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Women in Horror Fiction: Debbie Cowens

 Debbie Cowens is a New Zealand-based writer and teacher. Her short stories can be found in the collection  Mansfield with Monsters with Matt Cowens and Katherine Mansfield (Steam Press  2013) , the novella At the Bay of Cthulu with Matt Cowens and Katherine Mansfield, and the anthologies  Baby Teeth (2013 Paper Road Press), Steam Pressed Shorts with Matt Cowens (2012 Amazon Digital), and Shades of Sentience (2010 lulu.com).

 

1. Can you give our readers a brief introduction?

I’m a writer of a variety of genres – horror, SF, fantasy and crime. I co-authored the book Mansfield with Monsters, published by Steam Press, which is a collection of Katherine Mansfield’s short stories, adapted to include the monstrous and the macabre. I have also written numerous short stories, including the story “Caterpillars” in the recent horror anthology Baby Teeth. I’m currently working a short novel, Mother of the Baskervilles, a darkly comic mashup of Pride and Prejudice and Sherlock Holmes, which casts the Mrs Bennett-style mother as a ruthless serial killer and Elizabeth as an aspiring detective.

 

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

 

I’ve always been fascinated with the horror genre. One of the first films I remember making a strong impression on me as a child was the Christopher Lee film version of Dracula, which I watched unbeknownst to my parents as a five year old at my uncle’s house. It didn’t scare me as so much as enthrall. I would often sneak up after bedtime to watch the late night horror movies as a kid and most of the books I would choose to read had a horror or mystery element. As soon as I started writing my own stories, they tended to focus on monsters, which unfortunately worried one of my teachers who didn’t think seven year old girls should be writing about blood and guts or scary things. However, what draws to me the genre is as much the human element as the darker content. I’m fascinated by people and what drives them. Placing characters in truly terrifying situations often reveals more about who they really are and what matters to them than their everyday life. Our fears are an important part of human nature and often the monsters themselves reflect a lot about people and society. The scary ‘other’ in horror is often just a twisted and magnified reflection of ourselves.

 

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

 

I’m a bit of a writing chameleon, adapting my style to suit the characters and scenarios I’m writing. In Mansfield with Monsters I faced the challenge of blending my writing with that of one of the pioneers of Modernism. I’d say the linking element in a lot of my fiction is a sense of humour, often dry and somewhat dark, and a compassion for the characters – even when they are being murdered by possessed children, torn apart by zombies or facing their werewolf packmate and husband drifting away despite the thrill of the chase and the promise of blood. While I love stories of horror and harm, I do tend to like a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel – a suggestion that the sun might rise again, that there might be, if not salvation, then at least a reprieve before the next onslaught. Like a weekend, or a holiday break away from the being killed.

 

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

 

I really enjoyed reading Margaret Mahy as a kid and The Haunting was one of my favourites. As a teenager, I devoured a lot of Stephen King and I’m still a fan of his writing. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley was one of the first classic horrors that I read. I loved it; it was moving and compelling, and both beautiful and horrific at the same time. I’m also really fond of the nineteenth century horror classics like Poe and Lovecraft. The Cthulhu mythos sort of redefined my notions of what terrible monsters could be in terms of scale, strangeness and terrifying power. In terms of writing style, I’m more influenced by more modern or at least less florid prose and storytelling.

 

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

 

I enjoy reading a wide variety of books – anything from historical mysteries, young adult, fantasy, science fiction and of course horror. I like a lot of writers who blur the boundaries between genre and literary like Kate Atkinson, Margaret Atwood and Haruki Murakami. I’ve also recently read a lot of translations of traditional Japanese ghost stories, which are fabulous, and the short stories of Ryunosuke Akutagawa. I just finished two brilliant novels by fellow New Zealand Writers; The Unspeakable Secrets of the Aro Valley by Danyl McLauchlan and The Wind City by Summer Wigmore. Both weird, surreal and darkly humorous tales with more moral complexity than I had anticipated. Next on my to-read list is Wake, a horror novel by New Zealand author Elizabeth Knox.

