Summer Scares Resources

Click here to immediately access the Summer Scares Resource page so that you can add some professionally vetted horror titles into your reading suggestions and fiction collections for all age levels.

Saturday, October 31, 2020

31 Days of Horror : Day 31-- Announcing the 2021 Summer Scare Spokesperson Is....


Happy Halloween. We made it! And fort he third year in a row, I am using the holiday to announce the new Summer Scares year.

[Remember you can access all years of the Summer Scares program on the FAQ and Resources page here.]

This year we have not only a new spokesperson to announce but also new selection committee members and a new sponsor with Booklist taking over for Library Journal/School Library Journal!

Below is the press release with all of the details. We have already had 1 meeting and you will see the new faces on our Librarians' Day panel tomorrow too. In fact, in our Summer Scares panel, you will learn exactly how we pick the titles.

But that is tomorrow. Today I would like to announce Summer Scares 2021, including our spokesperson...Silvia Moreno-Garcia!

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


HWA ANNOUNCES SUMMER SCARES READING PROGRAM


Los Angeles, California, October 30, 2020

The Horror Writers Association (HWA), in partnership with United for Libraries, Book Riot, and Booklist, is proud to announce the third annual Summer Scares Reading Program. Summer Scares is a reading program that provides libraries and schools with an annual list of recommended horror titles for adult, young adult (teen), and middle grade readers. It introduces readers and librarians to new authors and helps start conversations extending beyond the books from each list and promote reading for years to come.

Award-winning author Silvia Moreno-Garcia and a committee of five library workers will select three recommended fiction titles in each reading level, totaling nine Summer Scares selections. The goal of the program is to encourage a national conversation about the horror genre, across all age levels, at libraries nationwide and ultimately attract more adults, teens, and children interested in reading. Official Summer Scares designated authors will also make themselves available at public and school libraries.

“When I tell people I like to read horror books, they often look at me like I'm a pervert,” Silvia says. “Horror has a bad reputation, even though it's the genre that gave us classics such as Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Shirley Jackson's “The Lottery” or Daphne du Maurier's “Don't Look Now.” Like any other genre, horror is multifaceted and has a rich history. From pulpy scares to cerebral thrills, horror deserves more love and we're here to share some exciting titles.”

The committee’s final selections will be announced on February 15 2021 — right after National Library Lover’s Day. Moreno-Garcia, along with some of the selected authors, will appear on a panel to kickoff Summer Scares at the 5th Annual HWA Librarians’ Day during StokerCon 2021.


Between the announcement of the titles and the kickoff event, the committee and its partners will publish lists of more suggested titles for further reading. Official Summer Scares podcasting partner, Ladies of the Fright Podcast, will also record episodes in conjunction with Summer Scares.


Look for more updates coming soon from Booklist, Book Riot, and United for Libraries, as well as at the HWA’s website: www.horror.org. For more information about Summer Scares, contact JG Faherty, HWA Library Committee Chair (libraries@horror.org), or Becky Spratford, HWA Secretary (bspratford@hotmail.com)


As always, this year’s Summer Scares initiative includes the updated Summer Scares Programming Guide, courtesy of Konrad Stump and the Springfield-Greene County Library, which provides creative ideas to engage horror readers. Centered around the official Summer Scares titles, the guide offers tips and examples for readers’ advisory, book discussions, and special programs, and enables librarians, even those who don’t read or especially enjoy the horror genre themselves, to participate in Summer Scares. More information is available here: https://tinyurl.com/SummerScaresGuide


Summer Scares Committee Members:


Silvia Moreno-Garcia is the bestselling author of the novels Mexican Gothic, Gods of Jade and Shadow, Certain Dark Things, and Untamed Shore, among others. She has also edited several anthologies, including the World Fantasy Award-winning She Walks in Shadows (a.k.a. Cthulhu's Daughters). Gods of Jade and Shadow was the 2020 American Library Association Reading List winner in the Fantasy category, appeared on many year's best lists, and won the 2020 Sunburst Award for Excellence in Canadian Literature of the Fantastic. Silvia is also the publisher of Innsmouth Free Press, a columnist for The Washington Post, and a book reviewer for NPR. You can follow her on Twitter at @silviamg.


Becky Spratford is a library consultant and the author of The Readers’ Advisory Guide to Horror, second edition, and is currently working on the third edition. She reviews horror for Booklist Magazine, is the horror columnist for Library Journal and runs the Readers’ Advisory Horror blog, RA for All: Horror. Becky is also a Library Trustee member of United for Libraries and is currently serving as Secretary for the Horror Writers’ Association.


Konrad Stump is a Local History Associate for the Springfield-Greene County (MO) Library, where he coordinates local history programming and works district-wide on Big Read, ASRP, and Springfield-Greene's popular “Oh, the Horror!” series, which attracts hundreds of patrons during October. He created the Donuts & Death horror book discussion group, featured in “Book Club Reboot: 71 Creative Twists” (ALA), and co-created the Summer Scares Programming Guide. Library workers and authors who are interested in cultivating horror programming can contact Konrad at konrads@thelibrary.org for free assistance.


