A Horror of Poets

Do you writhe with excitement at new and twisted verse, or do you merely sit in a corner and recite Tennyson to the cat? Today we have the great pleasure of welcoming three guests to greydogtales at once, in our special feature on modern dark poetry. Widely published poets Angela Yuriko Smith, Anita Stewart and Ashley Dioses, in alphabetical order, talk to us about poetry, and the form and function of their verse.

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You, dear listener, may take this as a celebration of female horror poets, or of the role of verse in current strange and speculative fiction  – or simply as a tribute to writers whose first names begin with A (that part may have been accidental, we admit).

This feature is both rare and strange,
For horror poets are its range.
With verses now we bend your ears
To raise some dark iambic fears.
Within such work is terror found,
And insights too, beneath grim sounds.
So please think kindly of your host
Because he has no experience writing poetry whatsoever.

You may even have a horror of verse, but a horror of poets is, of course, our collective noun for such scribes. We have three darkly talented women with us, so we might have gone in this case for a morrigan of horror poets. Sadly, John Linwood Grant wanted to be a fourth member, so we abandoned that one.

We shall introduce our guests, and you’ll find links to their recent publications, websites and so forth after the main feature.

horror poetsAngela Yuriko Smith’s published works span multiple genres. Her writing career includes writing, editing and publishing for newspapers and writing both non-fiction and fiction. She has nearly 20 books of speculative fiction and poetry for adults, YAs and children. Her first collection of poetry, “In Favor of Pain,” was nominated for a 2017 Elgin Award.

horror poetsAnita (A F) Stewart is a steadfast and proud sci-fi and fantasy geek, born and raised in Nova Scotia, Canada, who still calls it home. The youngest in a family of seven children, she always had an overly creative mind and an active imagination. She favours the dark and deadly when writing—her genres of choice being dark fantasy and horror—but she has been known to venture into the light on occasion. As an indie author she’s published novellas and story collections, with a few side trips into poetry and non-fiction.

horror poetsAshley Dioses discovered horror, dark fantasy, and weird work from authors like Clark Ashton Smith, H.P. Lovecraft, George Sterling, Donald Sidney-Fryer, and David Park Barnitz. With this new treasure trove of horror and weird authors, she began to explore her own approach to poetry and short fiction after college. She first got published by the Horror Zine in 2011 and has since been published by a range of other presses.


NOTE: We couldn’t resist raising the spectre of Edith Sitwell (1887 – 1964) towards the end of the interviews, which was very unfair of us. She was born near where greydog grew up, and he fell for her decidedly odd work at an early age. Scathing, eccentric and disliked by many critics, she produced many innovative works of poetry, of which ‘Gold Coast Customs’ and ‘Still Falls the Rain’ (like them or not) stand out.

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Portrait of Edith Sitwell (1887-1964), 1915 (oil on canvas) by Fry, Roger Eliot (1866-1934)
oil on canvas
© Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust, UK
English, out of copyright

The Poets Speak

Greydog: We’ll start with a political statement. John Barr, President of the Poetry Foundation, once wrote:

“…different kinds of poetry don’t communicate, don’t do business with one another… The advocates of each know what they like, and it’s definitely not what the others are doing. The result is a poetry world of broad divides, a balkanized system of poetries with their own sovereign audiences, prizes, and heroes. The only thing they share is the word poetry, and that not willingly.”

Is that something you recognise when writing and disseminating your work? Is horror or dark poetry an even tinier corner of the Poetic Balkans?

Angela: No, I don’t agree with Barr on the divisiveness in poetry. Yes, we tend to stay close to the genre closest to our hearts. As a child, I read Poe. When I started writing, of course I tried to mimic him. I have remained close to that vein. I didn’t know what genre was, I just knew what I liked.

I don’t see poets as divided as much as just different. I view poetry the same way I see nationality and race. No race or culture is better than another. Rather, the diversity is complimentary. The best culture and poetry cross-pollinates.

Lately I’ve been borrowing elements from science fiction and romance as well as trying out new poetic forms. The wonderful thing about poetry, and art in general, is the experimentation.

