Horror Writers Association
Email us.
Discord
YouTube
Slasher TV
HWA on Instagram
TikTok
Twitter
Visit Us
Follow Me

On Writing

Celebrating National Haiku Writing Month: The Thrills of Horror Haiku

Share

As February marks National Haiku Writing Month, it’s time to explore the dark and eerie side of poetry. Horror haiku presents a unique opportunity to craft spine-tingling tales in just three lines often using a pattern of 5-7-5 syllables. These mini-stories can evoke fear and suspense, making them perfect for fans of horror and thriller genres. In this post, we’ll go over tips and ideas for writing effective horror haiku that will send shivers down your reader’s spines. ...More...

YA Writing Prompt: Cabin Fever

YA Writing Prompt: Cabin Fever

Share

Young Horror brings you writing prompts to energize your week with spooky writing idea inspiration. Are you writing picture books, chapter books, middle grade, or YA? Your next great idea could be sparked right here. ...More...

Murder Most Fowl and Other Holiday Horrors

Murder Most Fowl and Other Holiday Horrors

Share

demonic turkeys with overlaid flamesSomewhere in the United States this moment, a large turkey—with glorious plumage, I would like to imagine—doesn’t know that he’s already been selected for presidential pardon for the American Thanksgiving holiday next week. In classrooms across the country, kids are consuming read-aloud picture books about other turkeys running from feast centerpiece fates. Many classroom games and educational activities are built to the theme of staving off the imminent death of the turkey—hide the turkey, disguise the turkey. ...More...

Scary Out There with Dawn Kurtagich

Scary Out There with Dawn Kurtagich

Share

Scary Out There recently interviewed Dawn Kurtagich, author of And the Trees Crept In and The Dead House. In this episode of the podcast, Dawn discusses the importance of horror in the world of children’s and YA literature, shares some of her own fears, and she gives us the scoop on her forthcoming book: Teeth in the Mist Listen to to the episode HERE!
...More...

Evil Teachers and Beyond: 5 School Scare Sources

Evil Teachers and Beyond: 5 School Scare Sources

Share

Scary school bus

The days are getting shorter and cooler, and ravaged store displays are picked-over, having only straggling survivors among the pencils, notebooks, and backpacks. Children and teens have mysteriously vanished from public places on weekdays… It’s Back to School season! In honor of returning yellow school buses, here are five school aspects to be mined for your horror stories. ...More...

Writing Prompt: A Family Fear

Writing Prompt: A Family Fear

Share

Young Horror brings you writing prompts to energize your week with spooky idea inspiration. Are you writing picture books, chapter books, middle grade, or YA? Your next great idea could be sparked right here. Check back every first Monday of the month for inspiration. Share your ideas and discuss in the comments below. Look out for our September feature article: Found Footage Horror, on the third Thursday. ...More...

Writing Prompt: Wicked Watermelon

Writing Prompt: Wicked Watermelon

Share

Young Horror brings you writing prompts to energize your week with spooky idea inspiration. Are you writing picture books, chapter books, middle grade, or YA? Your next great idea could be sparked right here. Check back every Monday for new writing prompts. Share your ideas and discuss in the comments below. ...More...

The CreEpy Catalog: Frozen Charlotte

The CreEpy Catalog: Frozen Charlotte

Share

In order to write great children’s horror, you must READ great children’s horror. To help you out with this, we’ve invited our very own middle school librarian to take you into the deepest, darkest corners of the stacks to see what frightening fiction kids are reading. Welcome to the CreEpy Catalog! ...More...

Writing Prompt: Ice Cream Truck

Writing Prompt: Ice Cream Truck

Share

Young Horror brings you writing prompts to energize your week with spooky idea inspiration. Are you writing picture books, chapter books, middle grade, or YA? Your next great idea could be sparked right here. Check back every Monday for new writing prompts. Share your ideas and discuss in the comments below. ...More...

Writing Prompt: Dog Days of Summer

Writing Prompt: Dog Days of Summer

Share

Young Horror brings you writing prompts to energize your week with spooky idea inspiration. Are you writing picture books, chapter books, middle grade, or YA? Your next great idea could be sparked right here. ...More...

A Flash of Fear: Why Write Short-form Horror

Share

For many (if not most), the first introduction to horror doesn’t come from a book or movie, but from a brief scary story told to them, perhaps around a smoky campfire in lonely–or are you alone after all?–woods. Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories collections include many of the selfsame creepy jewels of storytelling’s oral tradition, and have inducted many a child into the ranks of the horror lovers. ...More...