Carolyn Ciesla is a library director and academic dean at Prairie State College in the Chicago suburbs. She has worked as a teen librarian and reference librarian, and reviews horror titles for Booklist Magazine. She’s currently enjoying providing all the scary books to her teen daughter, and revisiting a few along the way.


Julia Smith joined the Books for Youth team at Booklist in 2015, where she is now a senior editor. Her life-long love of horror movies and middle-grade literature draws her to creepy children's stories and books with bone in the title. You can follow her at @JuliaKate32 on Twitter.


Kelly Jensen is a former librarian who works as an Editor for Book Riot (bookriot.com), where she runs the bi-weekly "What's Up in YA?" young adult newsletter and cohosts the popular "Hey YA" podcast about young adult literature Her books include the award-winning (Don’t) Call Me Crazy: 33 Voices Start the Conversation About Mental Health and Here We Are: Feminism for the Real World, both from Algonquin Young Readers. She's also a well-known and long-time co-blogger at Stacked (stackedbooks.org). A life-long lover of all things scary, she finds herself eager to scream about horror reads for teens with those who love good thrills and chills.


For More Information Contact:

John W. Dennehy, Communications Director

Horror Writers Association

jdennehy@johnwdennehy.com


###


Friday, October 30, 2020

31 Days of Horror: Day 30- #LovecraftFridays Finale and How to Get Up to Speed

This year on 31 Days of Horror I worked in partnership with @ItsNiaMya from Library Journal as we hosted #LovecraftFridays on Twitter and here on the blog. This was part of the larger Library Journal #LJReads program. Every Friday in October we will dissected LOVECRAFT COUNTRY the novel by Matt Ruff and the hit HBO show. We came up with 4 larger themes and took a deep dive into them each week.

Each Friday in October around 5pm eastern, Nia posted a thread on Library Journal's Twitter to start the larger discussion on the topic. To supplement the discussion, I prepared some more reading lists and background information to help you put it into a broader context and help your library patrons.

I hope you enjoyed the month long discussion and engaged with us. Actually, even though we are done, you still can participate in the conversation anytime using the #LJReads and #LovecraftFridays hashtags. Pass it on to your patrons and encourage them to participate too.


Today to wrap it all up we have a live, free, wrap up program. Sign up now and find all the details by clicking here or on the graphic.

I know the event will be recorded, so if you cannot join us, you will still have access to the recording. 

One of the participants is Alex Brown, an award winning critic, who wrote the official episode reviews for Tor.com which you can access here.

Brown's episode recaps with commentary along with the #LovecraftFridays threads will help you get up to speed on the conversation, the show, the book, and the intersection of modern horror and racism. 

I hope you can join us, but if not, I will make access to the recording available as soon as I can.

And as I said here on the blog last week:

I can't wait. I don't know if I am more excited that we all get to nerd out together or that I know our entire program will be making Lovecraft spin in his grave while we do it.
*Cue Evil Laugh*

Thursday, October 29, 2020

31 Days of Horror: Day 29-- Why I Love Horror, the International Edition and #HorrorForLibraries Giveaway #25

Today I am excited to feature two authors from The Valancourt Book of World Horror Stories which I reviewed in the October issue of Library Journal. From my Goodreads entry for the book:

Three Words That Describe this Book: translation, meticulously researched, wide range of scares

Known for their updated editions of classic horror stories, editors Jenkins and Cagle have taken on a new mission, collecting contemporary, acclaimed horror authors from around the world, translating may of them into English for the first time, adding a short introduction to each story in order to place them a context to be best enjoyed by a new, wider audience. This collection is stellar from top to bottom, but standouts include Christien Boomsma [Netherlands] with a nightmarish story of guilt spiraling out of control, and Bathie Ngoye Thiam [Senegal] who brings the rab [evil spirits] from his country’s oral history tradition to the page, terrifying readers near and far.

Verdict: This desperately needed anthology is meticulously researched and translated, offering stories from a variety of perspectives across five continents, and representing the broad range of storytelling styles and tropes that are used by all horror storytellers regardless of nationality. Readers will be clamoring for these fresh tales by current authors they probably didn’t know existed. Consider pairing it with A WORLD OF HORROR edited by Eric Guignard.

I am also giving away my review copy of the this book to 1 lucky #HorrorForLibraries giveaway winner. As a reminder, here are the basic rules to enter:

  1. You need to be affiliated with an American public library. My rationale behind that is that I will be encouraging you to read these books and share them with patrons. While many of them are advanced reader copies that you cannot add to your collections, if you get the chance to read them, my hope is that you will consider ordering a copy for your library and give away the ARC away as a prize or pass it on to a fellow staff member.
  2. If you are interested in being included in any giveaway at any time, you must email me at zombiegrl75 [at] gmail [dot] com with the subject line "#HorrorForLibraries." In the body of the email all you have to say is that you want to be entered and the name of your library.
  3. Each entry will be considered for EVERY giveaway. I will randomly draw a winner on Fridays sometime after 5pm central. But only entries received by 5pm each week will be considered for that  week.
  4. If you win, you are ineligible to win again for 4 weeks; you will have to re-enter after that time to be considered [I have a list of who has won, when, and what title]. However, if you do not win, you carry over into the next week. There is NO NEED to reenter.

