Greg F. Gifune

Summary

Greg F. Gifune (born November 12, 1963, in Middlesex County, Massachusetts) is a horror author, the recipient of multiple Bram Stoker Award and International Horror Guild Award nominations in addition to one for the British Fantasy Award.

Greg F. Gifune
Born (1963-11-12) November 12, 1963 (age 60)
Framingham, Massachusetts, U.S.
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • short story writer
  • editor
GenreHorror fiction, Contemporary fantasy, Crime fiction
Website
gregfgifune.com

Christopher Rice calls Gifune, "The best writer of horror novels and supernatural thrillers at work today."[1]

Gifune has written 17 novels, in addition to screenplays and published collections of short stories.[2][3]

He is also the editor-in-chief of Thievin' Kitty Publications (Link) and the former editor—from 1998 to 2004—of the fiction magazine The Edge: Tales of Suspense (Link).

A full-time author and editor, Gifune resides in Marion, Massachusetts, with his wife Carol and a bevy of felines. As of 2011 he was living in Wareham, Massachusetts.[2]

Bibliography edit

Heretics (collection)

Drago Descending

Saying Uncle

Night Work

  • March 2003 Trade Paperback (The Fiction Works)
  • June 2004 Trade Paperback (BookSurge Publishing)

The Bleeding Season

Down To Sleep (collection)

Deep Night

A View From The Lake

  • Jan. 2006 Trade Paperback (Blindside Publishing)

Dominion

Blood in Electric Blue

Judas Goat

  • 2008 Limited Edition Hardcover (Morning Star)
  • Oct. 2010 E-Book (DarkFuse)

Children of Chaos

Kingdom of Shadows

Sorcerer

Long After Dark

Gardens of Night

  • Jan. 2010 Signed Limited Edition Hardcover (Uninvited Books)
  • Oct. 2010 Trade Paperback (Uninvited Books)

Catching Hell

The Living and the Dead

Dreams the Ragman

Midnight Solitaire

Lords of Twilight

Apartment Seven

External links edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Christopher Rice leaves Anne Rice off list of '5 Scariest Reads for Halloween' | NOLA.com". Archived from the original on 2014-10-31.
  2. ^ a b Lauwers, Melanie (23 January 2011). "Fill Cape's quiet season with local authors". McClatchy – Tribune Business News. ProQuest 846835194.
  3. ^ Boatwright, Josh (28 June 2007). "Local horror fiction writer mines humanity's dark side". Asheville Citizen-Times. ProQuest 1471906644.
  4. ^ Davidson, Dan (17 September 2004). "Drago Descending (book review)". Whitehorse Star. ProQuest 362261245.