Sunday, November 30, 2025
Saturday, November 29, 2025
[Link] How To Write Like HP Lovecraft – 5 Best Tips
by Eugene Doak
Lovecraft might not be a household name like Stephen King, but his stories and the mythos behind them have a cult following. His unique style of cosmic horror has inspired countless authors, films, musicians, and games. So, even if you haven’t sat down and read The Call of Cthulhu, you’re probably familiar with some “Lovecraftian” inspired horror, which is the topic of today’s article – What is Lovecraftian Horror and how to write like HP Lovecraft.
Cosmicism: The Philosophy of Insignificance
At the heart of Lovecraft’s style is Cosmicism, the philosophical idea that human life is meaningless in the face of the vast, indifferent universe. His stories are not about good versus evil, but about frail, limited humans stumbling upon truths that their minds are simply not equipped to handle. The horror comes from the revelation that there are ancient, powerful, and utterly alien beings for whom humanity is less than an afterthought.
The Fear of the Unknown
Lovecraft rarely showed his monsters in full detail. Instead, he relied on suggestive prose and vague descriptions to build suspense. He would use words like “cyclopean,” “non-Euclidean,” and “squamous” to describe his creations, forcing the reader’s imagination to fill in the terrifying blanks. The horror isn’t just in the monster itself, but in the inability of the human mind to fully comprehend it.
Pastiche and Pseudobibliographia
Lovecraft created a shared literary universe by having his characters reference the same fictional grimoires and texts, most famously The Necronomicon. This technique, known as pseudobibliographia, made his stories feel more real and connected, as if they were all part of a larger, horrifying history. He also used a style of writing that mimicked 18th-century antiquarians, giving his prose a scholarly, archaic feel that lent credibility to the terrifying events he described.
How To Write Like HP Lovecraft
If you want to try writing like H.P. Lovecraft, you should focus on a few key elements that define his unique style. It’s less about imitating his exact word choice and more about capturing the atmosphere and philosophical core of his work.
Read the full article: https://livingwriter.com/blog/how-to-write-like-hp-lovecraft-5-best-tips/
Friday, November 28, 2025
AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTION PRESENTS BOOH HUNTERS VOL. 3 - SENIORS
Upon their arrival at the Long Household, Book Hunter Master Zhi Wenku and her companion, Master Shen Wei, discover all the aftermath of a horrific event. Foreign agents had descended on the family and somehow vaporized all the adults. But when seeking the children, who had gone into hiding, these attackers were then defeated by a young mud-covered boy named Gan Xuan. He who claims to have devoured the bad men.
Thus Zhi, Shen and their student apprentices, Qing and Xinglu, begin their most intriguing and complex adventure ever. It will take them into different realms of magic and confrontations with truly fantastical beings. Once again writer Barbara Moran spins a tale of Chinese wonder rich with amazing and memorable characters, both evil and heroic.
Artist Gary Kato provides the interior illustrations with Guy Davis turning in his colorful cover piece.
AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTION – PULP FICTION FOR A NEW GENERATION!
Available now from Amazon in paperback and soon on Kindle.
Thursday, November 27, 2025
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Monday, November 24, 2025
Sunday, November 23, 2025
Saturday, November 22, 2025
[Link] Forever Faithful To a Single Story: An Ode to Monogamous Writing
“It was never about setting out to write a book—the point all along was to write this book.”
by Amy Gallo Ryan
There seems to be a single answer to every predicament in which a writer might find herself; reached an impasse in your manuscript? Start something new. Need a distraction when you’re out on sub? Start something new. In a lull after your project sold? Oh, here’s an idea; start. something. new.
Yet as each of those occasions arrived, I did no such thing. For the past decade, rather than splinter my attention, accumulating second and third manuscripts in a drawer somewhere, I’ve had eyes for only one. That book hits shelves this week and given the many moments of stillness throughout the process of writing, querying, submitting, rewriting, tweaking and revising, it strikes me now as quite remarkable that I’ve managed to permanently avoid starting something new.
Each time I refused to redirect my gaze, I gained a greater understanding of my commitment, my tenacity, the wholeness of my belief in what this story should be.
I’m certainly aware of the advantages of being a writer with a drawer full of projects. More manuscripts mean improved odds for publication, to say nothing of the allure of distraction; when you’re stuck or bored or striking out, what could be more illuminating or productive than redirecting your attention, dazzling your brain with an entirely new set of words and ideas. I have a screenwriter friend whose head is full of such abundance. She concocts story after story, and then, perhaps even more impressively, actually writes them into existence. When we exchange updates on our work I have to qualify my questions, saying things like, “what’s happening with the one about…” and “which actress is reading the one where…” I have such deep admiration for her and for everyone whose drawers are stuffed with pages; mine contain stray batteries and Forever stamps.
I was told in a lecture once that the quality distinguishing a writer from an editor was that a writer couldn’t help but write. Putting pen to paper was a fact of existence, a matter of necessity. Who among us had a little pad on our nightstand, a stack of swollen notebooks beneath our bed, pages puffy with scrawl? The distinction has lived rent free in my mind ever since, just the lifetime supply of fuel my imposter syndrome needed.
Because the truth is that for ten whole years my writing has consisted of a solitary project.
Read the full article: https://lithub.com/forever-faithful-to-a-single-story-an-ode-to-monogamous-writing/
Friday, November 21, 2025
Valhalla Books unleashes Dante's Rebirth!
After the stunning final reckoning that laid waste to Dante, the town begins to rebuild. As life returns to normal in the mining boom town, new arrivals bring fresh opportunities. The Pommel Brothers hit town looking to make their bones, unaware of the danger lurking around every corner of the desert town.
Meanwhile, Elizabeth Perth and Heath Moore have started rebuilding their lives and their future together, but a telegram announcing the imminent arrival of Albert Barclay, the owner of The Dante Dispatch brings a sense of dread.
The reopening of the Archibald mine, under new ownership, unleashes a new underground horror with sharp claws and sharper teeth. These creatures are hungry. And Dante’s citizens are on the menu.
If that wasn’t enough, Miss Maddie, Dante’s most mysterious elder, unleashes plans of her own for both Dante and the poor, wretched souls who call it home.
Get ready for an all-new Dante Tall Tale from award-winning author Bobby Nash.
Dante’s Rebirth is the fourth book in the award-winning Dante western/horror series written by Author Bobby Nash. Cover by Jeffrey Hayes. Published by Valhalla Books.
All four Dante ebooks are currently $0.99 for a limited time. You can find them here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BX5QFR5P
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Fiction Like White Elephants: Subtext in Your Stories
Let's talk about subtext, you know, that stuff that's hidden subtly in your stories even though it never really leaves a footprint.
Dialog. How important is the stuff your characters don't say or avoid saying to each other in your work?
Terrance Layhew: Creating subtext in conversation is necessary. It immediately gives an inner world to the characters and a larger world at play. What people avoid saying directly or indirectly raises stakes, but done too much makes the story a melodrama.
Elizabeth Donald: If my characters are as close to living, breathing humans as I can make them, the things they don’t say are wildly important - just as they are for us allegedly-real people. When a married couple sits at the dinner table and says nothing but “pass the salt,” that tells us a great deal about their relationship, their thoughts and feelings, the comfort level they have reached (or not) between them. There are many times when we feel spurred to speak and do not, either for fear of social or professional consequences, adherence to behavior norms in society, or our own personal tendencies; a person who is generally conflict-avoidant may remain silent when insulted, even as they are burning to speak - or shout - on the inside. All of these should come to play in our characters, if we are to make them real. The worst thing you can do is an “As you know, Bob…” where a character explains the blatantly obvious to a person who already knows this information. A little subtlety goes a long way.
Sheela Leyh: From my own experiences, the subtext and context both matter. What is said is often just as important as what isn't said. It can and does affect your readers, as well as how your communication is received and does affect meaning.
It is important in mine as I hear dialog early in the writing process, even before the plot unfolds fully. What isn't said is often left for the reader to piece together as part of my thisness layer, as well as to help hold the reader's interest. For context, thisness is an older writing technique that helps make a place more real to a reader without jarring the reader out of the reading experience. The Oxford Writer channel on YouTube does one of the best explanations on the thisness concept that I've seen so far. By trusting the reader to fill in some gaps by leaving out only what needs to be left out, it helps build that relationship with the readers.
Jessica Nettles: Dialog: Silence is a lot like white space on a page. It gives room for the reader to breathe and feel and think thoughts about what ought to happen. With dialog it also give space for things to grow between characters. Kate and Shadow have a LOT of unspoken stuff between them. For instance, neither of them have to say, “I respect you.” They say it in the way they work. There are readers who have picked up something more between them—and maybe it’s there. Shadow certainly won’t say what he feels about Kate, mostly because he isn’t sure what to do with that feeling. He files it under respect, but he would defend her until he faded away. She sees him as her equal, which is once again, never spoken.
Tuesday, November 18, 2025
Matthew Hand: Neither Tidy Nor Meant To Be
Tell us a bit about your most recent work.
I just finished a story called Disqualified. It’s a horror narrative that starts like a typical cabin slasher, but the protagonist knows the rules — she knows she’s supposed to die — and goes anyway. It’s really about choice and consequence, turning the genre’s moral code into something theological and personal.
What are the themes and subjects you tend to revisit in your work?
