Horror Q&A: Jude S. Walko (The Unhallowed Horseman)
“I have long been enamored with the Headless Horseman character. The Horseman is the perfect anti-hero that has gripped the imagination of children and adults alike.”
Horror Q & A: Kenneth Bykerk (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“I live in the Old West…This lets me delve into the history of my home while bringing back to life the ruins that surround me.” Author Kenneth Bykerk explains his personal connection to the Old West, reveals his inspiration for this story, and shares what he’s writing next.
Author Q&A Kiran Manral on More Things in Heaven and Earth: “Sometimes trying to get closure can open fresh wounds.”
The author talks about the ideas fueling her novel, her mission as an author, and why her fiction helps readers to better understand the female perspective.
Horror Q&A: J.B. Dane (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“Well, there was plenty about the Old West that was horrific to begin with. It was a harsh landscape just waiting to kill you, and if it didn't get you, then the people whose territory you were invading took their turn, and nearly everyone walked around with a loaded gun.”
Horror Q&A: Peter Prellwitz (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“The isolation and mystic the Old West provides is the perfect background for horror.” Something Wicked This Way Rides features some two-dozen authors exploring the Old West through stories featuring the wicked, supernatural, demonic and just plain weird. Author Peter Prellwitz contributes the macabre tale “Partners.” In this interview, he discusses his story, the juxtaposition of westerns with weird tales, and how “Partners” compares with his usual fiction.
Horror Q&A: Lawrence Dagstine (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“I’ve written traditional western stuff in the past, but never molded two genres together to give it a speculative flavor...” In this interview, the author discusses writing Horror vs. Westerns, the inspiration behind his story, and compares it with his other fiction.
Horror Q&A: John A. Frochio (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“I enjoy writing things that are different… I couldn't simply write a Western story without some kind of twist.” In this interview, John shares the inspiration for his story, and explains his favorite part about mashing up horror with the Old West…
Author Q&A: Ishita Banik (AS WE LAST)
“Everytime I am writing a story, I am living in it. It's like living several lives in a single life-time!” Indian author Ishita Banik blogs about her books, how to write a novel, and more.
Horror Q&A Steve Gladwin: “Slight edge of black comedy”
“I write a lot of dark things in my work, but my short stories recently have been more quirky and off-beat. What all my work does have in common is that slight edge of black comedy and it's sometimes very dark.” In this interview, the author talks about writing to music, his unpublished ghost stories, and his upcoming projects.
Horror Q&A: Alistair Rey (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“I wanted to capture the existential horror of war and place it within the context of the supernatural.” Alistair Rey contributed the story "What Hath God Wrought?" In this interview, the author talks about legend vs. history, mixing horror with the Old West, and the challenges of historical fiction.
True Blood: Charlaine Harris Sookie Stackhouse Books In Order
The author thinks of these books as adventure novels. “Maybe the difference in my approach is the humor, and the fact that my protagonist has no increasing supernatural powers and has trouble paying her bills. (The telepathy? It's up in the air in the books as to where that came from.)”
Horror Q&A: Jonathon Mast (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“Reddit asked the question, what's the creepiest thing you've ever seen…" The short story collection Something Wicked This Way Rides features some two-dozen authors exploring the Old West with a twisted view…
Horror Q&A: Matias Travieso-Diaz (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“Showing that ‘horror’ things do happen in Texas was a lot of fun for me.” The author's fascination with Cryptids, and being such an eclectic writer.
Horror Q&A: John B. Rosenman (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“I had to get the western part right.”
Horror Q&A: Kevin M. Folliard (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“The Old West is such an enduring setting because it embodies adventure, danger, and oftentimes isolation.”
Horror Q&A: Gustavo Bondoni (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“My stories are mainly driven by ideas—weird, cool, frightening, whatever.”
Horror Q&A: Andrea Thomas (Something Wicked This Way Rides)
“Genre fiction has existed even as far back as the Bard himself.”
Panel: Black Women Who Write Dark Fiction and Poetry [Video]
Video panel presented by the Horror Writers Association. Panelists include horror authors Linda D. Addison, L.H. Moore, Tish Jackson, Nicole Givens Kurtz, Rhonda J. Garcia, and L. Marie Wood.