Crossing Genres: #Fantasy & #Horror

Different Genres

Welcome back to this month-long adventure where we talk about how advice for one genre can help for another.  Of course, these are only quick overviews because of time and space.  Today we’re going to discuss the similarities of:

FANTASY & HORROR/THRILLER

Use of Monsters

This might seem like a simple one now that you look at it.  Fantasy uses monsters a lot for enemies, plot points, background, and all manner of uses.  The creatures that fill the fictional world are incredibly important to create a sense that you are no longer on Earth or in our reality.  You can delve into mythology to create your bestiary or design your own monsters to fill the niches as you approach them.  A key point is to make sure they work within their environment.  Even if they are only mentioned in passing, they need to fit into what you’re describing.  Sure, you could have a living ice cream cone run around a volcano, but it comes off as comedic and silly, which can ruin the tone if you’re not going for that.  At the very least, give an explanation, but that means these possibly background creatures suddenly take a bigger role than you might have intended.

With Horror, you don’t always have monsters, but you do come close.  Even a serial killer can be placed in this category because they are the threat.  In Horror, the dangerous entity is what will be the biggest draw out of reality.  They are the source of death, fear, and whatever else you throw in there.  Like in Fantasy, you need this ‘monster’ to help build the world for your story.  That is why you also need to make it fit to some extent.  There is more of a factor that it doesn’t belong in this world, but you need to have it work within the confines of the story.  Maybe it’s an alien, but you have to explain why it might not be easily found or how it arrived without notice.  It could have been a creature that’s been asleep for centuries, which means giving it a background.  This may be more important than in fantasy because many times it’s this information that gives the heroes/victims a chance at victory.

Tension

Both of these genres can require tension and suspense to keep the readers interested.  For Fantasy, it could be a scene where you aren’t sure if all of the characters will survive.  It can be them coming to the edge of failure and the readers don’t know if they will go over or find a way to continue on.  Even knowing that there are more chapters doesn’t guarantee that the heroes won’t hit a setback. A trick is to strike as many senses as possible too in order to create more immersion.  In battles, you can create a back-and-forth to the point where it’s unclear who will come out victorious or how.  That tension leads to engrossment and people reading until the issue has been resolved.

Horror is similar, but it does require a longer build up.  While Fantasy can hit quick and move along through a chapter, Horror can draw it out for a long time.  This is because of the eerier atmosphere and the knowledge that things can go south at any moment.  You have the monster hunt without being seen or make people think that’s what is happening, which requires striking multiple senses.  Noises, smells, flickering sights, tastes in the wind, and goosebumps are all helpful here.  Eventually, you strike either with a death or a psychological surprise.  Both can be used to refine the tension instead of dissipating too, which means you can begin building it up once again.  Sometimes, you can even keep some of it through the whole book and make the payoff at the end.  Yet, you need to develop it the same way that you do in fantasy.

Points of Normalcy

There is a temptation in Fantasy and Horror to go entirely off the wall.  In Fantasy, it’s to have the world be so wild and magical that it has no connection to reality.  Some go so far as to leave out humans, horses, castles, and anything that you can find on Earth.  In Horror, one might become so enamored by creating a scary atmosphere that they push the world beyond reality.  Part of the genre is that you have an unnatural or ‘off’ entity in a normal.  An author has to curb this in because you need some points of normalcy for a reader to connect to.  Now, you can get further with Fantasy, but you need to reference some things people can identify.  I remember reading one book that had its own language and used it to define everything, so I didn’t know what was being talked about or how it was pronounced.  Horror might have it easier since these are typically on Earth or at least have humans.  Yet, one has to remember how such things operate and keep them grounded to enhance the entity’s ‘foreign’ nature.  For both genres, this can be as easy as word usage.

So, what do you think about advice for Fantasy and Horror being used for each other?

