling author of over forty books of monstrous mayhem, ghostly frights, and newfound terrors. Some of his bestselling books include the critically acclaimed Creature, They Rise, and The Montauk Monster, the nostalgic Money Back Guaranteed and One Size Eats All series, and Jessica Backman’s Death in the Afterlife paranormal trilogy. His books have been found in the International Cryptozoology Museum and his face on the Discovery Channel where he talks about, well, monsters.

He can be heard and seen on his two long-running podcasts, Final Guys and Monster Men, both informed and humorous explorations of horror’s best – and worst – movies, books, and video games, as well as interviews with some of the hottest writers, directors and producers in the genre. You’ll also find exciting first-hand accounts of true-life hauntings, UFOs, cryptid encounters and more.

Website – www.huntershea.com








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