The Mausoleum of Gore: A Halloween TV Special | Paperback

$11.99

A DIY Horror Movie Nightmare

With its uncanny atmosphere, realistic blood and gore effects, and unnerving existential themes, The Mausoleum of Gore is a must-see for fans of truly underground horror cinema. Due to its shocking content, it aired only once on a public access station in upstate New York before earning a reputation as a cursed metahorror relic that might be more truth than fiction.

The Mausoleum of Gore chronicles one fateful Halloween when graves erupt to the surface, weird little freaks emerge from the shadows, blood flows, limbs fly, doom descends, and an impossible spookhouse attraction appears in the nearby woods, beckoning all to enter.

The unnamed filmmakers claimed to be practitioners of Cinema Goblin, a psychospiritual approach to movie-making akin to sorcery. You have come into possession of a digital copy of this deranged DIY masterpiece. It’s time to see if this Halloween horror film can capture the spirit of the season—or unleash it.

The computer monitor beckons. The video file eagerly awaits. Halloween is upon us.

It’s time to press PLAY.

___

This book stands on its own in the Halloween TV Special series, so no prior reading is needed—but it does have several connections to the first book, The Crypt of Blood: A Halloween TV Special.

Cover art by Trevor Henderson and interior illustrations by Mat Fitzsimmons. Edited by Steve Grinstead. 4.25” x 7” paperback. 122 pages.

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A DIY Horror Movie Nightmare

With its uncanny atmosphere, realistic blood and gore effects, and unnerving existential themes, The Mausoleum of Gore is a must-see for fans of truly underground horror cinema. Due to its shocking content, it aired only once on a public access station in upstate New York before earning a reputation as a cursed metahorror relic that might be more truth than fiction.

The Mausoleum of Gore chronicles one fateful Halloween when graves erupt to the surface, weird little freaks emerge from the shadows, blood flows, limbs fly, doom descends, and an impossible spookhouse attraction appears in the nearby woods, beckoning all to enter.

The unnamed filmmakers claimed to be practitioners of Cinema Goblin, a psychospiritual approach to movie-making akin to sorcery. You have come into possession of a digital copy of this deranged DIY masterpiece. It’s time to see if this Halloween horror film can capture the spirit of the season—or unleash it.

The computer monitor beckons. The video file eagerly awaits. Halloween is upon us.

It’s time to press PLAY.

___

This book stands on its own in the Halloween TV Special series, so no prior reading is needed—but it does have several connections to the first book, The Crypt of Blood: A Halloween TV Special.

Cover art by Trevor Henderson and interior illustrations by Mat Fitzsimmons. Edited by Steve Grinstead. 4.25” x 7” paperback. 122 pages.

A DIY Horror Movie Nightmare

With its uncanny atmosphere, realistic blood and gore effects, and unnerving existential themes, The Mausoleum of Gore is a must-see for fans of truly underground horror cinema. Due to its shocking content, it aired only once on a public access station in upstate New York before earning a reputation as a cursed metahorror relic that might be more truth than fiction.

The Mausoleum of Gore chronicles one fateful Halloween when graves erupt to the surface, weird little freaks emerge from the shadows, blood flows, limbs fly, doom descends, and an impossible spookhouse attraction appears in the nearby woods, beckoning all to enter.

The unnamed filmmakers claimed to be practitioners of Cinema Goblin, a psychospiritual approach to movie-making akin to sorcery. You have come into possession of a digital copy of this deranged DIY masterpiece. It’s time to see if this Halloween horror film can capture the spirit of the season—or unleash it.

The computer monitor beckons. The video file eagerly awaits. Halloween is upon us.

It’s time to press PLAY.

___

This book stands on its own in the Halloween TV Special series, so no prior reading is needed—but it does have several connections to the first book, The Crypt of Blood: A Halloween TV Special.

Cover art by Trevor Henderson and interior illustrations by Mat Fitzsimmons. Edited by Steve Grinstead. 4.25” x 7” paperback. 122 pages.

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