Click here to see giveaway #24. Our 2 winners were Patrick from Hancook County [KY] Public Library and Lorna from Greenup County [KY] Public Library. 


Back to today's featured authors. After reading and greatly enjoying the stories in The Valancourt Book of World Horror Stories, I reached out to editor James D. Jenkins to see if any of the authors could contribute a "Why I Love Horror" essay to the blog. Now, let's be clear, most of the authors in this collection do NOT write in English. One of the best things about this collection is how hard the editors worked to find the very best horror authors across the world [many have won awards in their home countries] regardless of the language in which they write. Jenkins and Cagle were committed to producing worthy translations, and it shows. 


However, this also meant, my ask for contributors to write me an essay, in English, was a HUGE ask. But thankfully, 2 authors came through- Yvette Tan and Flavius Ardelean. I greatly appreciate their willingness to speak to you in their second language. 


I hope you enjoy their contributions, but even more so, I hope you understand that horror is being produced across the entire globe and there are thousands of amazing authors we have yet to hear from. Tan and Ardelean are just the tip of the iceberg.



Why I Love Horror
By Yvette Tan

I was—and still am—afraid of everything. I was always the weird kid. I was sheltered, unkempt (much to my mother’s chagrin), had no social skills, and had the tendency to take things literally. This last quality would serve me well because I grew up in a haunted house, but didn’t realise it until we moved out.


I only have three stories about that house that have to do with the supernatural, but I will only tell you two because the last one is quite long, and involves shape changing, possession, and telenovela-level acting. The first one is quite innocuous. Us kids would hang out in our parents’ room every night before we went to bed. And every night, someone would knock on the door. I’d usually be the one to open it, because it might be the maid, and sometimes it was, but usually, there would be no one there.

“There’s no one here,” I’d say, holding the door wide open so everyone could see.

“That’s just the wind,” my mom would say. “Come back and watch TV.”

So I’d close the door and go back to watch TV, and because my mom is wise and I’m quite gullible, none of this was scary. It was only when I got to high school, after we had moved to a different house, that I realised that the wind didn’t knock on doors.

The second story is stranger, but just as fun. One day,  my mom called an herbalist over to make “tawas.” “Tawas” is Tagalog for the alum burned as incense during mass, but it’s also the name of a traditional Filipino divination technique where the person making tawas holds a lit candle over a basin of water while reciting prayers in what is usually pig Latin and then interpret what’s going on based on the shapes that form on the surface of the water. I watched her do this, and saw the shape of a Disney dwarf, complete with the floppy cap, form. The lady said we had dwarves in our house, and to get on their good side, my mom had to lay out a small table in out sky well and on all four sides put a pack of crackers, a boiled egg, and an unlit cigarette.

Now, even as a child, I thought that it would be very easy for the lady to surreptitiously move her hand so that the way took the shape of a Disney dwarf, and it would be very easy for her to take a look at that and say, “You’ve got duende.” What I did not expect was for my mom to follow the lady’s instructions, and for everyone to see how the food remained untouched by either mould or rats, and how the cigarettes slowly burned down to ash without ever being lit or lifted from their positions. I thought I might be imagining the memory, but I asked my sister about it and she says that she saw it too. Again, all of this was done in such a matter-of-fact way that it didn’t occur to us how strange it was until we were in our late teens.

Stories like these are why I am drawn to the supernatural, and also why I live in near-perpetual fear of the unknown. Many Filipinos don’t believe in the supernatural, but they also kind of do. And our monsters are intertwined with real life to this day. For example, there’s a theory that the aswang ins’t an ancient monster, but actually the product of American pay-ops during WWII. I’ve always gravitated towards true stories that have a hint of the dark fantastic in them, which is why there are hints of “it could happen in real life” in my fiction.

As a reader, I really, really like the language used in horror fiction. The way words like sublime and blood slide off the tongue. As a writer, I didn’t know I was writing horror at first. I just wrote stories that I wanted to read (it was the 90s; using Philippine mythological creatures in stories written in English wasn’t a big thing in the Philippines yet, though Filipino horror movies and komiks with local monsters in them has been popular since forever), and was always slightly puzzled when people would come up to me to say that my stories gave them nightmares. A friend had to sit me down and explain that what I wrote technically qualifies as horror, even when they aren’t scary. This is something that I learned, and it’s also what I try to remind people: that horror isn’t a genre, it’s an emotion.

Working with horrific themes means being open to the good and the bad in the world. It’s being able to achieve catharsis on the page or onscreen. It’s being able to tell compelling stories using elements that most people want to keep hidden: the dark, the terrible, the ugly. It’s the ability to bring the world’s shadow self to light.

I love horror because even though I am afraid of everything, its stories are told in a language that resonates with me and that compels me to tell tales of my own.

When you think about it, I didn’t choose horror; horror chose me.

________________________________________________

All my horrors, distilled

Flavius Ardelean

In Transylvania we don’t need Halloween in the shape of that modern, commercialized and cute celebration of the dead, to feel the dread of horror. We grow up with our parents and grandparents dragging us to the graveyard on All Souls’ Day or the Day of the Dead, watching the candles burn between tombstones, throwing shapes and shadows in the darkness, making everything once dead alive again in our tiny minds. Tales of bands of Roma witches and fortune-tellers roaming the country with their aura of mystique and otherworldly dangers populating our days when we stayed out too late in the evening playing with the other children in the dark streets. And in our homes, at gatherings, old women whispering about the tribulations of the dying in the family, about curses and spectral apparitions, about that wandering mercury that can enter bodies – no children allowed in the room, of course, but who cares, really. 

