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Tag archive: Black Heritage in Horror Month 2024 [ 6 ]

Black Heritage in Horror Month 2024: An Interview with Tish Jackson

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What inspired you to start writing?

—Many many moons ago, I entered a contest in elementary school on why an amusement park should relocate to our town and won! I won the essay contest and our town won the amusement park. It made me feel like my words had power. I started writing short stories right after that and finished a murder mystery in junior high and showed it to everyone I could get to read it. I was hooked and wrote everything! But scary stories reminiscent of the movies I watched with my Mom as a child came bubbling up more than any other ideas. I went from murder mysteries to ghost stories to mental murder to zombies and enjoyed every word.  ...More...

Black Heritage in Horror Month 2024: An Interview with Nicole D. Sconiers

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What inspired you to start writing?

When I was a kid, I used to sit at the feet of my great-grandmother, Sallie, and listen to her tell stories. She had a way of captivating the listener with her tales of growing up down South, protecting her property from the Klan with a nine-shooter Winchester rifle she called Ole Betsy. I developed a love for storytelling by osmosis, just absorbing the colorful language and the joys and horrors of everyday life she shared with me. ...More...

Black Heritage in Horror Month 2024: An Interview with Chanel Harry

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What inspired you to start writing? 

I have drawn inspiration from many facets of my life. I have always been reading horror novels and watching horror movies since I was about four years old thanks to my mom. She used to read a lot of Stephen King and Anne Rice books which, of course, I picked up and read. So, I would say that my mother was the main inspiration, and I thank her every day for instilling literature in my life. ...More...

Black Heritage in Horror Month 2024: An Interview with Kai Leakes

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What inspired you to start writing?

My inspiration to write came from just growing up and aching to see myself reflected in the stories that I loved. I used to have to do a cognitive dissonance as a child where I’d replace the white characters with BIPOC and myself because I became over-saturated with being given stories about children who did not look like me. It also didn’t help that I loved books so much that I was reading out of my grade level. This led to me developing my own stories In my mind. As I grew up, I continued that same pattern into my teens until more books by authors of color in my age range at that time came about which fueled my inner storytelling.

What was it about the horror genre that drew you to it? ...More...

Black Heritage in Horror Month 2024: An Interview With Erin E. Adams

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What inspired you to start writing?

I’ve been writing since my childhood. There are still boxes of my old notebooks in my mother’s house. So writing has been a part of my life at nearly every step of the way. I think it started out of a need to make things and to engage with my imagination. I’ve also been a lifelong reader and for as long as I can remember, I always wanted to write stories of my own. ...More...

Black Heritage in Horror Month 2024: An Introduction by Dr. Lisa Wood

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by Dr. Lisa Wood

I’m often asked about being an African American writer in the horror genre. The question is fair; I am an African American writer who has been a psychological horror author for a long time, so it would follow that I have witnessed trends and patterns over the years and might have a comment toward it. But the question, in and of itself, is one that I wish never had to be asked again. It implies that there is a difference between African American people versus other racial groups in the genre. It implies that today a difference still exists, as much as it did in the early 2000s when I, a newly published, fresh-faced author, was asked the question for the first time. It is a struggle we are making headway on, but one that we still must overcome. That means different things for different people. ...More...

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