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What is horror?
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I personally find horror to be the realities of what could happen during the worst of times. Something that shows the dark side of good people.
Joseph Nassise, Dean Koontz, Estevan Vega, Tim LaHaye, Mike Duran, Robin Parrish, Michael Crichton, George RR Martin, Anne Rice. Soon, there will be a few others. Not all of them are Christian in any way, but it doesn't stop me from checking them out. Soon, Rene Gutteridge, Pete Turner, Eric Wilson, Keven Newsome, and Greg Mitchell will be added to the current reading list.

I could be wrong, but I think he's more fantasy, or at least his currently well-known series, A Song of Ice and Fire, is fantasy.
And to think we've gone from what horror is to the genre of Mr. Martin. We get sidetracked quite easily, don't we?


That one was pretty intense, not just at the time, but even now. I wonder what you would think of for his book The Priest's Graveyard?

My fave of his will still be his story of demon-possession, Adam. First one to truly give me the frightening chills.





..So the library really wouldn't allow you to check it out just because of how damaged it is..?


"Blood, guts."
"Blood, a lot of gore."
"Serial killers and lots of swearing."
"What they said."
Honestly, I was surprised no one mentioned sex. In most horror movies anymore, there's either at least toplessness or at least one sex scene. I didn't metnion that to them, though. I challenged what they believed to be true. Horror is when something evokes a powerful feeling of nervous, anxiety, dread, terror, etc. It doesn't need to have to do with serial killers, demons, etc. You take out the killers, demons, ghosts, etc, and all you got left is "drama", which saddens me that what is one's own personal horrific nightmare is (to another) one's everyday drama. As an asprigin author, I gave them the premise to one of my darker horror ideas, called "An Extreme Trial", dealing with satanism, secrets between friends, and, among the darkest taboos in American culture today, domestic torture. But I won't write it to just write some jumpfest, or test someone's stomach, I want to write about the practicality of certain "Christianese" statements many churches have the congregation uses but rarely are ever taught the meaning.
Back in college, the guys' Bible Study group I was in, one week, had an interesting challenge, define certain "Churchey" words (rejoice, hallelujah, praise, etc.) without sounding religious about it. Turned out, we didn't know how to define them in a realistic, secular kind of way (I went to a secular, liberal college, Marshall University). I realized that, aside from what one's taught about words, we really don't know (in a personal way) what they mean. So, in this story, I decided to discover a practical, hands-on meaning of "the Lord is always with you." Though the satanists in the story are ruining each friend's view of each other, one has a devastating secret all their life that's challenged that one not only on God's character of being a good god, but His existence altogether. But through this one experience, that friend finds out that what may seem like a curse is actually, in the darkest of times, a good thing.
What's your take on the reality of horror? And you can go ahead and use old-fashioned horror and new as references.