Anita: Certain things appeal to certain people of course, but enforced divides seem a bit silly and unnecessary to me, and I rarely pay attention to those partitions. I write poetry. Period. I write about different ideas in different ways, but it all comes from me. Sometimes I’m in the mood to pen fantasy or sci-fi verse, sometimes it’s all about the emotional angst. And sometimes I just need to raise the undead or let the serial killers wax poetic. It’s all about the whimsy of the muse with me. My books are usually a poetry mishmash, my volumes of horror haiku being the exception.

Ashley: Thats definitely something I recognize when submitting my work and I do think genre poetry (speculative genre) is in a tinier corner. There seems to be a clash of metrical poetry and free verse and then restricting that further by making it horror themed.

Greydog: And when it comes to reading poetry for pleasure, rather than writing it, are you more a classical or a modern enthusiast? Is there a particular period which enthuses you, or do you regularly flit across the borders?

Angela: I’m very fickle in my reading and tend to read whatever is in front of me. Even badly written work is good to spark ideas and new perspectives. I do have poets I tend towards. I admire the work of both Ashley and Anita. Recent new favourites include Marge Simon, Bryan Thao Worra, John Reinhart, Linda Addison, Bruce Boston and new poet Laura Duerrwaechter.

My comfort poetry, however, is usually classic. I adore Edgar Allen Poe. I have read “The Highwayman” by Alfred Noyes still makes me swoon and wish I had long black hair to plait dark red love knots into. I also like Frost, Bradbury, Carroll… and anything irreverent, in poor taste or rude.

Anita: Although I’m game to read most any poetry whatever the style, I’m more of a classical gal at heart. I lean towards the Romantic Era and poets like Coleridge, Poe, Byron and Shelley, as well as Victorian Era poetry and writers such as the Brownings and Tennyson. I do like a lyrical, flowing style as reader, more so than the often irregular rhythms used by more modern poets.

Ashley: I tend to read more classical poetry than modern for it seems you can find more formal verse in the classics than in modern poetry. Victorian era to the 1930’s, roughly.

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Greydog: What do you see as the virtues of writing poetry, as opposed to prose? Does poetry bring freedom, or discipline, for example?

Angela: I see poetry and prose as facets of the same jewel. I like to play and write the same story in both. My story, “The Braid” has a poem written to accompany it. I am writing a story to accompany my poem “Death Waits.”

Poetry allows us to tell a story in a different way, in nuance rather than detail. It’s the difference between an experience, and dreaming of an experience. It takes prose down to the shadows, warps the edges and thins the veil. It’s the same horizon viewed sideways, while squinting, in twilight.

All writing is discipline. Poetry pulls out the essence of a story. It’s a way to see the bones of a thing.

Anita: For me, poetry is the more emotional of the two processes, and I put more pieces of my soul in my poems. I find there’s added freedom in writing poetry over prose, for while they both have their own discipline and rules of the craft, poetry is far more forgiving towards breaking those rules. With poetry, especially when doing free verse, there’s a sit down and let it flow attitude, a more spontaneous combustion of creation. I think there is an added independence of expression in my poetry, and maybe some subversive undertones as well. I like the naturally subjective nature of poetry that allows for more commentary on the human condition and the philosophical nature of existence. Plus, I can rhyme stuff.

Ashley: Poetry tells tales without cutting back, or out, rich language and vivid imagery. Prose’s point is to get a story across and often sacrifice’s imagery and even descriptions of people and settings. Poetry encourages us to pull out every piece; every scent, every texture, every sight, and put it on paper. It gives us freedom to be creative and imaginative in our descriptions but if you write in form, it requires discipline to fit every piece perfectly into the puzzle.

Greydog: What are the major themes you use your own poetry to explore?

Angela: Major themes in my work include freedom from fear and acceptance of flawed and damaged self.

It galls me that we program our children with fear as they grow. We think we are protecting them, but really we are emotionally shackling them. We gasp when they are near a spider, scoop them up and run away. Then we go back and squash the offensive creature that was merely trying to live, no threat to anyone.

