Lee Allen Howard
Nav Menu
Nav
  • Home
  • Books
  • Newsletter
  • Bio
  • Blog
  • Dark Fiction Editing
  • Contact

Tag: horror writing

February 10, 2021
Book Review: Writing in the Dark by Tim Waggoner

The Best of How-to-Write Horror

I’ve read a ton of how-to-write-fiction books including a number of texts on writing horror, but Tim Waggoner’s Writing in the Dark is the best of them all.

Writing in the Dark by Tim WaggonerIt opens with an intro by Tom Monteleone of Borderlands fame demonstrating why Waggoner is qualified to write the book. He’s a prolific writer of both horror/dark fantasy and media tie-ins. In the preface, Waggoner reveals why he writes horror. We’re of roughly the same age, and his journey in many ways mirrors mine. (It’s great to meet a new member of the Horror Family. Weirdos unite!)

He progresses through chapters such as “Why Horror Matters” and “Things Unknown” and turns a corner with “Everything You Know Is Wrong.” He covers various subgenres of horror, generating unique ideas for stories, and building one-of-a-kind monsters. I especially enjoyed the chapters “The Horror Hero’s Journey” (Poor Bastard’s Descent into Hell) and the importance of including an emotional core relayed through immersive POV.

Every chapter is insightful, helpful, and entertaining. Each ends with exercises to enable eager writers to implement what they’ve just learned as well as three or four “voices from the shadows”—accomplished horror writers—who discuss what makes good horror and best advice for beginning writers.

Waggoner teaches college-level writing, so you’re getting a college course in a book. I love to study, so I consider it a textbook that’s also a tasty morsel of how-to darkness.

My rating is 4.6 stars. The book lost a few tenths because the type is so small. As I read through, I was hoping for a workbook that expanded the exercises. Well, Guide Dog Books/Raw Dog Screaming Press recently announced a companion workbook is coming, so I’m excited about that. I’ll be buying it, too, when it comes out. But I hope the type is a little bigger for those like me over fifty.

I can’t recommend this text highly enough. Whether you’re a beginning, intermediate, or advanced horror writer, you’ll get something useful to take your writing to the next horrific level.

Follow Tim Waggoner on Twitter @TimWaggoner. Check out his website at http://www.timwaggoner.com/.

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • More
  • Email
  • Print
Like Loading...
Comments to this post

Recent Posts

  • How Story Coaching Can Help You Write a Better Story
  • Writers: Do you remember fun?
  • Why Dark Fiction Writers Need Proofreading
  • What Do You Need on the Fiction Editing Spectrum?
  • Dark Fiction Writers: Do You Need Editing?

Recent Comments

  • Kevin Killen on Grave’s End by Elaine Mercado
  • Kat Craig on Omniscient POV in Peter Straub’s Ghost Story
  • Kat Craig on Paranormal Activity (2007) Scares the Old Fashioned Way
  • Jennifer Wells on Catholic Faith in The Exorcist and The Exorcism of Emily Rose
  • Jennifer Wells on Ghostbusters Improved from 1984 to 2016

Archives

Categories

Copyright ©2023 Lee Allen Howard. All rights reserved.
Disclosures & Privacy Policy
=
%d bloggers like this: