Showing posts with label scary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scary. Show all posts

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Best Practices: Write Something Scary!


Hey, writers! Give me your one best piece of advice to help someone learn to write something actually scary for a reader. And... GO!


Jessica Nettles: Mine the things that scare you the most, especially childhood fears. Then crank them to 11 (that is a different level for different people). I never fail to hit my mark when I go there.

John L. Taylor: Make the reader care about the character who will have the worst fate. Horror fails if you're rooting for the protagonists to die. Get them emotionally invested in someone who really doesn't deserve their fate and slowly pick them apart like a daisy. They will know fear from that.

John Pence:
It's got to scare the author. It's got to be something the author had to be brave and confront.

That's not true for all horror, and can be applied outside of that genre.

Scariest damn thing I ever read was Poe's first-person narrator popping his cat's eye with a pocket knife in "The Black Cat." I read that when I was like 9 or 10, and I still feel it.

Michael Dean Jackson: Get your reader emotionally invested in a character and then scare the hell out of that character. Maybe it's not something that would scare you or the reader, but if it scares the main character, then the reader will feel vicariously frightened along with them.

Lainey Kennedy: Less is more. Leave room for the readers imagination to fill in the gaps. What our own mind comes up with is often scarier than any written words.

Sean Harby: Write something that frightens you. Make sure you include all your senses and express the nature of your own fear. It will translate.

John Morgan Neal: Use your imagination to think of something you were horrified by or you think would be horrified by. Then present it in a way that gets across why it's horrifying. But leave enough room where the readers imagination fills in the blanks. Making it personal to them.

Bobby Nash: I always start with character. Make it scary for the character and the reader will feel it.

Krystal Rollins: Haunted old house in a small town, picture books left inside of the family, only stories are told for the new people in town, until, one gets into the house.

Danielle Procter Piper: Many people go for the gross-out factor, I go for psychological stuff.

Laura Rucker: Describe a physical reaction to the horrifying thing, or a physical description of the horrifying aspects. A. Piece. At. A. Time.

Mike Schneider: You have to establish normal. Scary is a juxtaposition. So many creators want all thriller/ no filler but the reality is those stories aren't scary, no matter how gruesome they get. In fact, show too much of the killer/ monster and we start rooting for them instead.

If you want any part of your story to be scary you need to put more time into establishing things are light and joyful. You need to get us invested in that story to a point where we forget we're reading something scary. Then WHAM.

Barry Reese: If it doesn’t scare YOU as the writer, it probably won’t scare them as a reader, either.

PJ Lozito: End the paragraph or chapter before the thing actually happens...

Jim Beard: Scare yourself. Everything else will follow.

Paul Beale: What scares you? It will likely scare the rest of us too..

Brian K Morris: Study Alfred Hitchcock's films as a blueprint for pacing and escalating the terror.

Sheela Chattopadhyay: This is a great question! While some may say to "write what scares you," I tend to find that the scary part is more in the suspense, pace, and overall environmental feel. Those aspects are what drew me to Poe and Agatha Christie as a child. From learning experiences and currently working on a suspense that's scary short story, the pacing and stakes help build the suspense.

Sean Taylor: The key to writing horror, as least as I see it (and you’ll find as many different takes on this as you can find authors, I’m sure), is to camp out in the concepts of discomfort and dread. You’re not going to surprise scare a reader. You’re going to slowly overwhelm them with several smaller “uneases” that become a full-blown “creepy” and finally if you’ve done your job right, all-out dread.

Dread is that feeling that keeps a reader’s stomach unsettled, that scene that makes them feel phantom pains in the same limb or joint the killer keeps sticking a pin into, the sum of all the chills up a spine and “what if” scenarios of the mind a reader keeps accumulating during the time it takes to read your tale.

Anna Grace Carpenter: Don't self-censor. (Especially on the first draft.) It's a lot easier to take things back off the page later if they seem too much than it is to add things back in when it's not enough.

Gordon Dymowski: Horror and comedy share one aspect in common: timing. The only difference is that comedy results in laughter, horror results in fear

Danielle Procter Piper: Less is more. Let their imagination fill in as much as possible.

Editor's Note: All images are free use from Unsplash.com.

Sunday, October 29, 2023

Best Horror Anime To Creep You Out (Or Horror-Adjacent To Entertain You Through Your Halloween Hijinks)


First, we'll start with my lists because we all know that's what you're here for. (And you know how I looooove to make lists.) Some of these will be true horror, featuring hideous monsters, slashing serial killers, and bloody gore. Others will be horror-adjacent, featuring the tropes of horror stories or horror characters in non-horrific settings, such as headless detectives, monsters chillin' at school, and chosen ones with creepy BFFs.

