Pride Month 2025: An Interview with Abigail F. Taylor
Pride Month 2025: An Interview with Newton Webb
StokerCon 2025 Keynote Speech: Why We Need Horror Authors in the Fight For the Freedom to Read
2024 Bram Stoker Award Winners Announced
StokerCon 2026 Announced – Celebrating Ten Years of StokerCon!
Pride Month 2025: An Interview with Mia Dalia
Pride Month 2025: An Interview with Briana Morgan
Pride Month 2025: An Interview with Nico Bell
Pride Month 2025: An Interview with Azzurra Nox
Pride Month 2025: Celebrating in the Midst of Chaos
HWA Scholarship Applications Now Open!
Annual StokerCon Diversity Raffle Prizes Announced
HWA Scholarship from Hell Recipient Announced
The Horror Writers Association Announces Lifetime Achievement Award Winners
HWA Poetry Showcase Volume XII Now Open for Submissions
NUTS & BOLTS: Lisa Morton Discusses Dennis Etchison
Lisa Morton describes Dennis Etchison’s work as a “brain bombshell” that changed her idea of what horror fiction could do. When she was just starting out, Etchison had a major influence on both her art and her career. In this month’s edition of Nuts & Bolts, Lisa discusses Etchison’s writing technique, his influence on her own work, and what writers today can learn from the late horror legend.
Nuts & Bolts: Interview With John Harrison, Netflix Series Creator, Author of Residue: Paramentals Rising
Early in his career, writer and director John Harrison picked up techniques about telling a horror story from collaborating with George Romero. He’s spent decades refining those techniques as a screenwriter, director, and novelist – most recently in a new novel that released on the 11th of this month, Residue: Paramentals Rising, based on the Netflix series he created. In this month’s edition of Nuts & Bolts, John shares his thoughts about telling a horror story and storytelling in general. He also gives advice about releasing a book, and getting into TV writing.
Genesis – The First Black Horror Writers/Storytellers by Linda D. Addison
Horror —n: an overwhelming and painful feeling caused by something frightfully shocking, terrifying, or revolting; a shuddering fear.
Who were the first Black horror writers in a country that made enslaved Africans’ everyday life horrific? How did stories develop and what were their themes? I wanted to write this because of my own curiosity. I didn’t know where this was going to lead me but the more I dug the more I found. The yellow brick road of discovery took me away from the land of published authors to places unexpected.
Black Heritage in Horror Month: An Interview with Marc L. Abbott
What inspired you to start writing?
This is always a difficult question to answer because I have always loved writing. My imagination was always running wild and growing up, rather than paying attention to lessons in class, I was writing stories in the middle of my notebooks. I used to look forward to doing creative writing with spelling words in elementary school. But my inspiration for starting to take writing seriously was in high school. I had a teacher, Mr. Dolan, who was always encouraging me to tell my stories. One open school night he told my parents “Your son is a writer and is really good at it. You should help him nurture that talent because he can go far with it.” He was one of those teachers who always believed in what I could do. I had told my parents I wanted to be a writer, and they weren’t a hundred percent behind it as a profession with my father saying that I had to be good at the craft to make it. That was before Mr. Dolan told him this news. And until I heard Mr. Dolan say this, I thought about finding something else to pursue. But he confirmed that small belief I had in myself, and it inspired me to go forward with it.