These things and others like them filled my childhood in Romania with dark wonders that set my imagination alight. There was that neighbour who suddenly woke up with a crooked neck, and there was no suspicion of disease in my mind, no, it was – it had to be – demonic possession. Didn’t we hear about cutlery flying dangerously through his apartment in the night? And then that one week when I was certain I had discovered a dead alien stuck between pipes in the staircase of our block of flats, visiting it daily to watch it through that tiny opening, only to understand eventually that it was just a rotten eggplant. That winter evening when a stranger wielding a knife and speaking in tongues reached our staircase and attacked our door and my father, who decided to confront him. This, and that other violent evening – the one when, hidden under the bed and between my grandfather’s legs, I could watch the lights of the bullets flying in front of our windows during the revolution of ’89 – are stuck in my mind. And even now, after all these years, I can hear the desperate cry of a mother pulling her electrocuted son from the small power plant built between our playing grounds. I watched from afar but could imagine the smell coming out of that hole in the skull – the moment I experienced the unrelenting power of my imagination. The doorway to the cellar, that made its way into many of my later stories and novels. That skull one of my older metalhead friends apparently stole from a graveyard, showing it to me from his bedroom window. And yes, that oh-so-exciting-and-wonderful cover art of the heavy metal, death and black metal albums I was handed down from my older metalhead friends. All this created a great breeding ground for later ideas and discoveries in the ’90s, when we could watch foreign TV and films and be awed – I remember the cackling laugh of the Crypt Keeper of the Tales from the Crypt and hiding in the shadows of the corridor watching in the mirror the dwarf’s dance in the Red Room of Twin Peaks, or the walk of the skinless, bloody shape from Hellraiser walking slowly through white rooms. Sure, scaring the hell out of me, but also filling my head with possibilities beyond the immediate and, therefore, leaving me wanting more.

All this happened exactly as I am telling it. Or maybe not, who knows what holes in my young reality my hungry mind observed and what parallel world it deemed fit to create for me.

But fear was not only lurking in the unknown corners of the outside world. Dread was also at home, as a necessary companion of growing up – hearing my maternal grandmother talking with the spirits of her dead relatives on her deathbed, the diseases amassed within ourselves over the years and the tendencies to self-destruct, seeing the dead bodies of my grandparents in their coffins, finding out about the fathers of our family and their dreams visited by the powerful dead women of their lives, summoning them to a better world, all culminating in that sunny afternoon where, as an eleven-year-old boy, I received a phone call from my dead grandmother, enquiring about her son, my father.

All this happened exactly as I am telling it. Or maybe not, who knows…

So through all of this, my passion and inclination for the aesthetics of horror might be the sum of temperament and acquired taste – horror as by-product of nature and nurture –, but it also represented a tool in my toolbox though life, a way of trying to understand the world around me in those moments where rationality and common sense failed me. As a child I often imagined the world as full of barely visible zippers; if I could only reach out and open one of them, I might be able to see what lies beyond the visible and the immediate. What wonders and horrors dwelled beyond, I could only imagine. But in that imagination was also the necessity to equip myself with both the possibility for horror, as well as the inference of beatitudes.

For a long time I used horror as a gateway towards those aspects of my life where I lacked understanding of myself and those around me, filling in the blanks of the unknown with images of dark fantasies, only recently truly asking myself why. Why did I choose horror as the vessel for understanding? And only recently, while cracking myself open like a nut and looking inside, I fully understood that I needed to in order to prepare myself for the descent towards the darkness that lies within. I built the stairs of that downward spiral with pages upon pages of stories and novels. I am now descending into my human nature, treading on my books.

Beyond the excitement, the giddiness, the jump scares and the laughs, horror for me is a way of making the darkness visible, or, even better, of making it conscious. Dealing with the shadows of this existence is a way of welding the inferior with the superior into the shape of a better person. Horror was the pathway to becoming whole, offering me a chance to bring a torch in the darkest recesses of existence and to search for that which shines in the darkness. For I truly believe that what can pierce the darkness, must indeed be a most powerful light source that can help us all in guiding our steps towards enlightenment.

Flavius Ardelean is a Romanian writer of dark fantasy and horror, the author of ten books for adults and children. His works have been translated into German and Russian. He made his debut in the English language with the short story, “Down, in Their World”, published in the Valancourt Book of World Horror Stories and named “an outstanding contribution” to "a ground-breaking anthology" by Publishers Weekly. Website: www.flaviusardelean.com. 

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

31 Days of Horror: Day 28- Meet the Horror Authors of Writing Bloc and Me On Their Podcast

Earlier this month I spent a lovely Saturday morning chatting with host Cari Dubiel and author Vivian Valentine for the Indie Writer Podcast. We talked about horror in general and splatterpunk and body horror in particular. You can listen here. 