Writing Prompt: Knock on Wood

Writing Prompt: Knock on Wood

Share

Young Horror logo

Young Horror brings you writing prompts to energize your week with spooky idea inspiration. Are you writing picture books, chapter books, middle grade, or YA? Your next great idea could be sparked right here. ...More...

“So, Who Wants to be a Horror Writer?” by Edo van Belkom

Share

© 2000 by Edo van Belkom
(From the book WRITING HORROR)

Whenever I give a talk on the craft of writing (whether the talk is on horror writing, fantasy writing, short story writing, or just plain creative writing) I always begin with a question. And even though this is a book on the subject of writing, it has the feel — to me anyway — of a long talk. So, I don’t see any reason why I shouldn’t begin the book any differently than I would a talk, although I will make one concession and modify the question slightly to better suit the subject matter. ...More...

“The Horror of It All” by Tim Waggoner

Share

© 2000 by Tim Waggoner

Want to write horror? A lot of folks do. The mainstream publishing industry
may have momentarily turned its collective back on the genre, but the
small press scene is thriving, not to mention the burgeoning number of
horror ‘zines on the Net. Unfortunately, a great many stories published
in these markets are uninspired (to put it kindly) and just plain bad
(to put it honestly). Want your work to stand out from the rest of the
lycanthropic pack? Want to start selling to larger and more prestigious
markets? Want your horror stories to be so good that people breathlessly
race through your prose, barely able to whisper an exhausted, “Goddamn,
that was something,” when they’ve finished reading?

It ain’t easy. But I’ve got three tips to offer that will increase your
chances of joining the dark pantheon of horror writers who kick major
ass.

1. Beware of clichés.

Read widely, both inside and outside of the horror genre, so you can
recognize plots that have been done to (living) death. Then you’ll know
better than to write a story which ends, “And it was all a dream” or “And
then he realized as his lover sank her fangs into his neck that she…
was… a… VAMPIRE!”

When I was in my teens, I wrote a horror story with the embarrassing
title of “Scary Christmas.” In it, a young punk torments and kills an
elderly man whose ghost comes seeking Yuletide revenge. At least I had
the good sense never to send this piece of crap out. Revenge stories are
one of the biggest clichés in horror fiction, and beside that, there’s
no tension in them. Readers know exactly how they’re going to turn out
every time.

Still, you can make clichés work for you. In my story, “Blackwater Dreams,”
published in Bruce Coville’s Book of Nightmares 2, I tried my hand at
another ghostly revenge story. Only this time I took the cliché and gave
it a twist. The main character, a young boy who blames himself for the
drowning death of a friend, is visited in his dreams by his friend’s ghost.
He fears the spirit has come seeking revenge, but the friend isn’t angry
— he’s lonely. At the end of the story, my protagonist has to make a
terrible choice: leave his friend to his loneliness, or join him in his
watery afterlife.

In my story “Alacrity’s Spectatorium,” I twisted another cliché around.
I took the notion that vampires don’t cast reflections and created a dark
mirror which displays only the reflections of vampires. What price would
vampires pay for a glimpse of themselves in such a unique mirror? More,
what would such a glimpse mean to them?

Instead of ending with a cliché, why not begin with one? Start with “It
was all a dream” and build your story from there. Why not begin with a
man discovering his lover’s a vampire and see what happens after that?
Or flip the cliché around. What if a vampire discovered his lover wasn’t
another nosferatu but was instead (shudder) a human?

And try to avoid the most overworked plot in horror fiction, which author
Gary A. Braunbeck (Time Was, Things Left Behind) describes as a story
in which the main character exists only to get “slurped by the glop.”
Stories in which characters are merely props to be eaten, drained, eviscerated,
sliced, diced and turned into julienne fries by your monstrous “glop,”
whether it’s a vampire, werewolf or the ubiquitous serial killer. These
stories aren’t just boring; they’re insulting to readers who deserve better.

Probably the best way to avoid clichés is to adhere to one of the hoariest:
write what you know. Draw on your own experience for your story ideas,
write about the things that excite and disturb you, the people, places
and events that form the unique fabric of your existence, which make your
life different than any other that’s ever been lived before. If you do
this, you can’t help but be original.

