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Women in Horror Fiction: Women in Horror Month– Introducing “Shelley’s Daughters”, by Colleen Wanglund

 

February is officially Women in Horror Month, and while it began with a focus on women in the horror film industry—including actresses, writers, directors, and others working behind the scenes— our goal is to expand this focus to include female horror authors. There are so many women writing horror, some famous but many who are not well-known. Their work is not published and pushed by the major publishing houses; most female authors are published by small houses and in some instances, they self-publish (hooray for the internet!).  And yet, time and again, “Best of” lists continue to be made up of male writers.  Are the women any less worthy?  Is their work not as good as their male counterparts?  Hell no!  We don’t know why female horror authors, for the most part, are overlooked, but we hope to remedy that. So, here at Monster Librarian, we are going to make an active effort to promote women in horror not just by occasionally publishing interviews, but by compiling an index of published women horror writers from Ann Radcliffe to the present.  It’s an ambitious project, but there is no resource that really addresses this topic: in her Reader’s Advisory Guide to Horror Fiction, Becky Siegel Spratford was able to spotlight only five women writers, although I know she would have liked to include more.  Colleen Wanglund and I are going to be spearheading this project, which we’re calling “Shelley’s Daughters”, If there are people who would like to contribute, you can contact  me at our general email address, monsterlibrarian@monsterlibrarian.com, or at kirsten.kowalewski@monsterlibrarian.com. And now, some words from one of my favorite women in horror, and partner in crime (or at least in promoting women writers of horror), Colleen Wanglund.

 

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Women in Horror Month

by Colleen Wanglund

I am a woman in horror; I am one of Shelley’s Daughters, and I am proud to be able to say that.

I was exposed to horror at an early age, both books and movies, thanks to my parents. When I was in high school I wanted to be a writer, but life got in the way and I got sidetracked. At the age of 39, I was asked to write a book review as a favor for a friend of mine. The book was Vicious Verses and Reanimated Rhymes: Zany Zombie Poetry for the Undead Head (2009 Coscom Entertainment). That began my journey back to being a writer. And I cannot thank that friend enough as he has also become a sort of mentor. For years I’ve written book reviews, eventually branching out into film reviews, and the genre I’ve always written about is horror. I have dabbled in fiction here and there, but only recently have I begun to seriously write horror fiction. I won a horror fiction contest for unpublished writers with my short story “Slugs”, I’ve recently sold a short story titled “The Mad Monk of St. Augustine’s” to an upcoming anthology, and I’m working hard on finishing up a novella based on Japanese Pinku (exploitation) films.

But why the love affair with horror? One answer is that I have many fears in this life and horror allows me to face some of those fears at a safe distance. I can put my fears and anxieties to paper as a sort of therapy. It has the potential to help me wrap my brain around some of the horrible atrocities committed by humans all over the world and throughout history. I also find horror to be the most “real” genre out there. Everyone suffers tragedy—in varying degrees, mind you—and horror can act as a catharsis for the feelings associated with those tragedies. We can relate, empathize, or sympathize to what is happening on the page (or on the screen).

As a society horror brings people together to face our collective fears, whether real or imagined. Serial killers, monsters, ghosts—they all represent something for everyone. And I’ve said before that I think women have a unique perspective to bring to the table when it comes to writing horror. We are more emotional and I believe that translates well to the development of characters and the situations they may find themselves in. We live our own horrors in childbirth, letting our children out into the real world, love and loss. We are viewed as the weaker sex, depicted as needing saving, yet at the same time we are expected to be strong for the people around us—our children and loved ones. We are the caregivers and that doesn’t stop because the apocalypse is upon us.

I would like to eventually see Women in Horror Month become unnecessary, but for now it’s needed.  All too often women are being overlooked in a genre they—we—love, and that’s just wrong. I think my main objective is to get the reader to see that gender shouldn’t matter in writing horror stories.  What should matter is the story itself.

 

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Stay tuned and see what we come up with next to promote “Shelley’s Daughters”, and the women of horror fiction!

