
Their next episode sends a group of deep-sea scientists on the cruise ship Atargatis to the Marianas Trench, hoping to prove the existence of mermaids. The resulting documentaries, of course, blur the line between fact and fiction ala Discovery Channel’s Megalodon, exploring for proof of cryptids and monsters. Subterranean Press – 2015 – Julie Dillon.įor a channel “famed for terrible movies about giant spiders,” news that the Imagine Network would switch to producing documentaries was quite a shock. Luckily, Grant writes several other non-zombie series, and has penned several horror/fantasy novellas-such as Rolling in the Deep, a novella recently release from Subterranean Press.

One of my friends has pressured me forever to read the series, and while I borrowed them years ago intending to read and review them, I’m kind of swamped by overdose of zombie in every other form of media/entertainment available (movies, TV, comics, games, …). Her Newsflesh Trilogy, following a post-zombipocalypse political blogger, is incredibly popular the first volume won a Hugo award. Mira Grant-an alias of Seanan (pronounced SHAWN-in) McGuire-is one of the more popular fantasy/horror writers to spring into the genre spotlight. We were too interested in… in… in pretty women in the sea.


We said ‘pretty women in the sea,’ and that was good enough, because who doesn’t want there to be pretty women in the sea? We turned monsters into myths, and then we turned them into fairy tales.