The Top Twenty-One All-Time

1. Perfect Blue

2. Higurashi When They Cry

3. Serial Experiments Lain


4, Bakamonogatari (and the rest of the -gatari series) 

4. Angels of Death

6. Akira

7. Junji Ito Collection

8. Shiki

9. Yamibashi: Theater of Darkness


10. Blood C

11. Killing Bites

11. Another


13. Dead Space

14. Parasyte

15. Red Garden


16. Ghost Hunt

17. Call of the Night

18. Devil Lady


19. Hell Girl

20. Dusk Maiden of Amnesia

21. Demon City Shinjukin



Top Vampire Anime

  1. Call of the Night
  2. Shiki
  3. Rosario +Vampire
  4. Blood C
  5. Nightwalker: Eternal Darkness
  6. Dance in the Vampire Bund / 
  7. Diabolik Lovers
  8. A Dark Rabbit Has Seven Lives
  9. Vampire Hunter D
  10. Actually, I Am

Top Slasher / Serial Killer Anime

  1. Perfect Blue
  2. Higurashi When They Cry
  3. Angels of Death
  4. Another
  5. Future Diary
  6. Karakuri Circus
  7. Rin: Daughters of Mnemosyne
  8. Ninja Scroll
  9. Talentless Nana
  10. The Magical Girl Site

Top Monster Anime

  1. Akira
  2. Parasyte
  3. Dororo
  4. Chainsaw Man
  5. Frankenstein Family
  6. Hellsing
  7. Berserk
  8. Claymore
  9. Nyaruko: Crawling with Love
  10. The Island of Giant Insects

Top Monster-Girls Anime

  1. Bakamonogatari (and the rest of the -gatari series)
  2. Monster Musume
  3. Rosario + Vampire
  4. Killing Bites
  5. Journal of the Mysterious Creatures
  6. Monster Girl Doctor
  7. Interviews with Monster Girls
  8. How Not To Summon a Demon Lord
  9. Arifureta: From Commonplace To World’s Strongest
  10. Omamori Himari

Top Ghost Anime

  1. Dusk Maiden of Amnesia
  2. Ghost Hunt
  3. Yuuna and the Haunted Hot Springs
  4. Ghost Stories
  5. Corpse Party: Tortured Souls
  6. Death Parade
  7. Ghost Hound
  8. Mononoke
  9. The Night Beyond the Tricornered Window
  10. Muhyo & Roji's Bureau of Supernatural Investigation

Top Zombie Anime

  1. Tokyo Ghoul
  2. Attack on Titan
  3. Dead Space
  4. Sankarea: Undying Love
  5. Corpse Princess
  6. Is This a Zombie?
  7. Kabeneri of the Iron Fortress
  8. Zombieland Saga
  9. High School of the Dead
  10. LilyC.A.T.

Top Aliens Monster Anime

  1. Parasyte
  2. Red Garden
  3. The Promised Neverland
  4. Argento Soma
  5. BEM

Top "And Then There Were None" / Deadly Games Anime

  1. Angels of Death
  2. Killing Bites
  3. Future Diary
  4. Akudama Drive
  5. Darwin's Game

Top Monsters at School Anime

  1. Rosario + Vampire
  2. Beastars
  3. Monster Musume
  4. High School DxD
  5. Testament of Sister New Devil
  6. Dusk Maiden of Amnesia
  7. Vermeil in Gold
  8. Welcome to Demon School! Iruma-Kun
  9. Sankarea: Undying Love
  10. High School of the Dead

Top Horror Anthology Anime

  1. Pet Shop of Horrors
  2. Boogiepop Phantom
  3. Yamibashi: Theater of Darkness
  4. Junji Ito Collection
  5. Hell Girl
  6. Ayakashi: Samurai Horror
  7. Mushi-shi
  8. Boogiepop and Others
  9. xxxHOLic
  10. Monogatari

Top Demons/ Devils Anime

  1. Demon City Shinjukin
  2. Devil Lady
  3. High School DXD
  4. Testament of Sister New Devil
  5. Devil Man
  6. Devil May Cry
  7. Hell Girl
  8. Vermeil in Gold
  9. Demon Slayer
  10. Demon Lord Dante

Top Witch Anime

  1. Witchcraft Works
  2. Yamada-kun and the Seven Witches
  3. The Ancient Magus Bride
  4. Howl’s Moving Castle
  5. Kiki’s Delivery Service
  6. Puella Magi Madoka Magica
  7. Burn The Witch
  8. Witch Hunter Robin
  9. Grimoire of Zero 
  10. Wandering Witch: The Journey of Elaina

Top Yokai Anime

  1. Undead Murder Farce
  2. Kamisama Kiss
  3. Spirited Away
  4. Tsugumomo
  5. Noragami
  6. Mushi-shi
  7. Spice and Wolf
  8. Elegent Yokai Apartment Life
  9. Into the Forest of Fireflies’ Light
  10. Natsume’s Book of Friends

Other Lists

The following are also interesting lists of top horror anime, many of which -- you'll notice -- agree with me. 

10 Best Horror Anime That'll Give You Nightmares For Days

10 Best Horror Anime To Watch This Halloween

The Best Horror Anime of All Time

10 Best Horror Anime of All Time

Anime Monsters: 15 Of The Most Terrifying Creatures and Demons