We watch the fictional mob attack the monster with torches and pitchforks and think we aren’t like them. We fool ourselves to think we have understanding and compassion for that which doesn’t fit on our scale of acceptance. We switch the TV off then and grab our pitchforks. We lie to ourselves. If I could squash anything, it would be fear. Fear is justified ignorance.

One of my favourite soapboxes is also accepting ourselves as we are. I dislike how we are told to think outside of the box, but scolded if we colour outside of the lines. We are told to be anything we want, and then given a list of appropriate career paths. We tend to hide who we are to be acceptable, but I bet if we could strip away all the pretence we would see that we are all pretty monstrous—and it’s okay. Maybe if we were more open and accepting of our flaws they wouldn’t fester so much.

Anita: Generally themes that keep repeating in my poems are Celtic myth and places, death, the moon, the sea, outer space, pain, and TV shows. I like to set the light against the dark and explore the “what ifs” and the “maybes” of the universe and folklore.

I also write about things I take an interest in or enjoy, as with my Celtic themes and the aforementioned TV shows. To date I’ve enshrined Supernatural, Doctor Who, Game of Thrones, Copper, and Justified in the indelible ink of poetry, and I have a nice collection of Irish and Scottish themed poems.

Ashley: I like to tell stories, or hints of stories, in my poetry. My poems often tell a why, a how, and a who like prose, but does not sacrifice imagery, detail, and language. My poems encompass horror, dark fantasy, fantasy, and Gothic themes.

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Greydog: We’re not hung up on meters and feet, but do you have a form in which you particularly like to write?

Angela: I do write a lot of haiku when I’m busy or exhausted. They are quick, creative little nuggets that satisfy my creative itches and I like to feel like they connect me with my Asian side, although American haiku isn’t anything like traditional, Japanese haiku, I found out.

Lately I’ve been playing a lot with pantuoms. When I first saw a pantuom I thought it was a stifling, artificial poetry vehicle, so I had to try it. I fell in love. It reminds me of cutting letters out of a magazine to make a ransom note. The phrases are cut up and re-pasted, creating different meanings. They feel distant to me, slightly surreal. I find that appealing.

Anita: I’m glad we’re not hung up on meter; I avoid writing metered poems as my attempts tend to leave me with a headache. I prefer forms with repetition, such as the Chant, Catena Rondo, the Trimeric or Cascade. I like writing forms that interconnect or build on themselves. And I also enjoy the haiku, and other non-Western forms.

Ashley: I tend to write in iambic pentameter but I am also fond of writing in Alexandrines (iambic hexameter). You’ll find sonnets, couplets, and rondels in my work.

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Greydog: You’ve all published your work. What’s it like trying to get your poetry into the marketplace?

Angela: I’ve been very lucky. I’m impatient, so I’ve self published mostly, but that has opened a lot of doors for me because I have a large body of work to show. I’ve just started seeking to be published in other publications in the last year and have done well. Just about everything I’ve submitted has been accepted. I attribute that to all the self publishing I did.

We all write crappy in the beginning. I lucked out because I published all my crappy stuff myself instead of collecting rejection notes. I’ve recently gone and taken everything I think is terrible out of print. As far as being paid for poetry, though, I couldn’t live off of it. I write speculative fiction and poetry out of love. I write children’s books because they sell.

Anita: Getting it into the marketplace is easy. Getting it to do more than sit on a virtual shelf like a lump, that’s the real trick. If I ever master it, I’ll let you know. As of now, my poetry books are more of a labour of love than commerce.

Ashley: It was extremely hard for me to find outlets that publish horror and dark poetry. While I was trying to hit my 10 paid with pro rates ($5) mark, to qualify for HWA Active status, I was struggling to find publishers who fit that requirement. I decided that I would make a list of pro rate paying speculative genre poetry markets. I searched every horror market listing and checked out every publisher, magazine, press, and ezine to see if they took poetry and paid pro rates for it. This took over 2 years to do. That included submitting to the markets to see how they worked as well as emailing editors to ask if they did take poetry (if it wasn’t clear). I currently have my list and it contains 69 pro paying speculative genre poetry markets. I’m waiting for Occult Detective Quarterly to make it number 70 (Ashley’s list link is given later below).

