Horror/Scary: February 12, 2013 Issue [#5512]
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Horror/Scary


 This week: Horror As The Alter-Ego of Love
  Edited by: Kate - Writing & Reading Author IconMail Icon
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Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

"The beginning of love is a horror of emptiness"
Robert Bly


         Welcome to this week's edition of the WDC Horror and Scary Newsletter, where we explore the means of inciting horror with our words in verse and prose.

"Where there is no imagination there is no horror."
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle



Word from our sponsor

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Letter from the editor

         Greetings, my fellow visionaries and scribes plundering the crevices of humankind's dark and secret fears and desires. Well, it is Valentine's Day, so let's explore.

         Fear and desire ~ they go together well, do they not. Humankind both fears what it desires and desires to explore what it fears. Think about it, makes sense, does it not. From childhood we explore the unknown - what's that crunchy noise in the hedges; I've got to show her/him that I'm not as scared as I look because... why? because there's something about him/her that makes me want to look brave and strong and fearless even though it's hard to catch my breath when I step towards the hedges, and towards him/her.

         Get the image, both horror and romance are visceral and sensual, whether they are visible and tangible or imagination perceived by one or more of the characters. They have physical as well as emotional impact on the victim, I mean, subject, of the sensation. Horror entwined with romance or love, be it returned or spurned, often adds depth to the story or poem, allowing the reader to empathize with one or more of the characters, drawing reader into the otherworld created for his/her horrific exploration.

         Horror and romance blend well together, and have a long relationship, centuries long, so they must get along, right? Be the object human, or other non-human sentient being, or of the spirit world, or an alternate reality, the increased passion energizes the plot and offers opportunity for characters to show themselves in their horrific gory, I mean, glory.

         For familiar horror blended with romance, consider Frankenstein, or Rebecca, or Wuthering Heights for some classics, or more recently H.P. Lovecraft (several in his collection October Countries). The horror is either initiated by, or escalates because of, spurned love, or unrequited love, or the imagined or perceived removal of the object of one's affection or obsession. The end results can be visceral, gruesome, or more subtle shifts in the fabric of the world as we know it (again, Lovecraft).

         The blend continues to weave atmosphere into the horror, the added depth drawing the reader into the parallel themes of increasing terror and romantic or emotional engagement. The setting becomes as another character, perhaps as deep as an actual antagonist, one to be bested in order to achieve success in quelling the horror and either achieving the romance or setting it to its ultimate rest.

         Horror with romantic undertones can be erotic, or subliminal in its expression. It can engage humans, non-humans, spirits, the living and the dead (in various stages of decomposition). Weaving in the atmosphere, the raging storm or silent beach, adds depth, explains the meaning, and makes the reader more fully engage both the horror and the anticipation of romance or love or love's opposite, hatred. And when your characters react with violence, be it visual and swift or subtle and slow, your readers are fully engaged in the story, anticipating the horror to come, yet unsure when or where or by whom (or what) it will be met and resolved.

         A romantic interlude can create a bond between two or more characters who join to fight an outside enemy or evil, or it can rend asunder friends, companions, and make of them enemies to wreak vengeance and horror upon each other and other sentient creatures, mortal or otherwise. But it's the horror unleashed that resounds to engage and drive the characters to seek vengeance or respite, together or apart.

Write on!
Kate




Editor's Picks

Engage the horror in these tales where horror entwines its grip on love or romance in myriad guises, then release one of your own*Wink*

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 Conscience Open in new Window. (E)
A man's affair with a woman he'd not met before, leads their lives to the worst direction.
#1909849 by diadem Author IconMail Icon


 The tollbooth (revised) Open in new Window. (13+)
Everyone pays...
#1915238 by James Heyward Author IconMail Icon


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#1900370 by Not Available.


 There Comes A Time Open in new Window. (E)
This is inspired by the great Edgar Allan Poe, I love to read his poetry.
#1917673 by Scarecrow_Poet Author IconMail Icon


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#1725132 by Not Available.


 Book Bites Open in new Window. (18+)
A college student goes home with the lovely female librarian. She has a surprise for him.
#1564907 by neilbco Author IconMail Icon


 Only For You Open in new Window. (18+)
"Heroes never have to be stared at, like they’re killers and bad and evil." Lang, viol.
#1750447 by Arosis Author IconMail Icon


FORUM
Sinister Stories Contest Open in new Window. (13+)
A horror contest for everyone! Can you write a terrifying tale? February Special Round!
#1556724 by Jeff Author IconMail Icon


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Word from Writing.Com

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Ask & Answer

         I thank you for this brief respite in the relative safety of your virtual home, sheltered for a time from the void.

         Until we next meet, may you each survive and thrive within the void and weave tales of horror imagined and surreal.

Write On*Paw*
Kate - Writing & Reading Author Icon
Kate

P.S. Happy Valentine's Day *Wink*


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