The Writer - 10.2019

(Joyce) #1

2 | The Writer • October 2019


FROM THE EDITOR


NICKI PORTER


Keep writing,

Nicki Porter
Senior Editor
@nickimporter

The haunting season


I read multiple genres all year long, mixing poetry
and nonfiction with novels and short stories as I
please. The lone exception is October, when I read
one genre and one genre alone: Horror.
I want books that go bump in the night, leave
me terrified to sleep with the lights off, convince
me that someone’s lurking in the linen closet. I
want prose powerful enough to raise goosebumps
on my arm. I want stories that linger long after
I’ve closed the covers (or buried under them).
Scary movies, horror books, creepy TV shows,
I love them all. But when I confess this love to
others, I often get the same shuddering reaction:
“Oh, I can’t do stuff like that. Too scary.”
Which, of course, is a pretty understandable
response, right? Who would willingly spend their
free time knee-deep in a case of the heebie-jeebies?
So why do fans keep coming back to horror?
What makes a person want to be scared?
I think about it a lot, especially in an age where
the headlines contain enough horror to last a life-
time. What drives a person to spend their leisure
time in a fictional hellscape? Why do we seek the
dark, and what do we hope to find there?
Part of me knows it provides a temporary
escape from everyday anxiety. It’s hard to fret
over that upcoming root canal when flesh-eating
zombies are on the loose. I know it’s also a path to
explore all the larger things in life that haunt us.
(Is The Shining about ghosts, or is it about addic-
tion? The wise reader answers: Why not both?)
Still another part of me craves art that creates a
physical response in the reader. If an author can
use the English language to make me audibly
laugh, tear up, or shiver in my chair, that’s a damn

fine piece of writing. So I want books that make
my heart race. I want language that gives me chills.
I want to feel something when I read, and horror
promises I’ll feel vividly alive from start to finish.
But I think one of my favorite things about
horror is how much earnesty exists at its core.
Fiction is a lie, plain and simple, but oh, how
much of it is spent convincing the reader that it’s
the truth. And ghosts, goblins, and ghouls are all
a much harder truth to sell than a troubled mar-
riage or murder case – and one humans don’t
have any good reason to swallow. We want to
laugh, so we flock to comedy. We need to under-
stand death and pain, so we relish tragedy. But
humans don’t have much of a good reason –
socially or biologically – to admit a work of art
makes us afraid. Showing fear implies weakness,
insecurity, a loss of control. So we cross our arms.
So we jut our jaw. And we say: You think that’s
scary? That’s not scary.
That’s stupid.
That’s why it’s easier to make a horror-comedy,
with fake-blood hijinks and campy zombies. So
we laugh at the things that should scare us. But
how brave, how confident is the author who will
stand in front of a crowd, that swarm of crossed-
arm skeptics, and say: I am going to tell you a
story that will scare the living daylights out of you.
And you’re gonna love it.
That’s the kind of confidence I want to see in
an author. That’s the kind of confidence I want to
see in fiction, period.
So come November, I’ll welcome all my cheer-
ier genres back with open arms. But for the rest
of this month, you’ll only find me in the dark.
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