Greydog: Finally, do you like the work of Edith Sitwell? If not, why not. This is a crucial test question.

Angela: I confess, this is the first time I’ve heard the name. Upon a quick bit of internet research, I will say I want to know her better. My impression is that she is a lady I would have been friends with. She seems to have had a total disregard for social propriety, ignored sexual ‘correctness,” and proper fashion. I share her view of parents.

I also liked the fact that she didn’t keep herself in a vacuum, dedicated to only one art. Creativity in all its manifestations was welcome in her world. She seemed to be an exuberant, improper bon vivante.

As of this moment, I have only read “Tournez, Tournez, Bon Chevaux De Bois.“ I love it. Insightful, unconventional and with cutting humour, just as I picture her from my brief glimpse. Ask me again in a few months what I think of her. She is on my reading list now.

Anita: Oh dear. I’m afraid I have no opinion as I haven’t read her work yet. Did I fail the test?

Ashley: I’ve never heard of her until I got this question. I quickly looked at a few of her poems and have to say she’s not bad.

Greydog: Everyone is, of course, forgiven on that last one. We offer our thanks to Angela, Anita and Ashley for participating. Whether you’re duck-mad for horror poets, a passing browser, or a sceptic, you should be able to find something of interest in their work. Do check them out below.

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OUR HORROR POETS TODAY WERE…

ANGELA YURIKO SMITH

Angela’s online home is at http://angelaysmith.com/  and on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/angelayurikosmith. She’s on Twitter, Instagram and all, and her books can be found on Amazon at:  https://www.amazon.com/Angela-Yuriko-Smith/e/B0053YHTO8

The books she is working on now are Bitter Suites, about a hotel that specializes in recreational suicide experiences, and a poetry collection titled Alters and Oubliettes. Both will be released in 2018. For the rest of this year she is writing children’s books for the Everly Everywhere series with her husband, R. A. Smith, editing his first fantasy novel and promoting her poetry memoir, Escape Claws.

ANITA STEWART

In addition to her existing and forthcoming speculative fiction, Anita’s second book of horror poetry, Horror Haiku Pas de Deux, has just been published. You can find her across the web in various guises:

Website: https://afallonblog.wordpress.com/

Blog: http://afstewartblog.blogspot.ca/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/scribe77

Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/afstewartauthor/

Facebook Fan Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/348788975590362/

ASHLEY DIOSES

Apart from her work in various anthologies and magazines, Ashley’s debut dark poetry collection, Diary of a Sorceress, was released in October of this year, and can be found via the link here –

https://www.hippocampuspress.com/mythos-and-other-authors/poetry/diary-of-a-sorceress-by-ashley-dioses?zenid=r8be69o7i6do7dbeufjc0e71l0

You can also find her on Amazon, and at her blog

http://fiendlover.blogspot.co.uk/

The list of speculative poetry markets she mentions above is here – http://fiendlover.blogspot.com/p/pro-paying-speculative-fiction-poetry.html


We’ll be back as usual in a couple of days, with something that isn’t poetry. What it is, we dare not say, but it’s trying to get out of the cellar…

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WHERE NIGHTMARES COME FROM: So You Want to be a Writer?

Are you itching and burning with ideas for your next story? Would you rather start that new novel than get medical help for the itching and burning? Are you obsessed with adverbs? Today we cover style, genre and creative writing in an extensive interview with author Tim Waggoner, who joins us to talk about his art and craft. A forthcoming book from Crystal Lake Publishing, Where Nightmares Come From: The Art Of Storytelling In The Horror Genre, focuses on the art of storytelling, taking an idea from conception to making it a reality. Tim is one of the contributors, and we let John Linwood Grant loose on him…

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Waggoner on Writing

Tim Waggoner grew up in the Dayton, Ohio, area, and is the author of numerous novels, three short story collections, and over one hundred published stories in the Fantasy, Horror, and Thriller genres. He’s a professional author who also currently works as a professor of English and coordinator of creative activities at Sinclair Community College in Dayton, Ohio. Having enjoyed his work (and having published him in our Occult Detective Quarterly magazine), I asked him for some thoughts on the whole business.

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John: Thanks for joining us on greydogtales, Tim. The main excuse for talking to you today is the forthcoming collection of essays and interviews, Where Nightmares Come From, but I’d like to start by asking a little about your own career and approach to writing, so bear with me. Firstly, you’re a professor of English and coordinator of creative activities as well as a professional writer. Was the teaching a deliberate parallel development, complementary to your writing, or one of those things that just happened?

Tim: It was deliberate. When I was an undergrad, and already dedicated to becoming a professional writer, I couldn’t believe how little my English professors – including the creative writers – knew about publishing. I decided then that I wanted to become a college writing teacher so I could help students like me, people who not only wanted to write, but wanted to do so professionally. After I received my bachelor’s degree, I went on to get my master’s. That degree allowed me to teach college writing classes part time while I wrote. I did that for ten years, then I landed a full-time, tenure-track job teaching creative writing and composition.

My teaching career has done more than provide a steady pay check and benefits, though. The act of teaching writing has taught me just as much about creating good writing as writing itself. The more I came to understand writing – what works, what doesn’t, and how to help others become better writers – the better writer I became. And I’m still learning.

John: You’ve also had experience in journalism and editing. Did that contribute to the development of your approach to fiction in any positive way?

Tim: I worked for a small-town weekly newspaper for a couple years in the mid-eighties, and that taught me to write to deadline, write fast, and write without second-guessing myself because there was no time to do it over. Back then, I wrote on a typewriter, not a computer, so there was almost no time for revision. I spend most of the week gathering information for stories, then I wrote them the day they were due to be typeset. Writing this way taught me focus, and how to write succinctly and to the point. There was no Internet as we know it today, so all my research consisted of interviewing people and gaining first-hand experience. It was a wonderful training ground for a writer.

I worked as an editor of my college’s literary magazine for a year, and after that, I did editing in my college’s publications office, where I wrote and edited various promotional materials. I took these gigs because I thought working as an editor would help make me a better writer by giving me insight into what it was like to work on the other side of the editor’s desk. Editors usually only ask me to do minor revisions of my fiction, and a number of them have remarked on how clean my copy is. I credit the experience I got from my editing gigs for this.

John: Some writers put on very different hats, depending on the project at the time. I can’t shift swiftly from Edwardian to contemporary, for example. You’ve crossed different genres quite a bit in your books and stories. Do you consciously change your approach for each, or do you write as ‘you’ whatever the area, and see what comes out?

Tim: I consciously change my approach when I write different types of stories, especially when I’m writing a media tie-in novel. I’m not going to write one of my original surreal horror novels the same way I’m going write an adventure of Sam and Dean Winchester or the way I’m going to novelize a script like Kingsman: the Golden Circle. For tie-ins, I work to capture the narrative style of the property. Writing tie-ins is similar to acting in some ways. You want to get the voice of the character just right. But at the same time, whatever comes out is still “me,” just another aspect of me. I find making the transition from one type of writing – say, pitch-black horror – to another – such as light-hearted adventure – to be a bit difficult at times. It can take me a few days to a couple weeks to get into the right mindset to start a new project. To help, I immerse myself in books and movies that are similar in content, tone, and style to the type of fiction I want to write, and that usually gets the job done.

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John: You were awarded a Stoker in 2016 for The Winter Box. Are there technical aspects of the writing – choice of style, voice, overall structure, etc – in that particular book which you feel made it stand up, and be received, so well?

Tim: I think the concept – a couple haunted by the ghost of their dead marriage – was a big part of why the novella was well received. Whenever I write horror, I try to be innovative, to create new and different types of stories, and use different narrative approaches. I love the genre, and I do my best to add something worthy to it. Along with the concept of The Winter Box, I think the fact that the story delved deeply into the characters gave it a strong emotional core. And the motif of winter – snow, ice, cold – worked well to accentuate the conflict between the characters. I’m glad The Winter Box worked for so many readers, and I’m grateful that the members of the Horror Writers Association chose to acknowledge it.

