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Red Line: Chicago Horror Stories

edited by Michael W. Phillips Jr.

“A revelation—a melting pot of street-level fever dreams that do more than just get under the skin. They haunt, they break your heart, and they dive deep into the dark cultural tapestry of a town crawling with centuries of sordid secrets.”
—Jay Bonansinga, New York Times bestselling author of The Walking Dead: Return to Woodbury and The Killer’s Game

$15.99
(paperback)

$1.99
(ebook)

Release date:
August 12, 2025

ISBN:
979-8-9875743-9-3

238 pages

Cover art:
Daimon Hampton

The Second City is second to none when it comes to terror. From H.H. Holmes, America’s first serial killer, to the Jane Byrne Interchange at rush hour, there’s an ill wind blowing through the Windy City. In this new anthology, nineteen stories by nineteen authors from the Chicago area take you on a bloodcurdling tour of the best city in the world.

We’re donating 10% of sales to the Brave Space Alliance, a south side Chicago center that provides services, programs, and an affirming space where trans and LGBQ+ people are centered. Read more about them.

Featuring stories by Jotham Austin II, Bendi Barrett, Tina Jenkins Bell, Priya Chand, TJ Cimfel, R.L. Gehringer, Christopher Hawkins, Sandra Jackson-Opoku, Aleco Julius, Nick Medina, Jen Mierisch, Sahar Mustafah, Cynthia Pelayo, K.A. Roy, K. Saab, C.J. Subko, Theodore C. Van Alst Jr., and Lauren Emily Whalen.

More Praise for Red Line: Chicago Horror Stories

“These stories, taken together, are a kind of gory trip advisory, in which the narrators warn that Chicago’s lively neighborhoods, monuments, architectural wonders and colorful residents might be as deadly as they are lovely.”
Newcity
Red Line takes you beyond the news headlines to a Chicago few get to witness, pulsing with the lifeblood of its neighborhoods, its history, and its monsters. Eat a pizza puff, take a shot of Malört, and then buckle up for a wild ride.”
—Gus Moreno, author of This Thing Between Us
“These stories delve into spooky Chicago history and painful aspects of modern urban life, employing a range of supernatural and speculative elements while maintaining a strong sense of place. Red Line’s contributors create a thrilling mosaic of Chicago—past, present, and future—in all its complex, terrifying beauty.”
Chicago Reader