A War-Torn Country: Latest Short Story

Well, this is nice. It’s the first day of 2026 and I already have a short story published.

BERJAYA

A War-Torn Country features a young boy who ran away from his farm and family to seek glory and adventure, but who ends up narrowly escaping a battlefield massacre. Regrets, he has a few. Poor Rafer. Read on to keep him company in his misery.

The story is in Issue Ten of Pulp Asylum. Isn’t the accompanying illustration beautifully creepy?

Incidentally, Pulp Asylum also published my story, Birthright, in Issue Three.

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Alice Lives Here Forevermore: New Short Story Now Available

Alice has no friends, is not allowed outside, and doesn’t even go to school. Her mother won’t allow it.

BERJAYA

Direct link to Alice Lives Here Forevemore.

Come meet poor little Alice, the protagonist of my latest short story, published in the October 2025 issue of Penumbric Speculative Fiction. This issue’s stories revolve around the intriguing theme of “Not What Things Seem.”

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New Short Story: Patience, With All Things

Me and my sisters were rough on our dolls when we were kids, and there were a lot of us — sisters, I mean. The dolls had all kinds of inappropriate adventures and ended up dismembered or dragged around by the hair, and, eventually, given outrageous punk rock hairstyles and makeup. One time I went over to a friend’s house to play with her barbie dolls. She was horrified when I immediately had Barbie performing naked gymnastics. I was, apparently, supposed to dress her up in pretty clothes and admire her. How very boring. I was never asked back.

BERJAYA

My old friend would like my local museum, where the dolls in the massive collection are beautifully dressed and behind glass to admire, their glassy eyes staring into an interminably dull and safe existence.

The doll in my latest short story is named Patience, and she tries to live up to her name. She tries really, really hard. She’s based on my favorites from the local collection: the diorama dolls. They don’t look so bored, as if they’re living an actual life. But imagine having to stand there forever. Can you? Patience couldn’t.

Hope you enjoy the story.

Frost Zone Stories Book 2 is available in e-book and print.

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New Short Story with a Side of Tissues

I have a new short story available in Baptized by Fire, Issue 4 of Rainy Weather Days Literary magazine.

The Thinnest Winter is one of my sad ones. I wrote it during an endless winter in which I’d been severely ill. All I wanted was Spring, some warm sun on my face and a few hardy flowers popping through the soil. It felt like it would never come. And so this story was born. Don’t forget to grab a tissue before you read it.

It’s available on Amazon in e-book and Mixam in print.

BERJAYA

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Birthright: New Short Story Published

A glorious Fall season has just ended in my part of the world and I’m celebrating the publication of a new short story.

‘Birthright,’ is a rather nightmarish combination of Science Fiction and Horror, that has its roots in 16th century Germany. I was a history major, you see, and I’ve long been fascinated by the extraordinary Munster rebellion. ‘Birthright’ is a futuristic reimagining of some of these events. It’s not a pretty story. Terrible things happen. But that’s par for the course in my short stories.

‘Birthright’ is available in Issue 3 of Pulp Asylum, edited by Billy Ramone.

BERJAYA

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Gothic Horror Novella On Sale!

DOWN BY THE DARK WATER is currently on sale at Amazon for less than a buck or a quid 🙂

BERJAYA

Amazon US  |  Amazon UK  |  Amazon CA |  Amazon AU

To-Read List: Goodreads

Jane Forsyth wants a new life—far, far away from her cold mother and recently-buried father. Working as personal assistant to a wealthy recluse seems ideal: fresh air, beautiful surroundings on a remote Scottish island, and time to recover from the trauma of nursing her abusive father. But when she arrives at gloomy, ghost-ridden Cardrossan House she finds a family even more dysfunctional than her own.

Her employer, Sebastian Holt-Manning, is drowning in whiskey, his wife has left him, and he treats his only child, Emilia, as if she doesn’t exist. It’s only her budding relationship with the lonely, mercurial teenager that convinces Jane to stay. The neglected Emilia requires a friend—and who better than Jane to mentor her through the hazards of a distant mother and a cruel father.

When Mrs. Holt-Manning’s body is discovered on the banks of the Black Loch, Jane becomes obsessed with the clues she believes point to murder. With Emilia leading her deeper into the shadowy secrets of the family and servants, Jane pursues the elusive facts. But even the strength she used to survive her parents may not be enough to save her from the terrible truths she discovers on the shores of the dark water.

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New Short Story Available!

My writing life continues, slowly and steadily (very slowly; somewhat steadily). My latest published short story is “A Prince of New England.” It’s a sad wee tale, probably best described as grit lit, with not a solitary drop of my usual spec fic.

It’s been published in Issue 4 of God’s Cruel Joke Literary Magazine, a publication dedicated to the “intersection of the profound and profane.” You can read Issue 4 for free online or purchase a print copy from Amazon.

