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Monster Movie Month: Colleen Wanglund Writes About The Vengeful Female Ghost in Asian Horror

Well, this time I just got lucky. Really, we all did.

I had no plans to write about Asian horror cinema, or ghosts, for Monster Movie Month. But one of our reviewers, Colleen Wanglund, is an expert on Asian horror cinema, and in addition to the reviews that she wrote for us for Monster Movie Month, I discovered that she also wrote a fascinating article for the feminist online horror zine Ax Wound, “The Vengeful Feminine: “The Asian Female Ghost is a True Feminist”. Great writing, and worth reading. In addition to her critical analysis, Colleen names a number of Asian horror movies; librarians unfamiliar with Asian horror may want to take note, for the next time a patron asks “Do you have any movies like The Ring“?

Women In Horror Month Is (Almost) Here!

February is Women in Horror Month, and that means it’s a great time to promote and celebrate the incredible women who write and create in the horror genre, and really throw open the doors of the library to an audience that is nearly invisible to the rest of the world- women who unapologetically read, watch, review, and LOVE the horror genre. To find out a little more about it, you can check out this manifesto (warning, it’s R-rated) on the importance of reccognizing women and horror, by Hannah Neurotica, of the feminist horror zine Ax Wound. This year, one of the online events that will be part of WiHM is a “Women of Horror” series of blog posts at Darkeva’s Dark Delights. where she’ll be writing about her top twenty writers, editors, and journalists in the horror community.

Looking for a few writers to showcase? You can always start with the classics, like Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. Check out the doings of the Horror Writers Association, which nominated Chelsea Quinn Yarbro’s Hotel Transylvania and Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire as possibilities for Vampire Novel of the Century. Lisa Morton, the current treasurer of HWA, is an incredibly talented writer who made our Top Picks list for 2011 with her book The Samhanach. And that’s just a beginning. I challenge you to do something different this month in your library display case- celebrate the creative talents of women in the horror genre.