In a moment, I am going to introduce you a little bit more to Valentine and Why She Loves Horror, but first, I also wanted to shout out two other Writing Bloc horror authors who also contributed "Why I Love Horror" essays:

While I didn't have room to feature Finocchiaro or Welch with their own posts, I greatly appreciate the time they took to participate. Please click through for their bonus essays.

Now back to Valentine. She is a brand new voice in horror just getting her start. I was quite impressed upon meeting her when we appeared on the podcast together, and cannot wait to read some of the projects she discusses in this episode. Here is her bio:

Vivian Valentine is a new writer who loves sci-fi and weird fiction. Her first novel, Beneath Strange Lights, blends cosmic horror with queer coming-of-age. It is available now via Kindle. Vivian lives in southern Virginia with her wife and teenage daughter. When not writing, she works in cybersecurity, plays boardgames and plans more RPG campaigns than she will ever have time to run. She cannot lie, all proceeds from her book sales will go toward X-Men action figures.

Listen to us talk about horror with librarian, and host, Cari Dubiel, check out why Valentine loves horror below and don't forget to click through to the the other horror authors I listed above. And thanks to Valentine for sharing a lot of herself as a trans-queer woman and how it feels to be "the sort of person who is supposed to be the monster." This is a powerful essay folks.


Why I Love Horror
by Vivian Valentine

Don’t go near the deep water, child. Jenny Greenteeth is waiting beneath the still waters. Don’t go a-stealing from orchards that ain’t yours. Awd Goggie loves to eat thieves. Don’t you go out at night. Black Annis is waiting in the dark.

I love horror because I love a good scare, but more than that I love the monsters. Draculas and Frankensteins, gorgons and Deep Ones, ghoulies and ghosties and long-leggedy beasties and things that go bump in the night. I cannot tell a lie, there’s a part of me that always wants them to win, and cheers when they come back.

There are monsters outside, we like to tell ourselves. We have laws and customs to keep them at bay. They fill stories from urban legends to slasher flicks. Follow the rules and you’ll be safe. Break them and … well, we told you not to go out at night. We told you not to skip church. We told you to stay away from that side of the tracks. We told you not to dress like that.

The stories hit differently when you’re the sort of person that’s supposed to be the monster.

We’ve adopted the monsters, haven’t we? The outcasts, the others, the weird and the wounded, we see something of ourselves in the scary tales and bogeymen. Cishet creators spent so much time queer-coding their baddies that we’ve come to revel in it. We realize Frankenstein’s “monster” only rages at rejection from his creator and his community. We thrill to the seductive queerness of a vampire’s bite. We recognize that all Medusa wanted was to be left alone.

Horror is about transgression. So is my queerness. The latter is incidental, of course; being a trans woman and a lesbian violates the way things are “supposed to be”, according to the mythologized 1950s Americana so many of my neighbors subscribe to. I didn’t break the rules for the sake of it, but there they are anyway, shattered at my feet. Now the monster is out, and what will she do to the village?

Watch out, dearies. I’ll queer you with a kiss.

Of course, we can’t queer all the baddies, can we? The problem with a lot of the monsters is they’re, well, monstrous. Pennywise the Dancing Clown is an ancient fear-eating child murderer. The alien Yith regard all other beings as curiosities at best. Count Dracula may be mysterious and sexy, but he’s also a powerful man with an utter disregard for consent. They have dreadful power and the ability (and willingness!) to us it for harm.

It’s a matter of what makes a monster Are they outsiders, shunned and feared by their communities? Or are they figures of power, of authority?

To a certain audience, I’m scary because a cheerfully transgress all manner of gender taboos. Let me loose and your boys might try makeup, your girls might try kissing each other, and your wives might wonder if there’s more to life than pot roasts and clipping coupons.

To me, the Archons of the Outer Church in Grant Morrison’s The Invisibles are scary because they embody the forces of repression and “order” that want to eliminate people like me. The real-world specter of conversion therapy is frightening enough; a monster that can reach into your head and rewrite your consciousness is terrifying.

The truth is that there are monsters in the world, but they don’t have fangs or tentacles or spellbooks. Some of them have guns and some of them have elected offices and the worst of them have a huge pile of money. I’ll take the pale gal in the black cape over the man with the black suit and tie.

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

31 Days of Horror: Day 27-- Why I Love Horror by Debut Author John Fram

I was first introduced to John Fram through his book, The Bright Lands, which his publisher passed on to me for review. [Click here for that review]. I was very impressed with the novel, especially considering it was a debut. 

Although my review appeared in the June issue of Library Journal, the book wasn't coming out until July 2020. I wanted to also include it in my 2020 Horror Preview that appeared in the July issue. I asked Fram for a quote about the current state of horror, especially from his perspective as a gay man to include in that article. Here is the full quote he contributed to my 2020 Horror Genre Preview for Library Journal:

"When I began work on "The Bright Lands," I only knew two things about the story: that it would feature a queer hero returning to a hometown that terrified him, and that he would learn things there were even worse than he could ever imagined. I didn't even realize I was writing a horror novel until a monster started whispering in people's dreams and a strange pit loomed at the limits of everyone's perception, but the moment I understood what I had on my hands, I ran with it. Horror has been producing some of the most mind-bending, diverse stories of the last five years, a trend I don't see stopping anytime soon. We live in a gaslit era, a time when straight, white society is finally being visited by the fears and uncertainties that the rest of us have been battling all our lives. Horror seems ready to tell us that yes, things really are more terrifying than you could have imagined...What a time to be alive."
This quote immediately made me want to know more about Fram and his horror roots, so he was one of the first authors I contacted for this year's "Why I Love Horror" guest posts. And as I suspected, Fram did not disappoint. See his essay below, and keep you eye out for more books from this rising star of horror.

