Home » 2014 » February (Page 3)

Women in Horror Fiction: Sephera Giron

 

 Sèphera Girón is the author of many books, including Borrowed Flesh (2004 Leisure Books), Weird Tales of Terror (2013 CreateSpace), and her latest, Captured Souls (2014 Samhain Publishing).  Her short stories have appeared in such anthologies as Slices of Flesh (2012 Dark Moon Books), The Haunted Mansion Project: Year One (2012 Damnation Books), Campus Chills (2012 Stark Publishing), and Unnatural Tales of the Jackalope (2012 Western Legends Press).

 

1. Can you give our readers a brief introduction?

I write horror, erotica, non-fiction, and almost everything else. My first love is horror. I’ve had over twenty books published since 2000, and numerous short stories.

My birthplace is New Orleans and I currently live in Toronto. My two boys have grown into amazing adults.

 

2. Why do you write horror?  What draws you to the genre?

As a kid, I wasn’t exposed to a lot of horrific images or situations. My family life was stable, summer vacations spent in Maine at grandma’s house, nothing terribly dramatic. So if I’d see or read something “horror,” it struck a chord. And as we all know, horror can be found in the most benign genres and art.

My reading interests leaned towards dark, weird, unusual, mysteries, and science fiction. I was a voracious reader and read books, comics, newspapers, magazines, encyclopedias.  If there were words on paper, I was reading them.

Stephen King came on the scene when I was a teenager and of course, it was love-at-first sight. There was some point I said to myself after reading one of his books that I wanted to scare people with words like he scared me. By then, horror was a genre so it was easier to find as I grew older.

I loved all the small press, the magazines, even the photocopied ones. I witnessed the dawn of splatterpunk and two rounds of the zombie movement. The genre ever evolves and it’s fun to be part of it.

 

3. Can you describe your writing style or the tone you prefer to set for your stories?

I’ve experimented with several tones and styles since I’ve worked in many genres. Likely a recurring element in my fiction is that I’m not afraid to look under the rock.  Other than that, I’m not sure how to describe my stories.

 

4. Who are some of your influences?  Are there any women authors who have particularly inspired you to write?

Certainly the themes of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein seem to keep appearing in my work. Captured Souls, which came out in February 2014 from Samhain, is about a mad scientist experimenting with love and lust. In July 2014, Flesh Failure will be released from Samhain, and it too explores a Frankenstein-inspired theme, although it takes place in the year of the Ripper.

I often relay Beautiful Joe as one of the first horrific novels I read as a young child. There was an old copy at my grandmother’s house, and one rainy day in Maine, I read it. I cried all the way through. I’ve never revisited it as an adult because I’m certain it won’t hold up even though I have that copy. It was written by Margret Marshall Saunders who was born in Milton, Nova Scotia and died in Toronto. I never realized until today that book was written by a Canadian woman. I had always associated it with Maine though likely an American author.

As many girls of my generation, I was in love with Sylvia Plath and Emily Dickinson and desired to be a writer too.

Some of my work is written in journal form (such as Captured Souls and Mistress of the Dark) and it is likely an influence of all these works.

A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle absolutely fascinated me. I invented landmarks around the neighbourhood where I played make-believe from the book in my head when I was young.

 

5. What authors do you like to read?  Any recommendations? 

Up until I had children, I was a voracious reader, and averaged a book every couple of days. These days, I’m often working on several projects, marketing, working at my day job (which is editing other people’s books), and by the end of it all, there’s very rarely time to read for fun. I’m badly behind. However, I will say that having been around so long, I know dozens of authors in the genre, both male and female. Every time I pick up work by a peer, I’m entertained. It’s very rarely I’ll see a clunker. My recommendation is read whatever sounds enticing to you. There are always wonderful new authors to discover, as well as the classics and those of us who have been writing for years. You can’t go wrong if you’re reading. I also would like to add that the face of publishing is rapidly changing, as we all know. These days, an author needs readers to support him or her. If you read a book and like it, and even if you don’t, please take a minute to review it on Amazon, Goodreads, or the author’s publisher’s site. It will help your favourite author to build sales and be able to keep writing more books for you.
6. Where can readers find your work?

The usual suspects:  Samhain Publishing, Necon E-books, and Ravenous Romance, as well as Amazon, Kobo,  and Barnes & Noble.

 

Interested in learning more? Check out Sephera Giron’s Amazon page, and her pages at Samhain Publishing, Necon E-Books, and Ravenous Romance. You can also visit her website, Sephera’s World, or her blogs, Sephera’s World (focused on writing and editing) and TarotPaths (focused on fortunetelling and the paranormal). And here’s a slightly more detailed interview she did last August.

Enjoy!

 

 

Women in Horror Fiction: Barbie Wilde

Image of Barbie WildeThe horror genre actually has the capability of being a welcoming place for women, because it offers opportunities for participation in a variety of approaches to the genre. Barbie Wilde is an example of a woman who has successfully transitioned from acting to writing, with her role as the Female Cenobite in Hellbound: Hellraiser II leading to the publication of her short story “Sister Cilice” in Hellbound Hearts, an anthology themed around the Hellraiser mythology created by Clive Barker, on which the movie franchise is based. Barbie has since published short stories in a variety of anthologies and recently came out with a book, The Venus Complex, which we reviewed here. It’s great to see the horror genre lifting up women in the horror community so that they can take advantage of all it has to offer, and I can only hope that not only continues, but becomes much more common.

 

1. Can you give our readers a brief introduction?

My name is Barbie Wilde. As an actress, I’m best known for playing the Female Cenobite in Clive Barker’s cult horror movie, Hellbound: Hellraiser II. I’ve also appeared in Death Wish 3Grizzly II: The Concert (along with then unknowns George Clooney, Charlie Sheen and Laura Dern) and numerous TV shows in the UK as either an actress, a mime artist or a host-presenter.

So far, I’ve written eight short horror stories published in eight different anthologies, as well as my debut dark crime-real life horror novel,The Venus Complex. Fangoria magazine has called me “one of the finest purveyors of erotically charged horror around.” (My mother would’ve been so proud, I’m sure!)

 

2. Why do you write horror?  What draws you to the genre?

I didn’t actually start out as a horror writer. I was always more interested in crime, particularly the psychology of the scariest monster on the planet: man.

Then Paul Kane (who interviewed me for his book, The Hellraiser Films and Their Legacy) asked me to contribute to an anthology that he was editing with Marie O’Regan called Hellbound Hearts. All the stories in the antho had to be based on Clive Barker’s mythology that he created for his novel, The Hellbound Heart, which the Hellraiser film franchise is based on.

When Paul contacted me about writing a horror story, I was initially reluctant, as I didn’t think I could write horror. However, two weeks later, I finished my first horror story, “Sister Cilice”, about the making of a female cenobite. I’m actually planning a Cilicium Trilogy and the second part, “The Cilicium Pandoric”, is appearing in Fangoria’s Gorezone #30.

So quite a few horror stories down the line, why am I drawn to the genre? I think that there is a great leeway for your imagination to take flight in horror. You can use all sorts of mythological, literary and historical research and then turn these sources into something (hopefully) unique. Also, I was very influenced and disturbed by horror and science fiction movies when I was a kid and they made their mark on me, fueling all sorts of uneasy and paranoid fantasies. Movies like The Thing From Another World (1951), Invaders from Mars (1953), Psycho (1960), The Innocents (1961) and The Haunting (1963) made a big impression on me. And of course, TV shows like The Twilight ZoneThe Outer LimitsOne Step BeyondDark Shadows and Night Gallery were also very influential.

 

3. Can you describe your writing style or the tone you prefer to set for your stories?

I like to keep things as simple as possible– I love spare and muscular writing. [See influences below.] There is a strong erotic thread through my stories, which I’d like to think is more sensual than romantic. Also, even when I’m writing about the most horrific crimes and events, there is always a sense of humour in there somewhere.

 

4. Who are some of your influences?  Are there any women authors who have particularly inspired you to write?

Influences: Rod Serling, Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett, Hemingway, Clive Barker, Colin Wilson (for his crime non-fiction, like The Criminal History of Mankind and The Order of the Assassins).
Influential women authors: Patricia Highsmith, Shirley Jackson and Margaret Atwood. I’m also inspired by writer-directors such as The Soska Twins, Jovanka Vuckovic, Mary Harron, Kathryn Bigelow and Ida Lupino.

 

5. What authors do you like to read?  Any recommendations?

All of the above authors, as well as Paul Kane. I just finished his latest compelling novella Rainbow Man and really enjoyed it. Other Kane books that I can recommend are The Gemini Factor and Red. All of Paul’s books are written so beautifully and so descriptively that you can just imagine movies been adapted from them. I also love the work of John Skipp and Craig Spector. Their novel, Light at the End, was a very cool and unusual take on the vampire genre.

My top pick of 2013 was the evocative and brilliant written Whitstable by Stephen Volk. The main character of the novella is Peter Cushing and it’s almost spooky how Stephen has channeled Cushing as a character in the story.

