mad_docs_of_lit: (Default)
( Nov. 18th, 2010 06:18 am)
And by the barest wisp of ectoplasm, Ghosts win the Fiend Vote and become our round 2 monster! Thanks so much to everyone who voted.

In the spirit (ha ha) of this haunted victory, what's your favorite ghost story? Have you ever had an encounter with a ghost? Tell us all about it!
I won't be dissecting (heh) every story I post here but I wanted to say a few words about my first story for the Re-Vamp! project, The Tangled Thread.

I'm not sure it's a scary tale exactly, but the reason I wrote it was to explore the changing vampire 'fashions' and cultural attitudes towards the myth. My idea was to take a modern vampire and place it in a historical setting, then take a traditional, folk-tale vampire and place it in the modern world and see what happened.

In part one (an obvious pastiche on late Victorian/early 20th century horror) our no-nonsense protagonist sees the world very much in black and white and as soon as he realises that the beautiful, sensitive, seemingly doomed creature in the house is indeed supernatural, he uses his knowledge of it to exterminate without compunction. I'm not sure what might have happened if he'd not been so businesslike - he may have spared a cursed yet essentially innocent creature's life, or he may have lived to regret his decision - much like the protagonist in part two.

In part two, I wanted to keep some kind of (tangled) thread running through the narrative, so I had the idea of the second protagonist as a descendent of the first - like history (and storybook monster) repeating itself. As soon as I started writing part two I knew that the family had moved to America - I think this suggested itself to me due to the fact that, much as 'old fashioned' horror conjures images of Transylvanian castles and misty English graveyards, modern horror puts me in mind of America - of Halloween and Psycho and shopping malls full of zombies. I set it in Astoria as a nod to The Goonies!

For me, part two was less fun to write than part one (I can never resist some old-fashioned language!) but much more interesting. Putting a traditional monster with no reason or humanity into a modern setting is terrifying - it's why the vampires of '30 Days of Night' will always captivate me more than any 'Interview with the Vampire' angst.
I drew on the earliest folk traditions of the vampire that I knew of: the blood-gorged, reanimated corpse with no human reason but the obsessive compulsion to count dropped items; traditionally grains of rice or salt, if I remember correctly. This compulsion is mistaken by the protagonist for intelligence, which stalls him from running away - a fatal mistake. This modern teenager only judges by modern standards, brought up in a society that teaches that there are no monsters under the bed and humans control everything. I left the story with him slowly becoming the monster himself, determined that he will overcome and be 'a better vampire' by sheer force of determination - will become, in fact, the creature that his ancestor gunned down in that London apartment.
I'd like to think that as soon as the vampirism took hold, he turned instead into another feral killer.

If you haven't yet voted in our Fiend Vote for which monster we'll tackle in round two, today's your last chance! Right now Ghosts and Werewolves are neck and neck with 5 votes each. Will you help the fearsome phantoms steal the shapeshifters' last breath, or aid moon-maddened monsters in tearing the chances from the ghosts' fading grasps? Or will you rally a sudden sneak attack by the shambling undead?

Speak now, or forever hold your peace!
Greetings, readers!

Well, we're having a scream playing with the vampires, but all good bad things must one day come to an end and so it's time to vote for the next monster. To give our writers a head start in crafting those creepy stories, we thought we'd open the poll now — You have one week to cast your votes!

The terrors we're going to tackle have been narrowed down to the following choices (please choose an option from the drop-down list!)...



[Poll #1642882]
Stumbled over this collection of old Horror comics art today on Wired and thought it was right up our alley! Now I want to read the rest of "Eyes of Death!"

Horror! Book Digs Up Lurid ‘Pre-Code’ Monster Comics
Tags:
mad_docs_of_lit: (LC Hu)
( Oct. 31st, 2010 06:25 am)
Happy Halloween, everyone, and welcome to the start of a spine-tingling collection of stories, art, links, articles and more!

On this spookiest of days, we leap straight into the Re-Vamp project with Round One: Vampires. If you're looking for some creepy tales to get you in the spirit of the holiday, we've got two serial stories for you, The Tangled Thread, Part One by Die Booth and Lump, Part One by LC Hu.

Also, please do enjoy this gorgeous art by Die Booth!
Copyright

Die Booth and LC Hu (unless otherwise indicated)

"Re-Vamp!"

© 2010–2011, Die Booth, LC Hu (unless otherwise indicated)
Self Published
mad.docs.of.lit@googlemail.com

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

This website contains material protected under International Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorised reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this website may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the authors.
.

Profile

mad_docs_of_lit: (Default)
mad_docs_of_lit

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags