We've got out very own Scream Queen in Jane Smith, so please enjoy this guest post from Jane Smith,a freelance writer and blogger with free online checks
Masters
of atmosphere: Revisit horror classics
Horror
buffs will doubtlessly name authors like Stephen King and Dean Koontz when
asked to list classic authors of the genre. But what would they say if asked to
name the influences on these “classic” writers? There were a host of horror
authors writing harrowing tales—stories that still incite fear in the
contemporary reader—decades before Stephen King was even born. I encourage all
horror fans to take a look at some of these vintage authors in order to gain a
deeper appreciation for the themes that shape current horror fiction.
Edgar Allan Poe
A
champion of gothic fiction in early to mid nineteenth century America, Edgar
Allan Poe has been immortalized for his foundational contributions to the
horror genre. Everyone has hear of Poe’s classic poem “The Raven,” a work
playing on self-induced madness, but the real meat of his work is in his short
fiction. Stories like “The Pit and the Pendulum,” “The Tell-Tale Heart,” and
“The Oval Portrait” revolutionized the way future writers captured gloom and
doom in fiction. Idle curiosity over
mortality and the specters of life that lurk in the darkness occupy much of
Poe’s work. Most horror authors to this day cite Poe’s macabre writing as a
major influence on their own work.
Robert Bloch
Robert
Bloch was an American science fiction and horror author whose work spanned the
greater part of the twentieth century. His work is often classified as cerebral
horror, with fictional works describing characters’ disassociation with reality
and descent into madness. He had a fascination with real life stories of people
losing their minds and committing inexplicable, eerie crimes. His 1959 novel
“Psycho,” about the mentally disturbed Norman Bates who terrorized occupants of
his family motel was, adapted into the classic horror film directed by Alfred
Hitchcock.
Shirley Jackson
Shirley
Jackson’s writing had a profound impact on controversial horror fiction. She
wrote the type of stories that frightened readers not just because of their content,
but because of how that content reflected contemporary culture. Her infamous
short story “The Lottery,” for example, scandalized readers by its violent
satire of modern day culture (if you haven’t read the story I won’t ruin the
ending for you. Go read it now!). Her novel “The Haunting of Hill House” set
the bar for modern day haunted house fictions and films alike, writing the
titular house with the characterization as if it were a character unto itself.
Her work can easily be ranked among the best in American horror.
H.P. Lovecraft
Horror
enthusiasts will often debate between Edgar Allan Poe and H.P. Lovecraft as the
undisputed classic masters of the horror genre. Writing in the early twentieth
century, H.P. Lovecraft wrote horror and alternate reality fiction that
depicted other planes of existence from a detached and clinical prospective.
He’s perhaps best known for writing an alternate Cthulhu universe inhabited by
people completely unaware of calamities and horrors just beyond their
perspective. His worlds are inhabited by a mythology of demonic demigods, such
as the Cthulhu (a bat-like human with the head of an octopus) or the Ithaqua (a
zombie-like human with glowing red eyes and webbed feet). To be sure, his
stories are unlike any other. Check out his novella “At the Mountains of
Madness” for a thrilling introduction to this god among horror authors.
Byline:
Jane Smith is a freelance writer and blogger. She writes about free background checks for Backgroundcheck.org. Questions and comments can be sent to: janesmth161 @ gmail.com
1 comment:
Most of us would be hard put to restrict a list of writers of vintage horror to just four names! And I suspect few would limit their list of those who shaped modern horror to Americans only. I'd encourage readers looking for the deeper roots of horror fiction to go to sites like the "Vault of Evil" boards, which delve right back to Victorian and Edwardian days.
Still choose to limit the genre's classics to the works of US writers? Well, the stats show that Bloch and Lovecraft, despite their influence in later decades via paperback anthologies, were far from the top writers for the original Weird Tales magazine (1923-1954). Check out the details here: http://tellersofweirdtales.blogspot.com/2011/11/who-wrote-most-stories-for-weird-tales.html
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