Halloween Haunts: 10 Tips for Creating a Wicked Halloween Costume by Annie Neugebauer

You’re at Halloween Haunts, hosted by the Horror Writers Association; I don’t need to convince you that Halloween is the best holiday. I don’t need to regale you with tales of childhood mischief to get you in the mood or win you over to the concept of costumes. You know dressing up is where it’s at. So whether you’re going to a huge gala, a friend’s backyard party, or throwing your own shindig, you’re going to need a wicked costume. Here are my ten tips for becoming the most bombawesome of them all. 1. Follow your spark. The best thing…

Halloween Haunts: How to be Haunted by Leigh Perry

For me, October means haunted houses! Not the real ones, mind you; those are year round. I’m talking about haunted house attractions. As part of the research for my latest book, I wallowed in reading articles about haunts and stories from scare actors. I came away exceedingly impressed by the effort and creativity that goes into scaring people night after night. I also gleaned some advice to keep in mind before you visit a haunt. 1. It’s not real. Okay, you probably know that these aren’t real insane asylums or vampire castle, but unless I chant that to myself while…

Halloween Haunts: Everything I Know About Sadism I Learned From Alfred Hitchcock by Pete Mesling

Halloween is not unlike death itself, I suppose. We know it's only a matter of time before it arrives, whether we want it to or not. It's more predictable than death, of course, arriving like clockwork every thirty-first of October, with its jack-o-lanterns, scary costumes and dry leaves that blow through the moonlight. But it carries with it the same kind of fascination and dread with which we contemplate our own demise. So to celebrate Halloween is to celebrate ... not death, exactly, but the idea of death. The possibilities that death presents us with. There is hope in death.…

Halloween Haunts: Spooky Lit – Why Spooky Matters to Young Readers by Angela Yuriko Smith

Not every little girl loves dolls and pink ponies. I grew up in Wyoming. My dad was an overly avid hunter with an undiagnosed case of PTSD. My mother was second generation Okinawan from a long line of mediums. I didn't understand the other girls my age and shared few, if any, similar interests. Needless to say, I did not fit in with my peers. A latch-key kid, my parents locked up the television while they were gone so I wouldn't rot my brain, something I'm grateful for. Books were my only entertainment and I combed through their well stocked shelves…

Halloween Haunts: Introducing New Readers to Horror by Adrian Ludens

Let me be clear: horror is NOT just for Halloween! I believe this with heart and soul, and yet, I’m guilty of perpetuating that stereotype. Think about the average reader: the stay-at-home parent seeking diversion during a few quiet minutes; the businessman or businesswoman reading during their commute on the subway; the person who turns up their nose at everything that isn’t “literature;” the person who only reads non-fiction; the person who read one horror author once and gave up on the genre. This list could go on. Horror is often marginalized, much to my frustration. Here are a couple…

Halloween Haunts: A Peak Through the Leper Window–Finding Unholy Inspiration in Holy Places by Frazer Lee

When the Season of Mists comes, and Halloween with it, I enjoy nothing better than sitting beside the fire with a book – often in search of inspiration for my next story. A couple of Halloweens ago I was leafing through an old history book, Ecclesiastical Curiosities (ed. William Andrews, 1899) – if you must know – and chanced upon the term 'leper window'. My imagination began to run wild with the revelation that these 'low windows' (also known as hagioscopes or squints) were incorporated into church buildings so that lepers could watch services without upsetting other members of the…
Halloween Haunts: The Last Winter of Newgate by Freedom Chevalier

Halloween Haunts: The Last Winter of Newgate by Freedom Chevalier

It crawled toward midnight, outside the Old Bailey in the echo of Sepulchre’s bells The moon wrapped himself in a blanket of clouds the winds screeched a bone-chilling yell I turned up my collar to stave off the night a stranger I walked on alone Feeling the cold, arthritic fingers of death start to ferry me home   The old road stretched on, bloodless and pale in the flare of the snickering moon Baring its moss-covered, black, rotting teeth with gobs of putrid, slick drool Something blurred the horizon, I unsheathed my sword with a clink from its talisman chain A leftover trinket from gods who abandoned mankind on the night of the rain  …
Halloween Haunts: Technology and Fear by Poppy Dennison, DSP Publications

Halloween Haunts: Technology and Fear by Poppy Dennison, DSP Publications

Fear is one of those deeply personal things. I, for one, am absolutely terrified of clowns. There’s no good reason for this fear, and my mother assures me she never abandoned me at a circus during my childhood. I’m not sure I believe her, but there you have it. I remember back in the day finding certain horror movies the most terrifying thing in existence (other than clowns, of course.) Take A Nightmare on Elm Street, for example. Freddy Krueger was scary with a capital S. That was then, though, and this is now. I recently attempted to scare my…
Halloween Haunts: Halloween Doldrums by David B. Riley

Halloween Haunts: Halloween Doldrums by David B. Riley

My first few Halloweens when I was young were simply awesome–just a pinch of scariness coupled with an adventure with my friends. The trick or treating was almost secondary to the costumes and comradery of what excitement awaited us–almost. I was particularly fond of my skeleton costume for reasons I can no longer remember. As I grew older, I also became aware of a darker side of the holiday–vandalism. The first time I encountered it someone went along the street and took people's Jack-O-lanterns and smashed them to bits. That made little sense to my young mind. I'd carved that…
Halloween Haunts: Halloween October Fest by Ian Welke