 

6. Where can readers find your work?

You can buy The Venus Complex as a paperback and Kindle on all the Amazons, as well as Barnes & Noble (online only). All the short stories that I’ve written are available in the following anthologies on Amazon. Most are published as both paperback and Kindle:
“Sister Cilice” (Hellbound Hearts)
“Uranophophia” (Phobophobia)
“American Mutant: Hands of Dominion” (Mutation Nation)
“Polyp” (The Mammoth Book of Body Horror and as a reprint for The Unspoken)
“A is for Alpdruck” (Demonologia Biblica)
“Z is for Zulu Zombies” (Bestiarum Vocabulum and as a reprint for Gorezone #29)
The following stories will be available soon:
“The Cilicium Pandoric” (Gorezone #30)
“Botophobia” (Phobophobias)

 

7. Is there anything else you’d like to share with librarians and readers?

If your readers would like to read more news, reviews and interviews, then please go to:
www.barbiewilde.com
Follow me on Twitter at: @barbiewilde
Facebook: www.facebook.com/barbie.wilde
Facebook Author-Actress Page: www.facebook.com/BarbieWildeAuthorActress

I’ve got some interesting writing projects and appearances coming up in the future, so please keep an eye out for news on either Facebook or my website.

 

Interested in learning more? Visit Barbie Wilde’s Amazon page, her website, her Facebook page, or her Author-Actress Facebook page, or follow her on Twitter at @barbiewilde.

Women in Horror Fiction: Michele Lee

Image of Michele Lee Michele Lee, one of our own book reviewers and the mind behind our teen-focused blog Reading Bites, is the author of such books as Wolf Heart (2012 Violet Ivy Press), the heartbreaking zombie novella Rot (2013 Skullvines Press), the self-published ebooks The List  (2013)  and On Halloween (a choose-your-own-path book co-written with Mini Lee). Her latest work, Last Brother, Last Sister (2014 Skullvines Press), was published earlier this month.  Michele’s short stories can be found in anthologies including Dark Futures: Tales of Dystopian SF (2011 Dark Quest) and Horror Library, Volume 4 (2012 Cutting Block Press). Michele also writes erotic fiction under the name M. Lush.

 

1. Can you give our readers a brief introduction?

My name is Michele Lee. I’m a multi-genre writer (Horror, SF/F and erotic romance), a reviewer and a vet tech by day.

 

2. Why do you write horror?  What draws you to the genre?

Way back when I was a teenager, horror was the only place you could find stories of the paranormal. Now we have urban fantasy and paranormal romance, both of which I also like, but sometimes you just want that spooky story. Also, I think a lot of the setups in horror, especially the monsters, are a powerful thematic way to deal with the darker stuff in our real lives. Violence, rape, fear of the true nature of human evil; the nameless thing that might be waiting to devour us in the dark is a perfect allegory for facing cancer, abuse, fiscal devastation and more. We can, as either writers or readers, work through and face our feelings on some Really Big Issues ™ without freezing up when the boogie man has the face of our abuser or looks like that shadow on the radiogram. And maybe, for a little bit, we can fantasize that beating cancer or a recession is as easy as staking that vampire or stopping that serial killer.

3. Can you describe your writing style or the tone you prefer to set for your stories?


The tone of my stories, I hope, is different because I really like to let characterization come through in how things are set up and described and how the characters react to things. I seem to be drawn to people working through things, maybe outside discoveries, but often things about themselves that are exposed because of things happening around them.

In my novella Rot, for example I wanted to take a typical rough/bad ass male character (stoic, former military man, zero illusions about life) and make him incredibly emotional without making him any less of a strong male lead. I also wanted to take on the “flamboyant gay” stereotype and the “damsel in distress” that you see in horror a lot and do something meaningful with them.

 

4. Who are some of your influences?  Are there any women authors who have particularly inspired you to write?


Anna Sewell, actually. My mom was really restrictive with me when it came to…everything, but she encouraged me to read Black Beauty. Maybe because it was about horses, or was a classic. But honestly it’s very brutal. You see horses die in war combat, serious cruelty to dogs, cats and horses and real world events like illnesses and alcoholism which leads to disaster for Beauty. It was the darkest book I had ever read.

An Anne Rice phase led me to the far more amazing authors Poppy Z. Brite and Nancy A. Collins, the latter of which not just writes fairly hardcore horror, but also wedged her way into comics. What geek girl doesn’t admire that?

On the male side of the spectrum, Roald Dahl, Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman are all glorious masters among us plebs.

5. What authors do you like to read?  Any recommendations?


I read a lot, over many genres. If you’re comfortable being seen in the urban fantasy section, Ann Aguirre is doing great things with demons and zombies (her zombie books are YA). Stacia Kane is a favorite for sure. Ilona Andrews is an auto-buy.

As for Authors You’re Probably Missing; Sara M. Harvey and Jennifer Pelland write dark speculative fiction, K.H. Koehler, Lucy Snyder and Chesya Burke are all amazing horror authors.

 

6. Where can readers find your work?

I’m mostly in ebooks these days, so all the usually places, Amazon, B&N, Kobo, OmniLit and iBooks. I have a werewolf book out (Wolf Heart), two zombie novellas (Rot and The List) and a zombie novel that just came out (Last Brother, Last Sister). I have short stories here and there, and my erotic romance stuff is published under the pen name M. Lush.

Interested in learning more ? Check out Michele Lee’s Amazon page, this interview, her blog, or Reading Bites.