I’d wish you happy reading, but…that’s not gonna happen. Unhappy reading, then. Enjoy 🙂

BERJAYA
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Update and a New Story

It’s me again, the laziest blogger who ever blogged. Though in my defence I did have another horrendous health issue that knocked me off my game for a while. But here I am, back in the writer’s saddle as per frickin’ always, editing a novel, writing a novella, and subbing a bunch of short stories, one of which I managed to sell while trying not to keel over dead. Success, I believe.

My short story, “The Rarest of Species,” is available in Issue 13 of the science fiction and fantasy magazine, Wyldblood, and involves mysterious shenanigans on a desolate Scottish island. Print and e-version is available from the publisher, as well as Amazon.

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It’s Been a Minute…

Yeah, long time, no see. My excuses include: cancer, pandemic, and a job that almost killed me. Started writing again last year, just for fun, and recently started submitting again. So, I have a new short story for those who might be interested.

“Mothers’ Daughter” appears in Issue 4 of Dream of Shadows. It’s available on Amazon. $2.99 for the Kindle edition, $5.99 for the paperback edition, and free if you’re a member of Kindle Unlimited. It’s also available via Amazon UK.

This story is a revenge tale. And it’s dark. Oh so very, very dark. So be warned.

BERJAYA
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The Nice Girl/Horror Writer Dichotomy: Guest Post from Sara Jayne Townsend

“What’s a Nice Girl Like You Doing in a Place Like This?”

As a child, I had very definite ideas about what girls were supposed to be like and what boys were supposed to be like. I wasn’t very fond of boys – they were loud and noisy and rough. I was a girly girl, into dresses and dolls and I didn’t like getting dirty.

sjtEverything changed around puberty, and it wasn’t just because boys suddenly got more interesting. In grade eight, we were given an assignment in English class to write a horror story. And in the school library, I picked up a book called DIFFERENT SEASONS that featured four novellas by a chap called Stephen King. I liked the book so much, I went hunting for other things by the same writer. That led me to CARRIE. The rest is history. From then on, I was hooked on horror. I devoured it throughout high school – the gorier the better. And suddenly, the girl who as a child couldn’t even watch a creepy TV show without having nightmares for weeks was writing some very nasty horror stories.

By this time, we were in the middle of the 1980s. My generation of women were growing up with the likes of Joan Collins as role models – women with big hair and big shoulder pads and six-inch stilettos, who knew what they wanted and weren’t afraid to go out and get it. The boundaries of gender were becoming blurred. My junior high school (mixed) obliged all students to take both Industrial Arts (wood and metal working) and Family Studies (cooking and sewing). I was actually hopeless at all of it. Writing horror stories, though – that I seemed to be good at.

In high school, where I was able to drop both Industrial Arts and Family Studies (and Physical Education, which I was also hopeless at), I started to get interested in the clubs and societies the school had to offer. I joined the Dungeons and Dragons Club. I found I really enjoyed playing.

It was after I left school, though, than I began to run into gender barriers more and more often. Girls don’t play D&D. Girls don’t play video games. Girls don’t write horror stories, apparently. Anyone who says that is clearly too ignorant to realise that FRANKENSTEIN, arguably the first modern horror novel, was written by a teenage girl.

There are plenty of women horror writers out there, but too often ‘best of’ lists of horror writers are populated exclusively by men. And I still meet people who are surprised when I tell them I’m a horror writer. “But you seem so nice,” they say.

Maybe being nice is not the way to go. Since women horror writers don’t get their voice heard often enough I think we have to learn to shout a lot louder. Maybe then more people will notice we’re out there.

***

stcSUFFER THE CHILDREN

Orphaned at eighteen, Leanne’s life is adrift in a sea of grief and drug use. She washes up on the shore of estranged relatives, the Carver family, struggling with loss of their own. The transition from her South London council estate to her new home in the Surrey middle-class suburbs is difficult for Leanne.

But beneath the respectable veneer of the quiet neighborhood, something terrifying lurks. Displaced and troubled teenagers are disappearing. Leanne recruits her cousin Simon and his girlfriend Carrie to help get to the bottom of the sinister mystery. Can the three of them stop a creature of unimaginable evil before Leanne becomes a target?

***

Sara Jayne Townsend is a UK-based writer of crime and horror, and someone tends to die a horrible death in all of her stories.  She was born in Cheshire in 1969, but spent most of the 1980s living in Canada after her family emigrated there.  She now lives in Surrey with two cats and her guitarist husband Chris.  She co-founded the T Party Writers’ Group in 1994, and remains Chair Person.

She decided she was going to be a published novelist when she was 10 years old and finished her first novel a year later.  It took 30 years of submitting, however, to fulfill that dream.

Her latest release is SUFFER THE CHILDREN, a supernatural horror novel that is available now from MuseItUp Publishing

Learn more about Sara and her writing at her website and her blog.  You can also follow her on Twitter and Goodreads, and buy her books from Amazon UK and US.

 

 

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