I think most of my work tends to revolve around people confronting their own grief - personal, familial, institutional. That sounds dark and depressing, but I think my approach is cleansing: here’s a mess, let’s organize it.
Monday, November 17, 2025
Sunday, November 16, 2025
Saturday, November 15, 2025
[Link] Dear Bill: Letters From a Young John Updike to His Editor, William Maxwell
July 30, 1953
Mr. William Maxwell
The New Yorker
25 West 43rd Street
New York, New York
Dear Mr. Maxwell:
Your two letters on the twenty-third were the nicest thing that has happened to me since I began mailing material away five years ago. Thanks a lot for your interest.
I will, of course, try to send you more light verse. The shortages (time, electricity, inspiration) up here may have made me unusually somber, but I am still convinced that the kindest possible way of earning a living is to be a humorist.
Sincerely,
John Updike
with
“Boy Playing Basketball…”
“City Vista”
“The Summer Reader”
_________________________________________________
213 Iffley Road, Oxford
October 4, 1954
Dear Mr. Maxwell:
I’m pretty embarrassed. In a rather garrulous letter I wrote Mrs. White this morning, I suggested there would be some noise from me concerning the galley proof of my story. But I’ve just read the proof, and the only improvement I can suggest is that “Friends” be spelled correctly in the title. Otherwise, it read slick as a whistle. I’m sure it isn’t the way I wrote it, quite, but there was no pain at all, so it must be the way I had wanted to write it. I can scarcely wait until it appears.
I’m sure it isn’t the way I wrote it, quite, but there was no pain at all, so it must be the way I had wanted to write it.
The first and last sentences gave me momentary pause. But it is a good idea to establish the time, the so-called “odd hour” right off the bat, and I suppose the kid would be aware of the time even though, as he later points out, he has no wristwatch. And the wine at the end sounds grand—not too grand, I hope, for a liquor store. But I’m sure it isn’t: The New Yorker’s care over details like that is legendary. The fastidious substitution of a “red foil cap” for my cork, or whatever, gave me exquisite pleasure.
Read the full article: https://lithub.com/dear-bill-letters-from-a-young-john-updike-to-his-editor-william-maxwell/
Friday, November 14, 2025
AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTION IS PROUD TO PRESENT THE PARALIPOMENA OF SHERLOCK HOLMES BY I.A. WATSON
From looking for a lost play by William Shakespeare to finding a kidnapped child before the blackhearted thugs end its young life. Here are thrills and adventure as only a Watson could provide.
Art Director Rob Davis provides the interior illustrations, with Dr. John Waeltz providing the stunning painted cover.
AIRSHIP 27 PRODUCTION – PULP FICTION FOR A NEW GENERATION!
Available now at Amazon in paperback and soon on Kindle.
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
Kristina Gruell: Found Family and Epic Magic
Tell us a bit about your most recent work.
The Dark Moon is the first book in the Night Goddess Series. It follows five characters as they face challenges in a world that has just broken. Again.
What are the themes and subjects you tend to revisit in your work?
Triumph after adversity and found family.
What happened in your life that prompted you to become a writer?
I was in a vehicle vs pedestrian accident, and I wasn’t in the vehicle. A neighbor intentionally hit me with his truck, and I ended up in a wheelchair. I started role-playing online, then eventually writing stories to deal with the pain and loss of mobility. It was one of the things that saved me, writing stories.
Monday, November 10, 2025
Sunday, November 9, 2025
Saturday, November 8, 2025
[Link] Why You Should Write About Other People’s Writing
by Ratika Deshpande
Some of the best writing I’ve done has been about the work of other writers. I’ve read their stories and compiled them into themed recommendation lists; I’ve written personal essays and deep dives into books that I couldn’t stop thinking about. It’s work that I’ve both enjoyed and am very proud of, and I think more of us should be writing about other people’s writing. Here’s why:
Learn the craft
To write about a story, essay, poem, etc., the first thing you have to do is (re)read it closely. A single read may be enough to write a short description of the plot or the main theme. But if you’re going deeper, you’ll have to read it several times, taking notes, annotating the text as you go.
Such close reading requires asking questions: What’s so great (or not) about this piece–are the descriptions short but vivid? Is the dialogue hilarious? Perhaps it’s the way the author has weaved the past and the present together? Or how the narrator’s experiences provide a new lens from which to view your own past?
Examining these elements helps you see what craft advice—“show, don’t tell,” “there must be a change in the protagonist,” etc.—looks like in practice. Reading a lot and reading widely teaches your brain to absorb the rhythms of language (especially when it’s not your mother tongue), discover the various narrative structures that are possible, and locate common themes and tropes. You’ll be able to study the components that make a piece work—or leave something to be desired, which you’ll then know to avoid in your own writing.