John: Do you have a personal genre or sub-genre preference in which you would write, if you were free from any commercial considerations? Do you secretly yearn to be Agatha Christie or Tolstoy?

Tim: While I enjoy writing tie-in novels, if money wasn’t an issue, I’d exclusively write surreal, nightmarish horror like in The Winter Box. Not only is horror my first love, but I consider those kind of stories my truest artistic expressions.

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John: OK, on to the new book – which should provide a wealth of information and viewpoints for other writers and critics. Your contribution to the book is entitled ‘Horror is a State of Mind’. Maybe I can start by asking you to tell us about what you cover in that, just a few clues.

Tim: The idea behind the article is that since we experience reality through the filter of our particular consciousness, knowing your character’s consciousness – trying to experience the story from your character’s perspective – will help you write more effective fiction.

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John: Should Where Nightmares Come From be seen as a primer for new and mid-career writers, or do you see it more as a set of reflections to be dipped into?

Tim: I’d say it’s a combination of both. Back when I was starting out, I got my hands on every book and article on writing horror that I could find, and whether it was a strict how-to approach or an interview with a writer talking about his or her craft, I always learned something from it. My hope is that people will have the same experience from this book.

John: When it comes to a volume like this with so many different contributors, have you had a chance to read any of the other sections? Or do you have to trust the editors that your contribution sits comfortably alongside the rest?

Tim: With a book like this, you never get to read the other contributions until after it’s been published, so you definitely have to trust the editors! But given the list of contributors, I feel confident the editors have covered a wide spectrum of horror writers and writing – and I’m looking forward to reading it!

John: There are many networks – Internet, association based or localised by geography – for writers. Do you generally interact with other professional writers much to discuss matters of technique and style? How much ‘shop talk’ can you endure?

Tim: As a teacher and mentor of writers, I spend a lot of time discussing aspects of writing, but that’s not exactly shop talk since these writers aren’t usually as experienced as I am. But when peers get together, we usually don’t talk about matters of craft. We more often talk about the business side of writing – which editor is acquiring what kind of manuscripts for what publishers, etc. When I was first starting out, I heard it expressed like this: Beginning writers talk about characterization and exposition, more experienced writers talk about agents and editors, and old pros talk about their kids, health, and world events. At this point in my career, I’m probably edging into the old pro category.

John: It’s talking about dogs, for me, but I agree. For others not so far down the line as you, what would you say are the key characteristics of the professional writer?

Tim: Making writing a regular habit. Learning to improve from feedback. Learning what feedback to listen to and what feedback to set aside. Always trying to improve as a writer. Learning as much as you can about the business of writing – whether you want to publish traditionally, publish as an indie writer, or as a hybrid writer. Conducting yourself like a professional when interacting with others in person and online. Learning how to network. Learning how to be a contributing member of the writing community.

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Teaching Creative Writing

John: And I’ll throw in an age-old question, given your role as an educator – is writing an art or a craft? I tend towards craft, but that’s probably because I hack away at it every day.

Tim: It’s both. Craft gives you techniques to express whatever ideas you wish to express, but it can’t give you the ideas themselves. That’s where the art comes in: having something to say in your work that’s uniquely you, something that no one else in the world could ever say in the same way, something that adds to the overall field you’re writing in. Craft can be taught, but Art needs to be nurtured, encouraged, and organically grown. This can be a natural process, one self-directed by a writer, or one guided by a teacher or mentor.

John: I have a thing about excessive adjectives. Stephen King (who is in the book) famously said “The road to hell is paved with adverbs.” Any bugbears you’d like to share, tremulously?

Tim: Regarding adverbs, I tell my students that they’re generally lazy, inefficient methods of communication. I ask any of them to show me “angrily.” They slam their fist onto their desk, shout, grind their teeth . . . and then I tell them that none of those actions is “angrily.” They’re specific ways of demonstrating anger. It’s always better to give readers a distinct image instead of using an adverb.

