Latinx Heritage in Horror Month 2024: An Interview with Adrianna Cuevas

What inspired you to start writing?
My fourth-grade teacher recognized my ADHD tendencies to constantly daydream and make up stories and encouraged me to write them down. While it took me a while to claim the professional title of author, I have been writing ever since then as storytelling seems to be what my brain is wired to do.
Latinx Heritage in Horror Month 2024: Introduction by Sandra Becerril

Welcome to Latin American horror! Latin American horror literature reflects human darkness. Beyond ghosts, what scares us the most is what we carry inside. It is not the monsters or the ghosts that add the disturbing component to our literature. It is the deep exploration of the human condition and its possibilities that leave readers with a dry throat. It is the ability of Latin writers with their stories that allow us to feel loneliness, hatred, abandonment, and resignation. The supernatural feels smaller than the narratives of what we Latin Americans can carry inside. Horror in contemporary Latin American literature is fueled by domestic and everyday events.
NOTABLE WORKS REVIEW: “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
NUTS & BOLTS: Interview With Writer, Filmmaker, Playwright John Patrick Higgins

As a novelist, short-story writer, filmmaker, playwright, and theater director, John Patrick Higgins has explored the art of story-telling from many different perspectives. In this month’s edition of Nuts & Bolts, he discusses the counterintuitive similarities between horror and humor, and gives advice for authors who’d like to try writing for the stage.
NOTABLE WORKS REVIEW: EV Knight’s “The Flannigan Cure” from American Cannibal
NOTABLE WORKS REVIEW: “Dream’s End” by Henry Kuttner and Catherine Moore
NOTABLE WORKS REVIEW: The Grief Hole by Kaaron Warren
NOTABLE WORKS REVIEW: Shards: A Mental Health Charity Anthology edited by Kara Hawkers and Emery Blake
NOTABLE WORKS REVIEW: “I’ll Be Gone By Then” by Eric LaRocca
NOTABLE WORKS REVIEW: “Survival Ritual” by John Edward Lawson
NOTABLE WORKS REVIEW: Welcome to the Black Parade
Holistic Horrors: EV Knight’s “The Flannigan Cure” from American Cannibal by L. E. Daniels
Halloween Haunts Blog: Call for Submissions

From October 1 through October 31, the Horror Writers Association will host an online event to celebrate the month of Halloween and help horror readers and horror writers connect at the eeriest time of the year.
All HWA members are invited to participate in this series of daily blog posts, book excerpts, and more. Halloween Haunts offers HWA members a place to share Halloween anecdotes and stories to connect with new readers, spread the word about members’ new works, and raise the profile of the horror genre and the HWA.
Interview with Pete Kelly, Poet-in-residence for the Dracula Society
Extended Request for Latinx Heritage Recommendations
Nuts & Bolts: Author Todd Keisling on Self-Advocacy for Writers

Nobody becomes a writer because they had childhood dreams of negotiating contracts. Like it or not, according to author Todd Keisling, it’s part of the job for authors without an agent. In this month’s edition of Nuts & Bolts, Todd talks about what authors – particularly beginners – should know about self-advocacy.
Nuts & Bolts: Interview With Magic Historian Anthony Grafton

The great thinkers of the Renaissance get plenty of credit for their indelible mark on art, science, and architecture. But maybe they don’t get enough credit for another field to which they made an enormous contribution – horror tropes. Demon-summoning rituals? Deals with the devil? Spellbooks full of dark secrets that must not fall into the wrong hands? All part of the legend surrounding Renaissance-era “magi,” who straddled the line between scientist and sorcerer, and who inspired literary accounts of Faust and Prospero. Anthony Grafton, a Princeton University history professor, tells their fascinating story in Magus, his study of Renaissance-era magic and its practitioners, which should provide plenty of inspiration for horror or fantasy writers who want to add an element of historical accuracy to their fictional sorcerers.
2024 Horror Writers Association Elections for Officers and Trustees

2024 Horror Writers Association Elections for Officers and Trustees
The HWA’s annual elections will soon be upon us. Up this year are four Trustee positions, as well as the offices of President and Secretary. Please read the statements of the following candidates carefully. Links to the ballot will be sent out on or around August 19, 2024 to our Active and Lifetime members, with a due date of August 25, 2024. The elected officers shall hold their respective offices for terms of two years, beginning on November 1 and ending on October 31.