Experience a premium, fully illustrated horror story, with unique artwork for every chapter heading, cover pages for each part, and illustrations woven throughout every page. You’ve heard the fairy tales. Every horrifying legend, every whisper spoken of the haunted forest and those foolish enough to wander within. But the legends lied. The stories were never separate. Every nightmare, every scream… it all happened on a single night. In a dark forest, trapped by a raging thunderstorm, six strangers seek shelter together in an old cabin. A girl in red, running from a monster. An old recluse, hiding from his past. A stranger who came from the forest itself. A blind prince trapped in darkness. A scarred woman with a bloodstained dress. And the kind old lady who takes them in, offering safety from the storm. Little do they know, their nightmare has only just begun. With nowhere left to run and no way to escape, long-buried secrets rise to the surface, hidden monsters reveal themselves, and as the true horror begins, those left alive must face the horrifying question… Can they survive One Grimm Night? “This was a fever dream in the best possible way. Dark, grim, and unsettling from the opening pages to the final line.” — Reading & Whatnot “If you’ve read and loved the dark retellings of classic fairy tales T. Kingfisher has been delighting fans with the last couple of years, this would be one you’d enjoy as well — just add a slashery vibe to it, too.” — The Nerdy Narrative “What happens if you take some of the most chilling fairy tales ever written and put the characters in a creepy cabin alone in the forest? One Grimm Night happens, that’s what. Chad has written yet another thrill ride that leaves you no choice but to hang on tight for the experience. Plus, there are a few subtle nods to the writings of Poe, and even to And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie.” — Charles McGarry, author of The Nomad’s Crucible “The Hateful Eight meets Grimm’s fairy tales in a cabin full of secrets. One Grimm Night feels like Quentin Tarantino stumbled into a snow-choked fairytale and decided to bring all the tension, monologues, and mysterious strangers with him. It blends the eerie isolation of The Hateful Eight with the twisted moral undercurrents of the Brothers Grimm — except this time, the woods are darker, the rain heavier, and Red has trauma and trust issues.” — Goodreads reviewer Space Coyote