IT’S HERE!!!
The fourth installment of Nothing’s Sacred magazine has finally arrived, and we couldn’t be more proud! With a fresh look and new layout, this volume sports the work of eighteen authors within its 60 pages. The best part is that Nothing’s Sacred Vol. 4 is being offered in two formats. Customers now have the choice between digital download or traditional copies.
For your convenience, we’ve included a brief overview of the entire magazine to this page. In addition, we’ve included samples of each featured story for your reading pleasure. Simply scroll to the lower end of this page and click on the desired title listed in red.
One last note:
Print orders will start shipping October 1st.
A new look, a new magazine. The upcoming issue of Nothing’s Sacred is right around the dark corner: October 1, 2018. Packed with work from eighteen authors, Nothing’s Sacred features eight short tales, seven poems, a new nonfiction selection, two sentence horror, book reviews, cartoons, and a dazzling array of new artwork. Returning customers will immediately notice that we’ve made some significant changes to the look and feel of our layout.
So what’s in Nothing’s Sacred Vol. 4?
Lets take a look.
Our first stop along the way is the short tale, “Broken,” by Kevin Folliard. Setting ones love status to “It’s Complicated” on Facebook doesn’t even come close to describing the complexities of love. While “Broken” is the shortest tale in this issue, it poignantly illustrates a chilling fact that we all endure from time to time: love truly can bring out the best and worse in people.
In Morbid Reading In Review, we take a look at Stephen King’s latest novel: The Outsider.
Brian James Lane shows us just how uncomfortable things can become when control is lost in the short story “Group.” 
In recent years, the horror community has taken a big stab at the online gaming industry with releases such as Dead By Daylight, and the ever popular franchise, Friday the 13th. Author Kevin Hoover explores how both of these games are kicking ass and stacking up [bodies] against single-shooter games in the article “Changing the Game.”
If you’ve never been in a toxic relationship, count your blessings. Chances are that if you have never been in such a situation, you either have a friend who is or has been in one, or know of somebody who knows of somebody who has been in one. Author Leigh M. Lane returns to Nothing’s Sacred to show us that fear really does exist in these conditions and why it’s necessary to be mindful of your surroundings in the tale “Sara’s Place.”
Two Sentence Horror returns with offerings from Andrea Allison, Tony Evans, and Michael Balletti.
Cindy O’Quinn, Samson Stormcrow Hayes, Bob McNeil, Gregg Chamberlain, Kurt Newton, and Trisha Wooldridge hold down Macabre Poetry in chilling, dreadful, and sometimes humorous ways.
On June 27th, 1876, Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer made his last stance at Little Big Horn. Bram Stoker Award winner Alessandro Manzetti describes the cost of the spoils of war thereafter in the ghastly tale “Long Hair’s Inferno.”
Embarking into the unknown can be scary without a guiding set of hands. Nobody knows that better than author Donna J. W. Munro as she leads us down the path in “Passage.” 
Not all kids are sweet, little cutie-pies. But as author Katherine Quevedo points out in “My Little Sugar Plum,” there are remedies to fix that. 
Anybody can be bought if the price is right. David Greske returns to Nothing’s Sacred to take us on a trip into the seedy underworld in “Messy Business.” 
Author S. C. Hayden wraps this issue of Nothing’s Sacred up with a twisted tale of genetic engineering gone terribly wrong in “Jake 447.”