Why I Love Horror 
by John Fram

In the book of Genesis, Jacob's daughter Dinah is raped by Shechem, a prince of the Hivites, a man who then begs his wealthy father to help him secure her hand in marriage. Dinah's thoughts on all of this are conspicuously absent, but the feelings of her brothers are not: in order to secure the marriage, Jacob's sons insist that Shechem and all the men of his city circumcise themselves. They do so, and three days later—when all of the men are still in pain—two of Dinah's brothers "took their swords and attacked the unsuspecting city and slew every male," carried off their women and children and everything in their houses. Just like that.

I was twelve years old when I first stumbled across this story during an unchaperoned trip through the Bible, and the horror of it—the frankness its brutality, the blithe duplicity, the third act explosion of violence—shot through my body with such force I might have licked a battery. I had always been an imaginative child, and my parents (not unwisely) had done their best to limit the amount of darkness I ingested. R-rated horror was strictly off-limits at our house in Central Texas. Stephen King was a dirty name. We admired the classics of the genre, but after a weekend reading  Edgar Allen Poe stories and watching adaptations of Frankenstein inspired me to dismember a few Barbie dolls and suspend them in water bottles (I ask you: how else was a boy supposed to assemble a monster?) even these were more carefully monitored. 

Yet no one ever thought to police the Bible. In our house, church began at 8:00 A.M. on Sunday morning, and if there's one thing a twelve-year old boy hates worse than sitting in a pew at 8:00 A.M., it's sitting in a pew and listening to a sermon about grace and forgiveness and anything that didn't involve obese kings getting impaled with swords (Judges Chapter Three) or women getting turned into salt (Genesis Chapter Nineteen) or the moon turning to blood and stars falling out of the sky and everything else blowing up in Revelation. Thankfully, whenever I got bored in the service, I was allowed to read The Good Book with impunity, and I tripped over a thousand brutal horrors. 

All of them gave me the same thrill as the story of Jacob's sons revenging their sister had, and with that charge there came a strange comfort. For a boy growing up in the shadow of 9/11, the Iraq War, SARS scares and anthrax letters and Black Rock murders and torture, it was almost a relief to see that nightmares of such a senseless magnitude were nothing new. They were tragic, they were destabilizing, but people had survived them, written about them, even given them a sort of meaning with the help of a little theology and a lot of supernatural imagination. The brutality of the Bible, its honest depiction of human failing, was more encouraging than any sermon in church or press release from the Bush administration. Yes, the Good Book said. Things are, indeed, as terrifying as they seem. God takes no prisoners. Sometimes the stars just...fall.

After the service, I was so fired up with gore and horror and the thrill of the unknown I could have powered a small car. The old folks in the pew behind us always made a point to compliment my parents. 

"You must be so proud," they'd say. "John is so diligent about reading his Bible." 
 
If they only knew. 

Monday, October 26, 2020

31 Days of Horror: Day 26- Why I Love Horror Featuring 2 Librarians

Today I wanted to give you the perspectives of two librarians, other than me, and why they love horror.

First up will be Corey Farrenkopf:

Corey Farrenkopf lives on Cape Cod with his wife, Gabrielle, and works as a librarian. He is the fiction editor for The Cape Cod Poetry Review. His work has been published in or is forthcoming from The Southwest Review, Catapult, Tiny Nightmares, Redivider, Hobart, Volume 1 Brooklyn, Flash Fiction Online, Bourbon Penn, and elsewhere. To learn more, follow him on twitter @CoreyFarrenkopf or on the web at CoreyFarrenkopf.com His most recent story, "Fences and Full Moons," can be read in Flash Fiction Online here: http://flashfictiononline.com/main/article/fences-and-full-moons/

In October, Corey Farrenkopf and Sturgis Library are hosting four online readings with prominent horror writers John Hornor Jacobs, Stephen Graham Jones, Sam J Miller, and Laird Barron. They are also hosting a program titled "Talking Horror with Danielle Trussoni, Paul Tremblay, Alma Katsu, and Victor LaValle" to dive into everything relating to horror writing and its presence in libraries. Talking Horror Link (Oct 21st): https://www.sturgislibrary.org/event2/talking-horror-with/ and Laird Barron Reading (Oct 28th): https://www.sturgislibrary.org/event2/adult-story-time-with-tba16-online/

And after Corey, you will find James Gardner:

James Gardner is a writer/librarian/self-styled horror aficionado from Kentucky who loves horror, pro wrestling, superheroes, and cheeseburgers (basically things that you've probably been told were bad for you). He has a blog The Foreboding Home of the Scary Librarian (bewarethescarylibrarian.blogspot.com) and does Booktoks on Tiktok despite being older than the typical Tiktok demographic. At the Clark County Public Library in Winchester, KY, he hosts Books from Beyond, a book club featuring horror, science fiction, and fantasy books. 

 

Why I Love Horror

By Corey Farrenkopf


My buddy’s father likes to tell a story about when he coached me in rec-league soccer. I was six or seven at the time, particularly small for my age, with a thick bowl cut that almost obscured my eyes. Before each game, Ace, my friend Rusty’s father, would get us pumped up prior to taking the field. Lots of compliments, lots of enthusiasm, lots of just go out there and have fun energy. It was rec-league soccer. Not the playoffs for the MLS. Most of the other kids would get fired up. I on the other hand had a catch phrase I’d utter on repeat: “Why should we even try? We’re just going to lose.” At this grim remark, Ace would smile, offer another perky quip about having fun, pat me on the back, and get everyone out on the field, regardless of my dour aura. 

What does this have to do with horror? 

Early onset darkness. A preternatural draw to the macabre. 

Some people are just oriented in such a way. When I was five, my favorite movie was Nightmare Before Christmas. When I visited my grandparents, I tried to sneak watching Jaws on cable. Whenever my parents brought me to their friends house, I’d lurk in the basement, hunkered down in plush leather recliners, scanning tv channels we didn’t get so I could catch Friday the 13th of parts of Alien. I owned every holographic Goosebumps novel, spent all my scholastic book fair money on the like. In middle school, one of my favorite songs was The Exhumation of Virginia Madison by the skatepunk band, Strung out. The song was about resurrecting the lead singer's dead girlfriend. I was at catholic school at the time, so resurrection was totally up my alley. I also loved a band called Choking Victim. Their name alone should indicate the flavor of their music. During college, I mowed historic cemeteries in Harwich Massachusetts (saw a lot of ghosts). I also cleaned beach bathrooms, but that’s another type of horror all together.

So each of these factors (and a thousand more) can be funneled into a particularly long math equation of This + This + This +This = my love for horror fiction. 

Now, as a librarian and horror writer, I should be able to synthesize all of that into a more coherent explanation. 

I love horror for the atmosphere, the mist-heavy graveyards, the full moon light illuminating something in my neighbor’s backyard that shouldn’t be there, the single candle hovering in the window of the abandoned house, the insane asylums, the condemned factory buildings, the woods dense with spanish moss and the low coo of birdsong... that might not actually be birdsong.

I love horror for the supernatural, for those monsters lurking (much like I did) in your parents’ friends’ basement, for the unknowable vistas glimpsed through a rend in time and space, for the telekinetic teenager who knows all too much about the goings on in the neighborhood, for the possessed books, for the cults that pray to entities neither you now I can pronounce, for the werewolves and the swamp creatures. 

I love horror because it projects my own anxieties outside my chest and out of my head. When the words are on the page and not scrolling through my mind, there is relief, understanding (what I assume people who meditate get from meditation...I can’t meditate).

That’s why I recommend it to my patrons (especially these days). To try to help them get those dark dilemas off their chest, to relieve the fears of what’s hiding in their attics, to put the terror on someone elses plate rather than their own. 

And also for the pure entertainment of it. Who doesn’t want to read about a woman living in a bayou who has to run drugs by boat for a crazy Christian cult in order to pay for the necessities of a swamp creature and witch (The Boatman’s Daughter by Andy Davidson), or about a town where high school girls are afflicted with a rusting disease that mimics the collapse of the steel industry in their town and only one teenager can get to the bottom of it (The Rust Maidens by Gwendolyn Kiste), or to trace the monstrous origins of three works of art that bring nothing but ruin to all who own them, all eventually culminating in a trip to a vast system of underground caves choked with bioluminescent fungi (The Imago Sequence by Laird Barron)? 

The answer is usually everyone.

At least that’s what I tell myself.

When I’m wearing my librarian hat, I like to point out that horror is at once its own genre, but also a genre that consumes other genres. So many of the best authors writing today blend horror with historical fiction, noir, thriller, romance, mystery, and just about any other genre you can imagine...which makes it particularly easy to recommend once you know where your patron’s reading interest lies. So, for example, if someone says they like historical fiction, I’ll point them to Alma Katsu’s The Deep or The Hunger. Do they like gothic romance? Romance in general? Then Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno Garcia is the right choice. Do they like it a little spicier? Then go with the short stories of Livia Llewellyn. Thrillers? Stephen Graham Jones’s The Only Good Indians or Paul Tremblay’s The Cabin at the End of the World. Noir? Wounds by Nathan Ballingrud or Coyote Songs by Gabino Iglesias. 

This is the game I play with myself, sitting behind my desk in the adult services section of the library. If someone wants a book about an aging punk photographer, set on an island, with culty undertones...where should I look? Generation Loss by Elizabeth Hand of course. But that’s how I sell it to the horror weary, those that think the genre is all blood and guts (and there’s nothing wrong with blood and guts). If a patron is into cozy mysteries, there is always a logical, three step equation to walk them through to get them to Caitlin Kiernan and Gemma Files. You just have to find those steps..


It always feels like a victory when you can put a new author in an unsuspecting patron’s hands and hear back two weeks later that they loved them.

And that’s the final reason I love horror. Sharing it with everyone else. 