Identify what you love and hate–identify your inspirations
Relatedly, you’ll be able to identify what are the things that you enjoy reading in a story or poem, and what are the elements that make you put the book away. For example, I don’t really enjoy stories written in the second person (although there are rare exceptions) or excessive expletives in the dialogue or narration. I do enjoy descriptions of food and cities, and reading essays about the history of interesting people, especially writers.
Read the full article: https://authorspublish.com/why-you-should-write-about-other-peoples-writing/
Friday, November 7, 2025
Harper Lee’s newly discovered short stories set to be published
by Issy Ronald
For much of Harper Lee’s life, To Kill a Mockingbird stood alone as her only major work; her first and, apparently, last novel, narrated by a voice so clear and coherent it seemed impossible that it was her only output.
Then came Go Set a Watchman, published shortly before Lee’s death and initially heralded as a sequel, but subsequently seen as more of an early draft of her most famous work than as a new, standalone novel.
The collection is titled The Land of Sweet Forever.
So, when eight short stories by Lee were discovered in her New York apartment after she died, it marked an important milestone. Here, finally, was a chance to discover how Lee’s distinctive voice was honed in the years before she wrote To Kill a Mockingbird.
These short stories will be published for the first time on Tuesday, in a collection titled The Land of Sweet Forever, accompanied by an introduction by Casey Cep, Lee’s biographer.
Read the full article: https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/20/style/harper-lee-short-stories-published-intl-scl
Thursday, November 6, 2025
Check Your Fiction for the Following
A Checklist for Prejudices in Your Work
Want to be more inclusive and diverse in your fiction? Here are a few points to consider. If you find examples of these “-isms” in your author’s voice, then you might want to take a look inside and try a re-write (and a re-think about where they might be coming from).[ ]
Racial prejudices: Negative feelings, stereotypes, attitudes, or beliefs
towards a people due to their ethnic or racial makeup.
[ ]
Gender Prejudice or Sexism: Stereotypes or attitudes held based on someone’s
gender or perceived gender.
[ ]
Religious Prejudice: Holding negative views or attitudes towards an individual
due to their religion or lack thereof.
[ ]
Ageism: Prejudice against an individual due to their age, spanning from
believing people are “too old” for some situations or “too young” for others.
[ ]
Classism: Holding prejudicial views or attitudes towards individuals from a
lower socioeconomic status. These views can easily manifest into
discrimination, impacting access to essential social services, like education,
employment, and healthcare.
[ ] Homophobia and Transphobia: Prejudiced views against members of the LGBTQ+ community based on their sexuality and gender identity.
[ ]
Xenophobia: Prejudice held against foreigners, in particular refugees or
immigrants from low-income countries. Xenophobia and racism may have
similarities; however, xenophobia focuses more on nationality, culture, and
origin, though race does contribute.
Source: https://www.cultureally.com/blog/racism-vs-prejudice
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
A.J. Porter: At Odds with the Supernatural
A.G. Porter is an author of YA Paranormal Thrillers. She loves writing about diverse characters in the Deep South who are constantly at odds with the supernatural. When she isn't working on her next YA Paranormal book, she is pouring her heart into her poetry collection or writing her next sweeping Romance book under Amanda Guerrero-Porter. She lives in Alabama with her husband and three sons.
Tell us a bit about your most recent work.
I am set to release a Rock Star Romance in February of 2026. And while some people may say, "another one," there will be someone else who will say, "another one, yes!" Because the best thing about troupes is that someone is going to love them. The fun thing about this one is that my FMC is a Mexican American woman from the Deep South (Alabama) who has worked really hard to overcome past trauma to become the award-winning songwriter she is.
What are the themes and subjects you tend to revisit in your work?
I always put Mexican American or Native American characters in my work. Whether it's the FMC or the MMC, though, I do tend to write from the female perspective, considering that is how I identify. I do this because I am a mixed-Mexican American from Alabama, and I didn't see a lot of representation in media as a young reader. Even if some of my work is paranormal, the theme of racial identity is very heavily focused on in all of my books.
Monday, November 3, 2025
Sunday, November 2, 2025
Saturday, November 1, 2025
[Link] 40 SCARIEST BOOKS OF THE LAST 200 YEARS
Creepy stories are as old as mankind, and the really good ones will continue to frighten generations to come.
We’re looking back through the scariest books of the past two centuries – from chilling gothic classics to post-apocalyptic tales of caution. These terrifying tales leave readers restless, never quite sure where fiction ends and reality begins.
Page through our master list below, and you’re guaranteed to stumble across a new nightmare in no time at all.
Read the full article: http://www.the-line-up.com/40-scariest-books-of-the-last-200-years/





















