Superdarks is a pocket multiverse of adult fiction, mostly psychological horror, many monsters, Lovecraftian, supernatural.
M.W. Wolf’s Superdarks is where you’ll find all your frights
Four of the Superdarks books are already written:
⸸ Buried at Bedlam; After the Black.
⸸ Carniphobia: When horrordrome comes to town. (The Wandering)
⸸ Bee My Agent; Blood and Honey.
⸸ The Fateless Child; Tainted Blood
In the M.W. Wolf Megaverse one of the most explored forms of the darkness is a cult called De Spuit sect of the Satanic Church, operating in the dark shadows of theMegaverse, and interwoven throughout many novels. De Spuit (the syringe) is a metaphor for allowing trauma, evil, darkness or vices to eat away at you and control you, letting in the darkness, Spiritus Malus, the dark Tempter.
Read brief descriptions & see visual art of each book in the Superdarks Pocket Multiverse by scrolling down.
Skelethorn; The Grave Digger, lord of the evil trapped.
M.W. Wolf’s Superdarks multiverse is where you’ll find the frights- manifestations of your concerns, worries, fears and phobias. Here’s where the Metaverse personifies that aching feeling you have in the pit of your stomach when you read the news, or that spike of unease you feel when you know your being watched!
M.W. Wolf’s Superdarks multiverse is plagued by our evil others. Here you’ll bump into some familiar folklore & mythological monsters & grotesque supernatural creature archetypes of evil. Yet you’ll also have to face many hatchlings and witness the bloody birthing of beasts and baddies yet untold.
Vampires, werewolves, zombies, ghosts, serial killers, The Bogeyman, ventriloquist dummies, Therianthropes, satanic cults, lunatics, asylums, sea monsters, cryptids, giants, killer clowns, a queen bee hybrid, and even a soul collecting traveling Carnival. We’ve got skeletons of all shapes and sizes entangled in thorned vines, trapped in iron maidens and buried deep in our graveyard, vertically, headfirst.
Skelethorn; The Grave Digger, lords over the deadly evil, making sure they stay dead, or at least contained. But I’ll warn you, they routinely breakout of their shackles and vines to plague the Superdarks multiverse and to bleed into the wider Metaverse.
Come and have a read if you think you’re brave enough!
“The power of fright is sublime, but too much fright can fracture a mind!”
Buried at Bedlam; After the Black
Diary Entry: 28th November 1793
Nothing by Robert Knox
Bush Hill Hospital, Philadelphia
Nothing. No sight, no smell, no fear, nor thought. No up, nor down, no left nor right. No joy, no pain, no loss nor gain. Nothing.
After the black…Was darkness! A floating mind of pulsating location. A sinking twilight and sedated twirl. An Isolated speck in a dark realm.
Nothing… Then. Blemishing dots go floating by; a prominent white bespeckles the night. A pulling power increases the bright.
I am located, I feel but cannot move, I know but cannot see. I hear… nothing!
Carniphobia: When horrordrome comes to town. (The Wandering)
Carniphobia: The Wandering, the first composite horror novel in The Carniphobia Series.
During The Perigee Harvest Moon which comes in the fall, once every four years, a travelling carnival shows up in various places across small town America. The carnies wreak terror on their chosen victims, then disappear leaving witnesses and victims dead, or worse, psychologically maimed into insanity. Survival of the self and the collective is the goal of our protagonists. These stories are standalone but amalgamate into a terrifying supernatural journey into The Wandering.
The travelling carnival is the perfect trap, a disguise, like the lollypop cage of the Child Catcher from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. The personified carnival, Horrordrome, is the silent main antagonist of the stories. The events of the book happen around the predatorial carnival and because of it, but mostly not inside the carnival grounds, it’s cunning and stealthy in this way. When Horrordrome comes to town, strange things happen and people seem to go around the twist, losing their best judgments and impulse controls. The carnival lures its victims in with cotton candy, flashing lights, exciting rides, and games to play. Once the victims are intoxicated by their vices of sugar, sex, alcohol, drugs, and crime, the carnival has them. It consumes souls to take back to The Wandering. Over three books, our collection of unassuming and unlikely protagonists must figure out what this thing is, where its coming from and how to stop it.
Book Summary:
"Bee My Agent; Blood and Honey" is a folklore horror novel with elements of a psychological thriller, metafictional tones, and black comedy. It follows the story of a struggling writer plagued by rejection who goes to London to track a peculiar literary agent, Malcolm Callaghan. Unveiling quasi-Lovecraftian cult secrets linked to literary success, the protagonist faces the mystery of authors vanishing under Malcolm's influence. Can Shaun Wojciechowski uncover the truth, save Victoria, and resist the agent's alluring hive? Through satire, the narrative critiques the literature world’s future amid SAG-AFTRA strikes and AI advancement, drawing parallels between honeybees and writing as essential, albeit with their own stings. In a style reminiscent of Percival Everett's "The Trees", the book blends dark humor and tragedy to explore the complexities of the writing universe.
The Fateless Child- First Preview!
The Fateless Child, Tainted Blood- an action-packed vampire dark fantasy novel. Its New Orleans, the year 2045, the world has been in recession and famine since the great nuclear war of the world beginning in 2024 and following the second reignition wave of Covid which hit in 2024 and 2025. Towards the end of 2025, over one thousand convents of vampires came out of hiding because Humans were destroying the world and themselves, eating contaminated foods from nuclear fallout, toxic waste, pesticides, plastics, and monocultured fake foods. Human blood is the food source of the vampires after all.
Grand Magus Dervish, elder of the Persian clads made a plea to humanity to stop the use of nuclear weapons and to allow Vampires to co-exist. He threatened that if the slaughtering and hunting of vampires did not stop, he would unleash a weapon unto the world far greater than our nuclear capabilities. Scholars were quick to link his words to Brahmastra in Hindu mythology, a weapon so powerful it is said to be able to destroy the whole universe. Others linked his threat to the Drona Parva’s Nuclear War in the Hindu Vedas. Others spoke of the end times and Armageddon.
The president of the USA, called for the end of wars and for vampires to have rights. She pointed out that if vampires are real, which they evidently are, then it’s not so farfetched to believe that they have a weapon of such mass destruction as they would need such a weapon to have the courage to reveal themselves to the world.
Grand Magus Dervish became a spokesperson for rights and an advocate for vampires around the world. He was assassinated during a world peace tour in America. This caused vampire rioting and protests around the world.
The protagonist, Axel Benoit- locally known as Bringer- is an infamous vigilante for hire and bounty hunter. Vampire gangs know him as Bringer or The Bringer. They call him this because he brings death and trouble. Bringer saves a white haired girl from a vampire attack. The girl cannot speak. She seems to be something different, neither human nor vampire. Vampire mobsters and kingpins come after her, as do the vampire police and the mayor of New Orleans. Bringer must work out what she is and how he is going to save her.
The Fateless Child- poses questions and speaks to fears of nuclear war, infectious diseases, food toxicity, immigration, unity, Human/ “subhuman” rights, corruption and all-encompassing, the fate of humanity, given the trajectory we seem to be on.