2. There’s a difference between disturbing readers
and simply grossing them out.

Too many beginners think that writing horror is all about detailed descriptions
of disembowelments and gushing bodily fluids. They mistake the use of
such elements for artistic audacity and cutting-edge (pun intended) writing.
The truth is, though, that such writers are the literary equivalent of
the kid who jams his finger up his nose and pulls forth a big old nasty
booger so he can wave it in his friends’ faces.

Good horror — like all fiction that truly matters — is about affecting
readers emotionally. True, revulsion is an emotional reaction, but it’s
a simplistic one with a limited effect on readers. They finish your story
about a penis-munching condom, think, Man, that’s sick, and immediately
forget all about it. You’ve failed to touch them save on the most shallow
of levels.

I’m not saying you should avoid writing about the dark and disturbing.
That’s what horror’s all about, from the quiet subtlety of a half-glimpsed
shadow on an otherwise sunny day to the in-your-face nastiness of blood
dripping from the glinting metal of a straight razor. But if you are,
as Stephen King puts it, going to go for the gross-out, it has to arise
naturally from the story itself, to be so integral to the tale you’re
telling that it can’t be removed without making the story suffer.

In Gary A. Braunbeck’s novella, “Some Touch of Pity” (also an excellent
example of a writer taking a cliché — the werewolf story — and putting
an original spin on it), there’s a flashback detailing a character’s rape.
Not just the physical aspect of it, but what the character experiences
emotionally as the rape occurs. The scene is absolutely brutal, but it’s
also completely necessary to the story. If the scene were toned down,
or worse, removed, the story would be far less emotionally wrenching.

In my story, “Keeping It Together,” forthcoming in the SFF-Net anthology
Between the Darkness and the Fire, I write about a gay man living a heterosexual
lifestyle in a home and with a family that he has created from his own
desperate desire to be what he perceives as “normal.” But it’s an illusion
which can’t be sustained, and as the story progresses, the house, his
wife and young daughter all begin to decay around him. In one scene he
has sex with his wife out of a sense of husbandly duty, and since she
is well along in her dissolution by this point, their lovemaking . . .
damages her. I created this scene not merely to make readers go “Ooooh,
yuck!” but to further dramatize the impact of such deep-seated denial
on both my main character and those around him.

Remember that extreme elements, like anything else in fiction, are only
tools to help you tell your stories in the best way you can. But like
any powerful tool, they should be used sparingly, cautiously and always
with good reason.

3. Give us characters we care about.

Let me say right up front that this bit of advice doesn’t mean that we
have to like your characters. It means your characters should be so well
developed and interesting that we want to read your story to find out
what happens to them. There are characters — Ahab, Sherlock Holmes, Hannibal
Lector — who aren’t always likable (and are sometimes downright despicable)
but who are so unique, so fully realized, that they can’t fail to fascinate.
Compelling characters is what memorable fiction is all about, whether
you’re writing for the New Yorker or Cemetery Dance.

In my story, “Seeker,” which appeared in the White Wolf anthology, Dark
Tyrants, I write about a disillusioned crusader who has lost his faith
in God and has gone searching for a nest of vampires in order to prove
to himself that there is some sort of spiritual aspect to existence, even
if that aspect is evil. The plot runs on two tracks. First is a narrative
of the crusader penetrating the forest where the vampires live, being
attacked by them, and finally dealing with their leader (who I made not
merely a vampire but one who has merged with the Wood itself). The second
track details, through various flashbacks, the events that caused the
crusader to lose his faith and make him so desperate to find a sign —
any sign — that there’s Something More to life.

If I did my job right, readers will be interested not only in the action
in the story, but also in the crusader himself, so that when the story
reaches its climax and the character’s quest is fulfilled in a way he
— and hopefully readers — never imagined (no, he doesn’t become a vampire
himself; remember what I said earlier about avoiding clichés? I try to
practice what I preach), there’s not only an emotional pay-off, but hopefully
readers will leave the story thinking a little bit about their own spirituality.

There’s a lot more to writing good horror, but if you take the three
morsels of advice I’ve given you to heart, you’ll create stories which
will not only rise above the generic tales of flesh-munching zombies and
blood-lusting serial killers that are out there, you’ll create fiction
worth reading — and worth remembering. ...More...

Social media & sharing icons powered by UltimatelySocial