Halloween Haunts: Halloween October Fest by Ian Welke

It’s that time of year again. October is upon us once more and with it come the same sets of expectations and disappointments that come every year for those of us that still hold that ideal Halloween in our memories, whether we ever truly experienced it or not. When I was growing up, Halloween was my favorite time of the year hands down. In school I started drawing cemeteries, bats, and haunted houses well before the teacher instructed us to, and I often kept drawing them well after I was supposed to. Who wants to draw a turkey anyway? Even…
Halloween Haunts: 9 Novels for the Novice Writer by Richard Evans

Halloween Haunts: 9 Novels for the Novice Writer by Richard Evans

Interested in writing horror but don't know where to begin? Here is a list of the 9 essential horror novels you need to read to get you started. In no particular order. No one can tell you what the greatest horror novels ever written are, nor would I tell a new writer to read the best of the best, it can only make your job harder knowing what you are up against. What you need to do is build the skills to tell your own stories by evaluating how others have done it, regardless of whether the book is critically…
Halloween Haunts: Bloody Mary by James Chambers

Halloween Haunts: Bloody Mary by James Chambers

As far as I know, no student ever saw inside the room with the yellow, rippled glass window. The only one on the second floor of St. James School not part of a classroom row, the window glared down like an angry eye at the parking lot where we played every day during recess. I never found the room it belonged to before I left there for another school, because where it fell between classrooms, no door or other feature existed to explain it. That alone inspired plenty of speculation amongst my third grade class, but the faded red stains…

The Bram Stoker Awards®

About the Bram Stoker Awards Submitting a Work for the Bram Stoker Awards Prior Winners and Nominees RULES Complete Bram Stoker Award Rules (PDF) About the Bram Stoker Awards Each year, the Horror Writer's Association presents the Bram Stoker Awards for Superior Achievement, named in honor of Bram Stoker, author of the seminal horror work, Dracula. The Bram Stoker Awards were instituted immediately after the organization's incorporation in 1987. To ameliorate the competitive nature of any award system, the Bram Stoker Awards are given "for superior achievement," not for "best of the year," and the rules are deliberately designed to…
Halloween Haunts Coming on October 1!

Halloween Haunts Coming on October 1!

Beginning on October 1st and running through the entire month, HWA will once again present its annual Halloween Haunts blog series, with posts about history and Halloween from HWA's members, book excerpts, and lots of great giveaways you won't want to miss!
Newsletter Ads – Get your product in front of our members

Newsletter Ads – Get your product in front of our members

Our newsletter is available online to all members. IMPORTANT: Ad requests should be submitted between the 5th and 18th of each month. Full Page Ad 650px wide by any height ($25) (.png, .jpg, or .gif)   Deadline The cut-off for each month is the 15th of the previous month. Purchase your ad and get the file to us by the 15th or it will have to go in the following month's newsletter. Example: Ad ordered and file submitted by midnight 10/15 ==> ad appears in November issue. Ad ordered and file submitted 10/16 or later ==> ad appears in December…
What HWA Has Done for Me by Annie Neugebauer

What HWA Has Done for Me by Annie Neugebauer

When I was starting out as a horror writer in 2008, I hadn’t yet heard about the Horror Writers Association (though I had heard of the Bram Stoker Awards, as the winners list provided much of my reading material). But after a couple of years of actively pursuing writing, seeking publication, and delving into the industry head-first, I learned that the HWA was something I wanted to be a part of. Resources, support, networking, education, mentorship, and most importantly for me at the time, a sense of community. Count me in! But when I went online to look up the…

In September, “Stephanie M. Wytovich – Stoker Award-nominated Poet – Poetry Editor for RDSP”

Stephanie M. Wytovich is the Poetry Editor for Raw Dog Screaming Press, a book reviewer for Nameless Magazine, and a well-known coffee addict. She is a member of the Science Fiction Poetry Association, an active member of the Horror Writers Association, and a graduate of Seton Hill University’s MFA program for Writing Popular Fiction. Her poetry collections, Hysteria: A Collection of Madness, Mourning Jewelry, and An Exorcism of Angels are all Bram Stoker Award-nominated, and her debut novel, The Eighth, will be out in 2015 from Dark Regions Press. Continuing the HWA Poetry Page exploration of the current state of…

Interview with Poet Michael Randolph

Michael Randolph is a horror author, poet, and editor currently living in San Antonio Texas. He is the owner-operator of Eldritch Press. He is a U.S. Army Veteran of Desert Storm/Shield where he first witnessed the true horrors of the world. A navy brat, he travelled to many countries throughout his childhood and still travels sometimes more than he likes. He’s a certified Gemologist and has spent nearly twenty-five years in the aviation field, mostly in military defense as an airplane/helicopter structures mechanic. I’m incredibly grateful that Michael took some time from his busy schedule to talk to the HWA…
Recipients of the HWA Scholarships

Recipients of the HWA Scholarships

Visit the official scholarship site for up-to-date information. The winners of the three annual HWA Scholarships have been selected, and they are Thersa Matsuura, Eric Smith, and Michael Tugendhat. Major congratulations to the HWA Writing Scholarship awardees. We received a number of fine applications in all categories. We wish those chosen the very best in their future careers. Thersa Matsuura, recipient of the Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley Scholarship, said, "I am beyond elated to learn that the HWA has chosen me to be this year's recipient of the Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley Scholarship. My son has just moved out of the house…