 

Guest Post by Paula Cappa: The Literary Ladies of Horror’s Haunted Mountain

It may not be February, but October is just as good a time (if not a better one) to recognize women in horror, especially women writers. Paula Cappa, author of the supernatural novels The Dazzling Darkness and Night Sea Journey (both reviewed here), gives us her take on women writers in the genre from the beginnings of their journey until the present day. Love quiet horror? Visit her blog to discover what classic story she’s presenting as her Tuesday Tale of Terror. Really. It’s awesome.

Want another take on women writers in the horror genre? Check out this post by Colleen Wanglund, which includes a fantastic list of contemporary women writers and recommended titles.

The Literary Ladies of Horror’s Haunted Mountain

By Paula Cappa

If there is ever a time to hear a night-shriek, it is October, a month that welcomes readers to the dark mountain of the horror genre. Listen to the hallowed voices, their devouring muscular growls and hot stinging hisses. Canadian writer Margaret Atwood, author of MaddAddam, says “Some may look skeptically at ‘horror’ as a subliterary genre, but in fact, horror is one of the most literary of all forms.”

The literary ladies at the summit are as ghoul-haunted as the gentlemen claiming Haunted Mountain as their territory with their persistent footprints and pulsing voices. Their names are familiar: Poe, Hoffman, James, Blackwood, LeFanu, Lovecraft, Stoker, King, Koontz, Herbert, Straub, Saul, Strieber, Bradbury, Barker, Campbell– the list goes on.

With women so under-represented, one would think the only woman writing horror in the early years was Mary Shelley, setting up ropes and spikes, blazing a wide path up horror’s haunted mountain with Frankenstein in 1818. But look closely at the mountain, and you’ll find the distinctive footprints of Ann Radcliffe, who tore open supernatural paths with The Mysteries of Udolpho as early as 1794. Radcliffe’s writing of suspense about castles and dark villains influenced Dumas, Scott, and Hugo. Mary Elizabeth Braddon, author of Eveline’s Visitant, wrote eighty novels and volumes of short stories during the 1800s, and was known as the Queen of Sensation. The little-known and much-overlooked Margaret Oliphant scaled the rocky mountainside with a heady ghost story, “The Secret Chamber.

By 1865, Amelia Edwards’  The Phantom Coach cut popular tracks across the haunted mountain. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky cleared the way for future women writers with her collection of nightmare tales, The Ensouled Violin, as did Elizabeth Gaskell with The Poor Clare, which deals with a family evil curse, complete with witches and ghosts. Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s short story “The Yellow Wallpaper”, written at the turn of the century, became the earliest feminist literature to expose 19th century attitudes against women’s mental health, in less than 6000 words. I like to think of Charlotte as the Wallerina, dancing up the haunted mountain.

Gothic writers like Edith Wharton (Afterward) and Mary Wilkins (Collected Ghost Stories) remain treasures.  V.C. Andrews, Shirley Jackson, Daphne du Maurier, Mary Sinclair, Rosemary Timperley, Victoria Holt, Mary Stewart, Joan Aiken, Phyllis Whitney, and Barbara Michaels, all were prolific writers on horror’s haunted mountain during the 20th century, and some are still writing today. Then, of course, there’s Anne Rice, with her newest release The Wolves of MidWinter. This queen of the damned has practically established a private driveway up the haunted mountain, with more than thirty enormously successful novels of vampires, angels, demons, spirits, wolves, and witches.

Horror’s haunted mountain, traveled by women writers from Ann Radcliffe to Anne Rice, is still being trailblazed by fresh talents, writers of gothic, ghost, supernatural, traditional, and dark horror: Alexandra Sokoloff, The Unseen; Barbara Erskine, House of Echoes; Caitlin R. Kiernan, The Drowning Girl; Chesya Burke, Dark Faith; Elizabeth Massie, Hell Gate; Gemma Files, The Worm in Every Heart; Joyce Carol Oates, The Accursed; Kelley Armstrong, Bitten; Linda D. Addison, How to Recognize a Demon Has Become Your Friend; M.J. Rose, Seduction; Melanie Tem, Slain in the Spirit; Nancy Baker, Kiss of the Vampire; Nancy Holder, Dead in Winter; Poppy Z. Brite, Drawing Blood; Rose Earhart, Salem’s Ghost; Susan Hill, The Woman in Black; too many more to list.

