Posted on August 26, 2008 at 2:13am
Posted on June 20, 2008 at 5:48am
Posted on June 6, 2008 at 2:22am
This is something I've been wondering, and it directly affects my career, but I already know the answer: How do you write horror that isn't horror? I
hear over and over that "Horror doesn't sell," yet clearly major
publishers are regularly printing books that are horror in most every
sense but the label on the spine. Truth is, there is no loyal horror
readership out there, at least not one that matters enough to…
Posted on December 6, 2007 at 1:26am
Girl is really into the Bermuda Triangle right now. She wants to take a boat to the edge of it and flay a paper plane into it. Her big thing now is
"teaching" in her classroom, and of course I am the inept pupil. Her
earnestness is so cool, and she's obviously modeling her second grade
teacher. And I get to trick her into improving my math skills.
Got…
ContinuePosted on October 30, 2007 at 3:27am
Welcome to
CrimeSpace
© 2024 Created by Daniel Hatadi. Powered by
Comment Wall (44 comments)
You need to be a member of CrimeSpace to add comments!
Best regards
Preetham Grandhi
Early Endorsements for “A Circle of Souls”
Linda Fairstein, NYT Bestselling Author: "A fascinating debut - this novel takes the reader to the darkest places in the human soul, from a writer with the authenticity to lead us there. A stunning thriller and an important read."
Judge Judy Sheindlin, star of the Judge Judy Show: "The seminal work of this fine author kept me glued to my chair until the adventure was over and the mystery solved. A great read!"
Book Synopsis:
The sleepy town of Newbury, Connecticut, is shocked when a little girl is found brutally murdered. The town s top detective, perplexed by a complete lack of leads, calls in FBI agent Leia Bines, an expert in cases involving children.
Meanwhile, Dr. Peter Gram, a psychiatrist at Newbury s hospital, searches desperately for the cause of seven-year-old Naya Hastings devastating nightmares. Afraid that she might hurt herself in the midst of a torturous episode, Naya s parents have turned to the bright young doctor as their only hope.
The situations confronting Leia and Peter converge when Naya begins drawing chilling images of murder after being bombarded by the disturbing images in her dreams. Amazingly, her sketches are the only clues to the crime that has panicked Newbury residents. Against her better judgment, Leia explores the clues in Naya s crude drawings, only to set off an alarming chain of events.
In this stunning psychological thriller, innocence gives way to evil, and trust lies forgotten in a web of deceit, fear, and murder.
Of course, Hollywood is the exact opposite, and films are more likely to undeservedly be labeled "horror" because the audience for the genre is very loyal and broad. A run of popular horror films have never really carried over or created interest in horror fiction, and I think it's safe to assume this will always remain true--with the recent National Endowment for the Arts study showing a continually declining readership, I believe there will never be a large horror book audience. That doesn't mean people don't read, or that people don't like scary stuff; horror is just as dead as westerns and big-bug monster fiction. Kind of makes you wonder why anybody bothers writing the crap...
Oddly enough, I'm not bitter about it, though I have not yet embraced the idea that I either need to write something else or cleverly disguise the weird stuff in my books. I just kind of fell into a groove, and I don't even read that much horror fiction myself. I don't even view it as a "problem." It's not like I can say, "You're stupid if you don't like horror" or "Everybody loves horror," because it's clearly untrue. It's just reality. Lucky for me, I've never had much use for reality.
Brian
regards from Switzerland, Jan
Worshipping my cat, of course. Sadly, it's too chilly up here in New England to run around skyclad. And you?
Kristine
View All Comments