Darkest Hours Reviewed on As Told by Bex

“I loved seeing Mikeâs love for the genre shine through in his work. This occurs in the fiction pieces alongside the essays that can be found at the end of the expanded edition.”
Darkest Hours Reviewed on More Like Library Booked

“Thorn just has a way with description that makes the stories hit the reader hard because you feel like you’re part of the experience.”
Darkest Hours: Expanded Edition Reviewed on Read by Dusk

“Darkest Hours is a fantastic collection of short horror stories with some of the most unique premises Iâve ever read! Body horror, terrifying visions, and monstrous creatures all make an appearance. The clarity and confidence in the writing made these stories come alive.”
Mike Thorn presents a cinematic mood board for his latest book Darkest Hours: Expanded Edition

“As I did with Shelter for the Damned, I have created here a list of titles that provide a kind of cinematic âmood boardâ for Darkest Hours. I included the films I reviewed in the expanded editionâs Criticism section, as well as the films that had overt or indirect impact on the stories.”
Darkest Hours: Expanded Edition Reviewed on Kam’s Place

“No sober person had any supernatural encounters. Nothing good happens after dark, so stay the F*** home. Oh, and mirrors are evil so get rid of them! Now!”
Review of Darkest Hours: Expanded Edition on IndieMuse

“In the short story notes, Thorn cites a lot of influences (both literary, musical and cinematic) that inform his work, but Thomas Ligotti seems to be a name that crops up throughout. While Darkest Hours covers a lot of the same themes (nihilism, anxiety, and the human condition), Thornâs work approaches them in a far more mainstream and accessible way. Still, I think this says a lot about the prevailing tone of his work, and there are stories here that scared (‘Long Man’, ‘Sabbatical’), disturbed (‘The Auteur’, ‘Fear and Grace’) and disgusted (‘Fusion’) like few other collections have managed for me.”
Re-Fear: Halloween (2007) / Halloween II (2009) by Rob Zombie
To celebrate Halloween, Nathan Smith and Mike Thorn wrote a dialogue about Rob Zombie’s Halloween (2007) and Halloween II (2009) for Cinematary.