Horror Aficionados discussion
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What is required for good horror?
Scott wrote: "As in everything, a sense of wonder, and/or an emotional connection."
Exactly. If you don't share some sort of bond with the characters, who cares what happens to them?
Exactly. If you don't share some sort of bond with the characters, who cares what happens to them?


Atmosphere, too. If the author can create a scene that the reader can see in their mind then half the job is done. The reader has to believe the setting, be there with the characters, in order to feel the emotion that anxiety or fear can bring.

Good point. Characters are the most important aspect for me, but atmosphere is absolutely vital.


Honestly gore doesn't frighten me, it might gross me out some but disgust and fear are not the same thing. The characters have to interest me, love them or hate them when you feel indifferent then it's not a good story.


I hate obvious horror: monsters hiding in closets; a group of people coming together at the end of the story to kill a monster, especially with some "magical" device a person has had all along but didn't know it would work. Lame!
What scares me the most are the throwaway things that may not scare other people. Build these up in a story and I'm yours. An example that comes to mind is in Seed when Charlie's mother is bent over tying her shoelaces and feels air on the top of her head and looks up to see Charlie bent down right on top of her. It was unexpected and in one quick scene spelled out just how frightening it was to be around the girl.

I always thought that I had to like the characters to enjoy the book. Then I read We Need to Talk About Kevin. I didn't like any of those characters and but I enjoyed the hell out of the book.
I like the building sense of dread and unease in horror stories. I find that very few authors are able to keep those feelings up throughout a story-but I've found a few that I believe do that very well.

Keeping the sense of dread up in a horror story is difficult to do, and when a writer can do that, I praise him/her to the heavens for a job well done. To not only scare me but to make me want to flip to the end because I just can't take it any more is admirable to this jaded horror fan.

Again, well said Tressa!



I dislike books that one nasty thing after another happens to the cars. I want the build to the scream at the end. If too much too soon the last scare losses its punch


I also like it when there is a feeling of dread present throughout the book like Tressa talked about. That doesn't mean it has to be all horror though, I like it when the horror goes to the back burner for a few chapters for the author to focus on the characters' lives outside the greater story and show us their personalities.

I totally agree, Matthew. I think that's quite possibly the most fascinating thing about horror for me.
What would happen to a rational person who discovered vampires are real? After that, nothing is off the table. You hear a dog howling in the distance and immediately wonder, "Could that be a werewolf?"
You go by a cemetery and suddenly you think of zombies.
When reality is shifted for a person, it would change absolutely everything.

It's funny how humans in these stories don't go insane when met with an alien or vampire or four-story octopus. Their whole world has been picked up and turned inside out, yet they act like it's business as usual, they just now have to battle this alien, vampire, or four-story octopus before they can go back to their schools or their jobs.

Messes up my whole day."
Remain calm and carry on. That's what you should do. Not have your hair turn white and go stark raving mad, like people would do in the real world.


the premise of the movie is following some physical/emotional reaction a sense is lost. 1st smell, then taste, then hearing and finally sight. BTW this is a worldwide epidemic it is happening to EVERYONE.
The movie is classed as: drama, romance, sci-fi.
My question just like facing the 4 story octopi knowing the fact that a person KNOWS that this will happen to him, how does he handle it? Does it constitute horror? It does to me I think this would be terrifying.


I saw it about a month ago. I thought they did a good job of predicting what might happen with lost of smell and taste, but it helped that one of the main characters was a chef. Those two senses were the majority of the film, as things go downhill quickly after loss of hearing and sight...
Overall, I liked the premise more than the execution, but it was a decent film.
There was a similar film a few years ago, Blindness, which just dealt with a pandemic of the loss of sight.

What do you think? Is every story that deals with subject matter that's scary to contemplate automatically horror? If not, what is the difference?

I saw it about a month ago. I thought they did a good job of predicting what might happen with lost of smell and taste, but it helped that one of..."
agree wholeheartedly Randy the way the loss of smell and taste was handled well.
The romantic and heart tugging sequence before the loss of sight was contrived. Hence the romantic tag put in just to appeal to a certain demographic.



I think I'd be cool with it if vampires or aliens or whatnot would come out in public, and be for real. I don't think I'd go mad, I'd be like, ok, what have I learned from reading/movies, and go with it. Granted, as I'm not in shape or anything, and probably couldn't run very far to save my life, I'm sure I'd be one of the first casualties, but hey, I'm cool with it :)

I would NEVER be ok blind and deaf. No books or music?
Please shoot me or hand me a gun so I could do it myself.

Just you for company, 24/7. Hope you like yourself!
I think I'd rather be blind and deaf than be attacked by a giant cockroach, though.

Blind and deaf? Terrible thought -- at least you could learn braille, I guess. The absolute worst fate seems to me to be locked-in syndrome, where you're conscious but can't move or communicate. No way to occupy yourself or even get that itch on your nose scratched ... GAAAH! Isn't that what The Diving Bell and the Butterfly was about?

Please don't laugh at this. I am a Cancer Survior. I was once told I would not still be alive today. I think the reason I like reading about people overcoming horrors is it kind of mirrors what I went through.
LOL I think I have finnally figured out my love for a good zombie story

Lots of descripion,about the gory stuff though,i don't need to know about the main characters great great grandfather's home town.
Of course the most important is a good ending,no one likes to rave about a book and have to say "the ending sucked though..."




It would.
I'm not so sure.
You don't hear about many domestic homicides in senior citizen communities.
I'm not so sure.
You don't hear about many domestic homicides in senior citizen communities.


Do you think they look at the deaths very closely? When my dad died at one, it was the funeral home that picked up the body, not the coroner.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Summer I Died (other topics)We Need to Talk About Kevin (other topics)
Psycho (other topics)
Bitter Blood: A True Story of Southern Family Pride, Madness, and Multiple Murder (other topics)
Basement: True Story of Violence in an American Family (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Robert Bloch (other topics)Carla Coon (other topics)
In your opinion, what's the difference between a good horror story and a great one?