 

6. Where can readers find your work?

 

Mansfield with Monsters is available from Steam Press or on Amazon. At the Bay of Cthulhu, a Lovecraftian take of a Katherine Mansfield novella is available of Amazon. Baby Teeth, the horror anthology is available from Paper Road Press   and a selection of my stories are included in Steam Pressed Shorts on Amazon, which includes a range of horror, steampunk, SF and fantasy short stories.

Interested in learning more? Check out Debbie Cowens’ Amazon page, and  her blog. For a little more detail on Mansfield with Monsters, take a look at this interview, or this video, which also include her collaborator, Matt Cowens.

Stoker Finalists Named

The finalists for the Stoker ballot have been named! It’s unbelievable that Women in Horror Month is already drawing to an end and it will soon be Stoker time! As in past years, we at ML will make a heroic effort to review the finalists (I hope that’s not a surprise, guys). Yes, our reviewers are heroes. Any finalists who happen to be reading this… Please contact us at monsterlibrarian@monsterlibrarian.com so we can get this (heroic) party going!

And now:

“We are proud to present a particularly notable slate of nominees this year, showing the horror genre is strong and popular,” Rocky Wood, the HWA’s President, said.

IMPORTANT: Voting begins on 2/28 and ends on 3/15. Only Active and Lifetime members can vote.

The nominees are:

Superior Achievement in a Novel

      Joe Hill – NOS4A2 (William Morrow)
      Stephen King – Doctor Sleep (Scribner)
      Lisa Morton – Malediction (Evil Jester Press)
      Sarah Pinborough and F. Paul Wilson – A Necessary End (Thunderstorm/Maelstrom Press)
      Christopher Rice – The Heavens Rise (Gallery Books)

Superior Achievement in a First Novel

      Kate Jonez – Candy House (Evil Jester Press)
      John Mantooth – The Year of the Storm (Berkley Trade)
      Rena Mason – The Evolutionist (Nightscape Press)
      Jonathan Moore – Redheads (Samhain Publishing)
      Royce Prouty – Stoker’s Manuscript (G.P. Putnam’s Sons)


Superior Achievement in a Young Adult Novel

      Patrick Freivald – Special Dead (JournalStone)
      Kami Garcia – Unbreakable (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)
      Geoffrey Girard – Project Cain (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers)
      Joe McKinney – Dog Days (JournalStone)
      Cat Winters – In the Shadow of Blackbirds (Harry N. Abrams)


Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel

      Ed Brubaker – Fatale Book Three: West of Hell (Image Comics)
      Caitlin R. Kiernan – Alabaster: Wolves (Dark Horse Comics)
      Brandon Seifert – Witch Doctor, Vol. 2: Mal Practice (Image Comics)
      Cameron Stewart – Sin Titulo (Dark Horse Comics)
      Paul Tobin – Colder (Dark Horse Comics)


Superior Achievement in Long Fiction

      Dale Bailey – “The Bluehole” (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, May/June 2013)
      Gary Braunbeck – “The Great Pity” (Chiral Mad 2, Written Backwards)
      Benjamin K. Ethridge – “The Slaughter Man” (Limbus, Inc., JournalStone)
      Gregory Frost – “No Others Are Genuine” (Asimov’s Science Fiction, Oct./Nov. 2013)
      Greg F. Gifune – House of Rain (DarkFuse)
      Rena Mason – East End Girls (JournalStone)

Superior Achievement in Short Fiction

      Michael Bailey – “Primal Tongue” (Zippered Flesh 2, Smart Rhino Publications)
      Patrick Freivald – “Snapshot” (Blood & Roses, Scarlett River Press)
      David Gerrold – “Night Train to Paris” (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Jan./Feb. 2013)
      Lisa Mannetti – “The Hunger Artist” (Zippered Flesh 2, Smart Rhino Publications)
      John Palisano – “The Geminis” (Chiral Mad 2, Written Backwards)
      Michael Reaves – “Code 666” (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, March/April 2013)