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New Book Release – #Shortstories – Life is Like a Bowl of Cherries: Sometimes Bitter, Sometimes Sweet by Sally Cronin

I wasn’t sure if I would make it before Christmas, but thanks to David who pulled out all the stops as always, my new short story collection, with a …

New Book Release – #Shortstories – Life is Like a Bowl of Cherries: Sometimes Bitter, Sometimes Sweet by Sally Cronin
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You Never Know Who Is Suffering

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There is a constant scream
It is in silence
Though there are signs
Awkward movements
Eyes of others
Hold daggers of poison
Itches and coughs
Heartbeat rushing
Even when at rest
Tears welling up
But only flowing in solitude
Cracks are forming
Both on the shell
And at the core
As the pressure grows
Horrors stack
Agonies breed
Why can nobody else see
That my reality is on fire
And my only sensation
Is
Pain


Okay.  This poem got darker than expected and I’m sure some people will see this as a cry for help.  Maybe it is?  I do have days when I feel like I was born solely to suffer on an emotional and mental level.  I’d rather physical pain than the internal stuff.  Yet, I also know that there are people who have it worse than I do.  That doesn’t make me feel better or worse.  It’s just how it is.  Most wouldn’t dare to write something like this on a public forum too, but I’m feeling that I should bring attention to mental illness.  My platform isn’t that big, but it’s something.

It does confuse and hurt me that society pushes for us to hide our internal struggles.  We are practically raised to keep the pain inside and eventually turn away others who are unable to keep their happy mask on.  People get tired of the ones who are always depressed or eternally nervous.  Schizophrenia and dissociative disorders are even more difficult to understand from the outside.  Humans tend to be caught up in their own journeys and trials too, so to put effort onto wrapping your head around the suffering of another person care be a challenge.  Though, I think it would be fine if you’re simply there for them to talk to and let them know that they’re not alone.  It’s complicated and differs from person to person, so we can’t really get into that.  All I know is that we tend to be told to hide our internal scars because:

  • They will cost you friends.
  • They will prevent you from getting a job.
  • They will make you ‘weird’.
  • They will prevent you from having a boyfriend/girlfriend/spouse.
  • They will go away eventually.
  • They aren’t real anyway.

Ouch.  I got panicky just writing all of the ones that I’ve heard.  Those phrases come off as so callous and cruel too.  Ignore your pain and let it fester because you don’t want it to cause trouble?  Imagine if we said that about physical injuries.  Don’t worry about that shattered arm because it could cost you a job.  Got a horrible gash?  Leave it alone and hide it to avoid losing friends.  I’m sure neither of those will get worse if you give it the same level of attention that we give mental illness.  (That was sarcasm for anyone who didn’t get that.)

Why am I writing this?  Because it’s been that kind of year.  2020 has been brutal on most people.  It’s certainly given the ‘gift’ of mental illness to many and has made those already in the pool struggle to stay afloat.  This goes for all ages, races, genders, economic classes, locations, occupations, and whatever category you can think of.  The emotional and mental brutalization that 2020 has done to people is horrific.  Makes it hard to imagine 2021 will be any better because we have a long road of recovery ahead of us.

So . . . Give a thought to those who are suffering in silence.  Maybe reach out to someone you know is lonely and starting to draw away from people.  The holiday season is depressing enough for many, but now you have the 2020 terrors added onto the usual junk.  So, just think about others and how they could be screaming at the top of their psychic lungs right in front of you.

Now, for the song that I keep going back to:

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Another Week Down . . . Time for a 99 Cent Sale Report and Goals

Last Sunday, I announced that I dropped all of my single books to 99 cents.  People have been asking how the sale is going, so I’m going to give a quick breakdown by the day starting with a week ago.  I’m not counting free books either.  First, click here for my Amazon site to see all of my books:

  • Last Saturday-  The day after I changed prices and the day before I announced: 37 sales
  • Sunday-  The day I announced on blog, Twitter, and Facebook: 0 sales
  • Monday-  0 sales
  • Tuesday- 0 sales
  • Wednesday- 0 sales and 1 panic attack
  • Thursday- 19 sales and utter confusion
  • Friday- 1 sale

Somebody smarter than me will have to explain this.  My biggest sale day was before I announced, so I think people had my books marked for price change notifications.  I saw nothing while things were stuck at the top of pages.  Then something happened Thursday somehow.  I noticed that I didn’t get any traction on Facebook and Twitter was the usual sharing with no clear sense of it helping.  So, I can’t tell you where the traffic was coming from.  A bizarre thing is that somebody bought a copy of ‘Catalysts’, which was a thriller novella that I attempted long ago.  That wasn’t even mentioned and has been 99 cents for years.  I’m thoroughly confused here.  Still, it was nice to see some motion.

