Three and a half stars. This collection of horror and fantasy stories connected to the War Between the States was released in 1993. I read it not long after, while I was in college, and recently revisited a few of the stories that made an impression on my memory. The one that stuck with me the most is horrifying in an entirely different and more real way: Nancy A. Collins’ “The Sunday-Go-To-Meeting Jaw”. My favorite of the more conventional horror tales is Doug Murray’s “The Crater”, in which the miners digging tunnels to lay charges under the Confederate fortifications around Petersburg encounter something else underground. Other highlights for me included the entries from William S. Burroughs, Anne McCaffrey, Jerry and Sharon Ahern, Nancy Holder, and the collaboration between Anya Martin and Steve Antczak. Unsurprisingly, most of the stories are set in the South and, especially the ones that tilt towards horror, in the late stages of the war. With so much death and despair everywhere, it should not surprise that a number of the stories involve zombies. Unfortunately, I don’t share most people’s apparent fascination with the undead, so none of these stand out in my memory.