Superior Achievement in a Screenplay

      Fabien Adda and Fabrice Gobert – The Returned: “The Horde” (Ramaco Media I, Castelao Pictures)
      Brad Falchuk – American Horror Story: Asylum: “Spilt Milk” (Brad Falchuk Teley-Vision, Ryan Murphy Productions)
      Bryan Fuller – Hannibal: “Apéritif” (Dino De Laurentiis Company, Living Dead Guy Productions, AXN: Original X Production, Gaumont International Television)
      Daniel Knauf – Dracula: “A Whiff of Sulfur” (Flame Ventures, Playground, Universal Television, Carnival Films
      Glen Mazzara – The Walking Dead: “Welcome to the Tombs” (AMC TV)


Superior Achievement in an Anthology

      R.J. Cavender and Boyd E. Harris (ed.) – Horror Library: Volume 5 (Cutting Block Press)
      Eric J. Guignard (ed.) – After Death… (Dark Moon Books)
      Michael Knost and Nancy Eden Siegel (ed.) – Barbers & Beauties (Hummingbird House Press)
      Joseph S. Pulver, Sr. (ed.) – The Grimscribe’s Puppets (Miskatonic River Press)
      Anthony Rivera and Sharon Lawson (ed.) – Dark Visions: A Collection of Modern Horror, Volume One (Grey Matter Press)

Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection

      Nathan Ballingrud – North American Lake Monsters: Stories (Small Beer Press)
      Laird Barron – The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All and Other Stories (Night Shade Books)
      James Dorr – The Tears of Isis (Perpetual Motion Machine Publishing)
      Caitlin R. Kiernan – The Ape’s Wife and Other Stories (Subterranean)
      Gene O’Neill – Dance of the Blue Lady (Bad Moon Books)
      S. P. Somtow – Bible Stories for Secular Humanists (Diplodocus Press)


Superior Achievement in Non-Fiction

      Barbara Brodman and James E. Doan (ed.) – Images of the Modern Vampire: The Hip and the Atavistic (Fairleigh Dickinson)
      Gary William Crawford (ed.) – Ramsey Campbell: Critical Essays on the Modern Master of Horror (Scarecrow Press)
      William F. Nolan – Nolan on Bradbury: Sixty Years of Writing about the Master of Science Fiction (Hippocampus Press)
      Jarkko Toikkanen – The Intermedial Experience of Horror: Suspended Failures (Palgrave Macmillan)
      Robert H. Waugh (ed.) – Lovecraft and Influence: His Predecessors and Successors (Scarecrow Press)

Superior Achievement in a Poetry Collection

      Bruce Boston – Dark Roads: Selected Long Poems 1971-2012 (Dark Renaissance Books)
      Helen Marshall – The Sex Lives of Monsters (Kelp Queen Press)
      Marge Simon and Sandy DeLuca – Dangerous Dreams (Elektrik Milk Bath Press)
      Marge Simon, Rain Graves, Charlee Jacob, and Linda Addison – Four Elements (Bad Moon Books/Evil Jester Press)
      Stephanie M. Wytovich – Hysteria: A Collection of Madness (Raw Dog Screaming Press)

HWA’s voting members will now vote on this Final Ballot, with voting closing on March 31 (only Active and Lifetime Members are eligible to vote).

The Bram Stoker Awards® will be presented at the 27th annual Bram Stoker Awards® Banquet held during the WORLD HORROR CONVENTION 2014 in Portland, Oregon, on May 10th. Purchase of tickets to both the convention and the banquet are open to the public. The awards will also be live-streamed online for those who cannot attend in person.

Women in Horror Fiction: Resource on Black Women Writers of Horror Now Available

 

Author Sumiko Saulson has compiled a great resource, 60 Black Women In Horror Fiction, which is now available on Smashwords for free. February being both Black History Month and Women in Horror Month, this is a perfect choice to add to your reader’s advisory resources. Saulson based the short book on blog posts she has written over the past few years that provided short biographies of  followed up with interviews from some well known black women authors, including Jemiah Jackson and Linda Addison.  The women Saulson profiled have authored books from all over the spectrum, including erotica, urban fantasy, poetry, and science fiction… but all of them have published something that qualifies them as writers in the horror genre.

 

RA librarians, you’ll definitely want to check this out. The price couldn’t be any better, that’s for sure! Many thanks to Sumiko Saulson for compiling this reference– she’s an inspiration!