Large chunks of unnecessary exposition bug me, as well as stories that have no focus, stories that wander all over the place without going anywhere. I really get irritated by characters – especially in horror – who don’t have realistic reactions to events. I can’t tell you how many student stories I’ve read where a character is confronted by a threat, such as a ravenous monster running toward them, fangs bared, claws outstretched, and the character has no emotional reaction to it whatsoever. That drives me insane! It throws me right out of the world of the story.

John: Obviously, you’ve had a lot of experience of guiding early writers and suggesting, or exploring, approaches. When you teach creative writing, do you find that people come to classes/groups with realistic expectations, or do they have some idealised view of being a writer?

Tim: Beginning writers sometimes believe that “creative” writing means free expression, and they’re resistant to the idea that they need to learn specific techniques to make their stories effective for an audience. “I didn’t know this class was going to be work!” A lot of beginning writers lack confidence in themselves and think everything they produce is crap. It may well be crap, but that doesn’t mean they’re doomed to write crap forever, but it can be hard to convince them of that. Some beginning writers believe that every word they write is golden and are highly resistant to making changes. A number of the graduate students I’ve worked with were the worst offenders when it comes to refusing to make changes based on feedback. It puzzled the hell out of me. Why would someone pay thousands of dollars to enroll in a graduate program and then refuse to learn and grow from the experience?

John: Has anything that came up whilst you taught creative writing to others ever changed your mind about your own approach?

Tim: I’m sure there are thousands of things I’ve learned through teaching that have changed my writing, probably in ways that I’m not even aware of. The act of trying to figure out what a student is trying to do in a story, and then trying to figure out specific ways to help that student achieve his or her goals sharpens and clarifies your approach to your own fiction. In my case, the old saying “those who can’t do, teach” should be “those who teach learn to do better.” I learn something new from every class I teach, every story I give feedback to, and every writer I mentor.

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John: I write professionally, but I’ve never taken a writing class, paid much attention to books on writing, had a mentor, or studied any aspect of the craft seriously. I don’t take any pride in the fact – it simply happened that I honed what moderate abilities I have by writing, again and again. What would you say I might have missed out on?

Tim: Reading and writing a ton are always the best ways to grow as a writer. No one needs a class to do those things. But a good class or writers’ group can provide a sense of community and make you feel like you’re not alone. You can start building a support network of fellow writers, too. You get a chance to put your work before an audience and see what sort of response it gets. It helps make the concept of an audience concrete rather than abstract. Classes and how-to-write books can help give you different perspectives on your work, open you up to new possibilities, or simply provide you with some new tips and tricks to add to your writer’s toolbox. Those are the positives.

There are some potential negatives too. You might get bad advice from teachers and fellow students. A bad teacher can end up discouraging a student to the point where he or she stops writing altogether. Other beginning writers don’t know any more than you do, so you can get a situation of the blind leading the blind. And a story that’s been workshopped to death, that’s been revised to please everyone in the class – teacher and students alike – can become bland, unremarkable, and likely end up unpublishable. If you want to take a class, find out as much about the teacher as you can. Does he or she write? Can you check out his or her work? Can you Google the teacher and find out what past students think of him or her? For how-to books, see if they’re written by people who actually publish fiction. A lot of how-to’s are written by people who’ve published little or nothing. That’s what’s so great about Where Nightmares Come From. Everyone in it is a pro who practices what they preach.

John: And as you’re here, feel free to update us with anything new or forthcoming from you that people might like to know about.

Tim: My monsters-attack novel Teeth of the Sea is just out from Severed Press, my next story collection Dark and Distant Voices should be out in December from Nightscape Press, and my horror novel The Mouth of the Dark will come out from Flame Tree Press sometime next year.

John: Many thanks for joining us, and may your writing prosper.

Tim: You’re welcome and thanks!


WHERE-NIGHTMARES-COME-FROM-small

WHERE NIGHTMARES COME FROM

Full Table of Contents

  • IT’S THE STORY TELLER by Joe Lansdale
  • A-Z OF HORROR of Clive Barker
  • WHY HORROR? by Mark A. Miller
  • PIXELATED SHADOWS by Michael Paul Gonzalez
  • LIKE CURSES by Ray Garton
  • HOW TO GET YOUR SCARE ON by S.G. Browne
  • STORYTELLING TECHNIQUES by Richard Thomas
  • HORROR IS A STATE OF MIND by Tim Waggoner
  • BRINGING AN IDEA TO LIFE by Mercedes Yardley
  • THE PROCESS OF A TALE by Ramsey Campbell
  • GREAT HORROR IS SOMETHING ALIEN by Michael Bailey
  • A HORRIFICALLY HAPPY MEDIUM by Taylor Grant
  • INTERVIEW WITH JOHN CONNOLLY by Marie O’Regan
  • THE STORY OF A STORY by Mort Castle
  • WRITING ROUNDTABLE INTERVIEW with Christopher Golden, Kevin J. Anderson, and Silvia Moreno-Garcia
  • HOW I SPENT MY CHILDHOOD LOOKING FOR MONSTERS AND FOUND POETRY INSTEAD by Stephanie M. Wytovich
  • BITS AND PIECES INTERVIEW WITH JONATHAN MABERRY by Eugene Johnson
  • THE REEL CREEPS by Lisa Morton
  • THE MONSTER SQUAD by Jess Landry
  • WHAT SCARES YOU by Marv Wolfman
  • PLAYING IN SOMEONE ELSES HAUNTED HOUSE by Elizabeth Massie
  • CREATING MAGIC FROM A BLANK PIECE OF PAPER: Del Howison interviews Tom Holland, Amber Benson, Fred Dekker, and Kevin Tenney
  • Z NATION: HOW SYFY’S HIT SHOW CAME TO LIFE by Craig Engler
  • LIFE IMITATING ART IMITATING LIFE: FILM AND ITS INFLUENCE ON REALITY by Jason V. Brock
  • WHERE NIGHTMARES COME FROM by Paul Moore
  • STEPHEN KING AND RICHARD CHIZMAR DISCUSS COLLABORATING by Bev Vincent
  • CHARLAINE HARRIS DISCUSSES STORYTELLING by Eugene Johnson
  • WHAT NOW? by John Palisano

Where Nightmares Come From: The Art Of Storytelling In The Horror Genre will be out on November 17th. You can keep up to date by checking the Crystal Lake site:

21314682_497870440547186_6146671627347809401_nhttp://www.crystallakepub.com/


Teeth of the Sea by Tim Waggoner, a wild ancient predator romp, is available now.

51Nb4JVU7qLAmazon US http://a.co/eU1wxZQ

Amazon UK http://amzn.eu/2oyXi6q

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More New Horror Bookshelf

Lawks a-mercy, it is a time of great scurryingness and the doing of doings. So we’ll have to lift up our skirts and roll out some quick snippets to appease our listenerdom. The longdogs are busy playing in heaps of autumn leaves, which they love, so here’s a nod to some new horror releases. Next time we’re on bookshelf madness, we should be rustling up some proper in-depth features and reviews. Take today as a hastily erected signpost…


Creeping Unstable Entities

the_20stay_20awake_20men_20small_20n_400w Continue reading More New Horror Bookshelf

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Occult Detectives and the Shadow of Carnacki

Are you eager to see a thrilling new crossover, featuring occult detectives struggling at both the physical and psychic level against horrors in the nineteen twenties? You are? Then you should be a writer, and get on with it. Or you might wait and see if Joshua M Reynolds and John Linwood Grant come up with anything further in the shadow of Carnacki over the next few months. Who knows? We probably don’t. But here’s what we in the trade call ‘a conceptual framework’, or possibly what we scribbled on the back of spare envelopes…

shadow of carnacki

Continue reading Occult Detectives and the Shadow of Carnacki

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Literature, lurchers and life