Getting to the events of the week, it was busy.  Since I work in a school, things get more hectic as you near the holidays.  The Era of Covid doesn’t make that any easier, so I ended most days exhausted.  I felt useful and wasn’t driven up the wall until I got home, which was a good thing.  Can’t believe we have a week and a half before the holiday break.  To think that I imagined getting a bunch of writing done first.  This month seems to have kicked on the jet boosters because it’s flying.  I didn’t even have time to touch on the ‘Ruins of the Zodiac Gods’ outlines that I carry around.  To be honest, the breakneck speed of life has left me fairly irritable.  Feel kind of trapped and off at times.  Part of the reason for tomorrow’s post, which I highly recommend.

In the arena of parenting, I had my son for half of the week.  We might have another of my son’s art posts coming in January since he finished the last of the main Fairy Tail characters recently.  Schoolwork carried into last weekend though, so we didn’t get a lot of play time.  We had a lot of back and forth too.  Hanukkah struck at a really bad time this year.  It started the day after he went to his mom and ends the day before he comes back, but I get some time promised to me.  Still, Jewish holidays with these lengthy time periods suck when you have shared custody.  You never have your kid for the whole thing unless you give up time afterwards.  Since schools don’t give off for Hanukkah, it would mean I take on more school days and sacrifice days that both of us have off.  That doesn’t sound like a smart deal to me, so I’m sucking it up.  A little time is better than none and I don’t want to put any extra pressure on the situation.

I’ve got no writing news.  Set up blog posts for the weekend and February.  Mostly, I spent time with my son and watched TV when I was home.  I’m almost done with ‘Yu Yu Hakusho’ and will jump to a few comedies on Netflix afterwards.  ‘Schitts Creek’ and ‘Mr. Iglesias’ are the ones I’m eyeing.  I keep wondering when I should watch the live-action Rurouni Kenshin movies that I bookmarked on Funimation.  Feels like something best to watch with someone else, but my son is too young.  These are such lame problems.  I think because it does stem from and feed my loneliness.  Ever feel isolated even when you’re around people?

That’s really all I’ve got.  I get my son today for potato latkes and tomorrow doesn’t see any real planning.  I’ll try to get some Do I Need to Use a Dragon? done and I’ll slip a few more in throughout the week.  Be nice if I can get the ‘World’ section done.  That will leave me with 40 to go.  I’m still surprised that I can’t crank these out like a blog post even though I’m writing it in a similar fashion.  Think I’m crafting these entries more carefully since I’m going to publish everything.  A few people talk like I’m going to be posting the tip book on the blog, but this is going to Amazon for 99 cents.  Sorry.  I figure the time and effort I’m putting into the whole thing deserves official publishing instead of tossing it out like I do with ‘Bedlam’ stories.  Beyond all of that and some meetings, I have nothing else planned.  Counting down the days until the holidays, I guess.

Goals of the week:

  1. Work
  2. Little time with son
  3. Write more Do I Need to Use a Dragon?
  4. Try to outline more of ‘Ruins of the Zodiac Gods’
  5. Think about introducing Darwin Slepsnor on the blog in January
  6. February blog posts
  7. Think of March topics (Feel free to suggest)
  8. Get a nice dinner when I’m alone tomorrow.
  9. Finish watching Yu Yu Hakusho
  10. Puzzle time
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The Rainbow-Colored Desk Slinky

My Slinky

Sitting on the side
Dust crushed
Between the plastic coils
Colorful and bent
I have had you
For untold years
No memory of your origin
A gift?
A prize?
There is no way to know
I grab you when idle
Or stress is rearing up
Shooting you out
Like a weapon
Bouncing between palms
Just to make that sound
And hazy colors
That soothe me
To the core

______________________________________________________

The poem really covers it.  As you can see from the picture, I have a slinky that sits within reach.  I don’t know if I’ve ever used it on stairs, but I always seem to grab it when I’m getting stressed.  Been happening a lot this year because of all the Zoom and Google Meet sessions where I have to be muted.  It isn’t a distraction for me and I don’t even notice when I take it.  Not until I launch it while holding one end, so it stretches out and shoots back to tap my knuckles.  Long ago, I remember trying to grab things like pencils and remotes with it.  I succeeded a few times.  Weirdest part of the slinky is that I have no idea how long I’ve had it for, where I got it, or when I started playing with it when I was getting twitchy.  It gets the job done though.