What about the short story? Look to Billie Sue Mosiman, with 150 short stories to her credit. Her “Quiet Room” is about a ruthless evil killer, written in “quiet horror” fashion. For collections, try authors Kaaron Warren’s Dead Sea Fruit, Carole Lanham’s The Whisper Jar, and Fran Friel’s Mama’s Boy and Other Dark Tales.

Men may continue to dominate horror’s haunted mountain, just as women continue to be fierce climbers with hawkish voices. But story is story; writers are writers. What does gender matter in art? In the words of Virginia Woolf: “It is fatal for anyone who writes to think of their sex. It is fatal to be a man or woman pure and simple; one must be woman-manly or man-womanly.” Oh wait, I forgot one more ghostly title for you: Virginia Woolf’s A Haunted House.

Bio:

Paula Cappa is a published short story author, novelist, and freelance copy editor. Her short fiction has appeared in SmokeLong Quarterly, Every Day Fiction, Fiction365, Twilight Times Ezine, and in anthologies Human Writes Literary Journal, and Mystery Time. Cappa’s writing career began as a freelance journalist for newspapers in New York and Connecticut. Her debut novel Night Sea Journey, A Tale of the Supernatural launched in 2012. The Dazzling Darkness, her second novel, won the Gothic Readers Book Club Choice Award for outstanding fiction. She writes a weekly fiction blog about classic short stories, Reading Fiction,Tales of Terror, on her Web site http://paulacappa.wordpress.com/

 

Guest Post by Colleen Wanglund: Does Misogyny Exist in Horror?

There is nothing new about sexism and misogyny in the geek community.

Some of the things women have experienced are daily things that don’t seem like they’d be a big deal on their own, but stack up over time (I’m not going to link to it, but just search “feminist gamer bingo” and you’ll see the kinds of comments many geek women hear). Some of them are more obvious incidents, especially at cons. Cosplayers (people who wear costumes to represent a particular fictional character) in particular often face harassment, but it’s not limited to them– con attendees, authors, and panelists have all experienced disheartening behaviors due to their gender. Author Ann Aguirre wrote about her own experiences at cons not that long ago, and caused enough of a flurry to qualify for an interview at Publishers Weekly (link here). There continues to be a belief that the way things are now– both the actual treatment of geek women and girls and the representation of women in the media they consume– is okay, or at least to be expected. It’s not, and it’s important to be having a conversation about it. (Here are a couple of links that have contributed to that conversation- this article from  author John Scalzi, this article from Dr. Nerdlove, and for a slightly different and more personal take, this article by Mercedes Yardley. And, of course this awesome video from the Doubleclicks, which drives the point home with clarity).

Mostly, though, discussions on the treatment of women geeks have been focused on science fiction, fantasy, comics, and gaming communities of various kinds, horror being the redheaded stepchild of genre fiction (although there is a fair amount of overlap).  I asked Colleen Wanglund, one of our reviewers who is very involved in the horror community and in Women in Horror Month (held every February) if she would share her thoughts on misogyny and sexism in horror, and here is what she had to say.

 

 

Does Misogyny Exist in Horror?

I’m a geek—and unashamedly so.  I’m also a woman, which to some seems to be a contradiction.  So it distresses me to read about other women’s bad experiences within the realm of geekdom.  While I have been to some big conventions—namely New York ComicCon, Chiller, and Horrorfind—I personally have only had good experiences.  I’ve also been to my local comic shop on many occasions and have never gotten weird looks or been made to feel uncomfortable.  My daughter Darlene (you know her as the artist who created Horatio P. Bunny)(editor’s note: Horatio P. Bunny is the mascot for MonsterLibrarian.com) is a cosplayer—that’s costume player for the uninitiated–and has been to many more conventions than I and she has been the victim of the sexism that has taken hold.  I was shocked to hear some of what she has told me recently, and quite frankly, it disturbs me….A LOT.