Widening the horror community is a beautiful thing. It’s open and accepting and filled with the kindest people imaginable. The more the merrier. There’s plenty of room under the dark cloud where we reside. I promise I won’t be such a downer if we decide to play a round of spooky soccer...whatever the heck that might look like.


Why I love Horror

By James Gardner 

My love affair with horror began when I visited the Overlook Hotel in high school. I have never been physically inside the hotel, but I explored its rooms and its hallways when I discovered Stephen King’s The Shining. I found a copy of the book in a high school classroom, and it was a great way to pass the time, teenage me thought. Little did I know that The Shining would be so much more. It would be the book that started me on a new life path.

As I read, I explored the dark, spooky hallways of the Overlook, but also the frayed relationship of the Torrance family, trapped in a hotel all winter while the isolation worked on their minds. Mother Wendy was trying to keep her family together while also trying to help her son. Father Jack, an alcoholic ex-teacher, was trying to be a good man and a good father, having recently failed at both. The son Danny was seeing ghosts, thanks to his psychic powers, and he could also see the malevolent ghosts trapped with them. I remember not only reading that book but devouring it. Then I found King’s vampire novel Salem’s Lot, then more of King’s work, then I discovered other authors just as frightening or even more frightening. In college, I majored in English, read books by Chaucer, plays by Shakespeare, and even X-Men comic books I bought from the comic store that also sold office supplies, but I always came back to horror. Horror had sunk its teeth into me and has still not let go. Who am I kidding? I’m the one who’s never let go.

Why horror, though? People who know me might assume it’s a natural transition from the fantasy and superhero works I’ve read, but I was not a huge fan of horror in the beginning. I didn’t see the appeal of being scared, and I couldn’t fathom why people would want to purposefully enter a panic-inducing situation. The movie A Nightmare on Elm Street, featuring bogeyman Freddy Krueger, actually gave me nightmares. I mean he could kill you in your dreams. How could I defend myself when I was asleep? I eventually watched horror movies just so I could stop being scared. I did stop being scared, but I was also still scared. Moreover, I was enjoying being scared. By the time I got to The Shining, it got me seeing horror fiction as something to reverse engineer. I wanted to dissect horror and see the mechanisms whirring and clanking in the readers’ mind as they read. I realized that I wanted to understand how to scare people.

Sure, it began as a way to manage my own anxiety (If I could understand how horror auteurs made people afraid, I could understand why so many different things make me afraid), but that also grew into my current passion for writing horror stories. I wish I could say that I have a few novels written, but that would be a lie. I haven’t always made the time to write, especially as other priorities have competed for my free time. I’m now writing more while also being a librarian. I haven’t written the Great American Novel, but I’m in a job where I can share the fiction I love with people who love to read it, or who would love to read it if they gave it a chance. I might not be writing the gospels of horror, but I can still be its acolyte, sharing the good and frightening word.

Like how horror is, according to Wikipedia, “a genre of speculative fiction which is intended to frighten, scare, or disgust.” But horror is also more than that. Going by that definition, horror just has to have some ghosts popping out like those hydraulic ones in the haunted house attractions, or a few repulsively vivid descriptions of surgeries, or rotting food. Horror, good horror, is more than that. Take The Shining’s Jack Torrance. He eventually becomes the villain, just as people may have seen in Stanley Kubrick’s movie adaptation, but the Jack Torrance in King’s novel is basically a well-meaning father. King injects a great many father and son moments to show that Jack truly cares about his son and wants to be better for Danny’s sake. King, of course, also shows examples of Jack’s temper, his addictions, and his general character flaws getting him in trouble. Horror is sometimes maligned as a genre that goes simply for cheap thrills, but there are many, many examples of classic horror fiction that takes its time to build its plot and develop its characters. And that number continues to grow with new writers adding to the genre, pushing it in new directions and tackling relevant societal issues.

Yes, horror can provide a cathartic release, but it can also be used to talk about some very difficult issues, as what is haunting or stalking the characters are symbolic of something else, whether it be trauma, tragic personality flaws, or a real world that sometimes seems scarier than fiction. A ghost that is haunting a house might be a secret or a traumatic event the protagonist wants to keep buried. The werewolf is our own worst impulses run amok. The vampire might be a predator, but one that appears to something dark within us. Horror even has villains that could have easily found their inspiration from news headlines. Peel back the layers of a good horror story and the supernatural threats often have parallels in the real world that we can only face in books or movies.

These stories do get told and retold, monsters trying different masks for different time, but that’s also what makes horror great and why horror often breaks free of its conventions and preconceptions. Classics of the horror genre are classics because they are timeless, but there is also horror that speaks to this particular age of blurred lines between genres. Take the vampire, for example. There are vampire movies where it’s the protagonist versus the creature of the night, but there might also be a little romance between vampire and human. Their encounter might take place during the Old West. The vampire might be a corrupt businessman seeking to literally drain the lifeblood of that society’s poor and underrepresented. Horror can not only effortlessly glide among genres but the fears they address can change with the times.

With all that’s going on in horror, with all the new horror I can introduce to the masses, neither of us are letting the other go, not when I have the opportunity to give someone a book that will change the direction of their lives like The Shining did mine. I also feel good knowing I can help people scare themselves out of their minds.