So, does anyone else have an object that they fiddle and play with when either stressed or bored?  Is this an author quirk?

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How to Publish with KDP: Part Twenty

Image courtesy of bigstock.com Hello SErs. Harmony here.  As promised, here is  part twenty in the post series dedicated to taking a step-by-step …

How to Publish with KDP: Part Twenty
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Welcome to Gwen Plano and Her Latest Book, The Culmination, a new beginning.

Thank you, John, for inviting me to your blog to help launch The Culmination, a new beginning. The book is now public on Amazon, and I’m super …

Welcome to Gwen Plano and Her Latest Book, The Culmination, a new beginning.
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Questions 3: Publishing in 2020

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From my own experience and asking around, this hasn’t been a very good year for publishing and selling books.  I’m not really going to touch on that second part though since I rant about it a lot on Saturdays.  That and I’m sure everyone has their own opinion on it.  So . . . I’ll jump right into it then.

  1. How would you describe the state of indie publishing?
  2. What do you think could improve it?
  3. What is something that you feel hurts authors in the indie publishing world?
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Is Weather Important to Stories?

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Many of us remember Snoopy starting a book with ‘It was a dark and stormy’ night.  In fact, I’ve seen this get used as a ‘what not to do’ lesson.  I believe it’s that you never start with the weather, which is a guideline that I’ve seen broken many times.  Some of us might have heard that a conversation is dead once you bring up the weather too.  There really is a lot of rules that make weather out to be a terrible subject. This makes me wonder if weather is really important to stories.

For my stories, I use weather to help set the stage for what is about to happen.  I don’t depend on it alone for setting, but it is a piece of the world-building puzzle.  If I mention that there is snow then that can explain slow progress when walking, characters shivering, and other cold-related events.  I try not to harp on the weather, which is where I think some people go wrong.  You can only mention the storm so many times before it gets a negative reaction.  Of course, it’s much easier to use bad weather than good because that’s what can really influence things.  A nice, sunny day doesn’t really hit with a lot of impact when compared to lightning or a tornado.  Still, you can use it to show that it’s relaxing scene, so it shouldn’t be discounted outright.

Some add weather without realizing it, but I’ve met more who try to leave it out.  I understand why because people do have this weird aversion to it.  It’s surprised me how often a reader will be chugging along and then scowl because there’s a mention of it raining.  This is mostly when it starts a chapter because of the idea that you shouldn’t start with weather.  Seems that belief has become more mainstream somehow.  Authors are more likely to do this from what I can tell.  Not all of us and it could be a minority, but it’s enough that I run into fairly often.

A funny thing is that this seems to not be the case for more visual mediums like movies, comics, and television.  There are times where it feels like the opposite.  So many scenes begin with nightmarish weather and that gets the blood pumping.  Maybe people aren’t as good at imagining these things when they read it.  I know I tend to underestimate storms when I dream them up, so a real one always catches me by surprise.  The sheer power of wind and water in their various forms/levels is shocking if you aren’t faced with it fairly often.  So, there could be a mental block that authors have to get around, which is possible if you ease into it.  That means, you don’t start with the weather, but you can build up to it and then continue rising to sandwich it between the rest of the world-building.

One last thing I will mention in terms of weather in fiction is that you can shake it up by researching unique patterns.  In fantasy, I can do a lot of wild stuff with magic, but I’ve learned that there are really strange ones in reality too.  It can range from the fairly well-known ball lightning to incidents of raining fish.  You have many events that involve smog, combinations of weather, and some of the lesser used patterns.  Apparently, fire tornadoes are a thing too in some places.  Just type what you’re thinking of or wander around various sites to see if any of the real, but strange events catch your attention.  It can really liven things up and separate them from the basics that we tend to use.

So, what do you think about weather in fiction?  Is it a really minor piece of the big picture?

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5 Crucial Tips For Writing Plot Twists

This is a guest post by Desiree Villena. Desiree is a writer with Reedsy, a marketplace that connects self-publishing with the world’s best editors, …

5 Crucial Tips For Writing Plot Twists
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