This started out as a piece on the horror world, but let’s face it, there is a lot of overlap between horror, sci-fi, and fantasy.  We see it in everything from comics, movies, anime, manga and literature to video games, toys, cosplay and role playing games.  What’s got me riled up is the fact that many so called “geeks”, regardless of genre and whether they are fans, writers or other participants think that women cannot have the same interests as deeply as the men.  There are plenty of stories of convention goers angrily confronting female cosplayers, thinking they are only out for attention.  They have questioned these women to determine if they have the appropriate knowledge to be a geek.  There are stories of sexual harassment and assault, as though men think they can treat these women any way they please.  Ironically, the men who attend the various genre conventions don’t seem to mind the Booth Babes—women hired to work the booths of companies specifically to attract the male convention goers.  Women aren’t the marketing targets, although they attend, too; or maybe  the businesses there think women are not worth the effort to attract toward a particular booth or product.

What is interesting is that for every story of a woman being harassed, or accused of sleeping with a publisher to get their book in print, there is a story of women being treated with respect, and welcomed into the community of their choosing.  I have spoken to a number of female horror authors who have said their experiences have been nothing but good when it comes to dealing with other male writers, editors, or publishers, both through long-distance business dealings and in person at conventions and other events.  Some have even told me that if anything, the only bad experiences they may have had have come from other women.

Even looking at movies, women are forever portrayed as the damsel in distress having to be saved from the likes of Jason Vorhees, Michael Myers, Leatherface and Freddy Krueger.  But not so fast.  There is also the phenomenon of the Final Girl, the girl left standing in the aftermath of a crazed psychopath on a killing spree.  The Final Girl is no helpless female. On the contrary, she has survived and (usually) been responsible for the demise of the psycho.  And of course there have been plenty of badass heroines, including Ripley (Alien), Sarah Connor (Terminator), Alice (Resident Evil), Laurie Strode (Halloween), Heather (I Spit on Your Grave), Kristy (Hellraiser), and most recently Katniss (The Hunger Games), among many, many others.

So does misogyny exist in horror?  Or sci-fi and fantasy, for that matter?  I think it depends on who you talk to and how their own experiences frame their opinion.  Is it outright hatred of women?  I can’t say for sure. For some, I think it’s just arrogance to think women can’t participate in geekdom.  For others, I think it’s fear—fear of losing what these male geeks and writers have thought of as their domain.  One thing I do know is that it seems to mirror society, in general.  Women are always getting the short end of the stick, no matter how successful they become.  We see it with women who work behind the scenes in the horror film industry, with the male to female ratio of published stories in horror, the number of publishing houses run by men versus women, and in the ratio of awards given out to women in all aspects of the horror industry. While on the one hand it’s a good thing to see horror film festivals and book publishers focusing on the women in the industry, I also think it’s sad that these steps must be taken to give hard working women the recognition they deserve.

Either way, women have to work harder than most men to be successful in horror, sci-fi, fantasy, or whatever it is they are pursuing.  This is the reason behind the annual Women in Horror Recognition Month.  Taking place every February, the brainchild of Hannah Neurotica aims to bring to light all of the women in the horror film industry, both in front of the camera and behind it.  My personal involvement came about because I wanted to ensure that women in the horror literary industry also received their due.  There is support for women, both from other women as well as men.  Not all men are clueless.  Most of the men I have dealt with as a reviewer and writer have been nothing but supportive and respectful.  However, not everyone is so inclined to give their fellow writers, directors, gamers or fans the respect they deserve….and this is not going to change overnight.  But I believe it is changing.  The Viscera Film Festival and Bleedfest showcase female moviemakers.  In the literary world, an annual award given for “outstanding achievement in the literature of psychological suspense, horror and the dark fantastic” is named for Shirley Jackson, female author of such notable works as the short story “The Lottery” and the novel The Haunting of Hill House. 

Have I answered the question “Does misogyny exist in horror?”  I think there is some measure of misogyny and sexism but I don’t think it is as bad as some may think.  Again, this is dependent upon the individual’s own experiences.  It’s the remnants of a patriarchal society that is still struggling with women’s equality.

 

Colleen Wanglund