
Although they contain little violence and gore, they may not be suitable for young readers.

The stories in her Six Scary Tales series and the Thirty Scary Tales collection are subtle horror: suspenseful, creepy atmospheric, unsettling. Rayne Hall is the editor of the Ten Tales anthologies: Her books on the writing craft (Writing Fight Scenes, Writing Scary Scenes, The Word-Loss Diet, Writing Dark Stories, Writing About Villains, Writing Short Stories to Promote Your Novel, Writing About Magic, Twitter for Writers) are bestsellers. Picker, tarot reader, adult education teacher, trade fair hostess, translator and belly dancer.Ĭurrently, Rayne Hall writes fantasy and horror fiction and tries to regain the rights to her out-of-print books so she can republish them as e-books. Outside publishing, she worked as a museum guide, apple Over three decades, she has worked in the publishing industry as a trainee, investigative journalist, feature writer, magazine editor, production editor, page designer, concept editor for non-fiction book series, anthology editor, editorial consultant and more. Rayne holds a college degree in publishing management and a masters degree in creative writing. Her short stories have been published in magazines, e-zines and anthologies.Īfter living in Germany, China, Mongolia and Nepal, she has settled in a small Victorian seaside town in southern England. She is the author of over sixty books in different genres and under different pen names, published by twelve publishers in six countries, translated into several languages.

Rayne Hall writes fantasy and horror fiction, some of it quirky, most of it dark.
