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Women in Horror Fiction: Karen H. Koehler

Planet of Dinosaurs, The Complete Collection (Includes Planet of Dinosaurs, Sea of Serpents, & Valley of Dragons)Karen H. Koehler is a versatile writer who has written everything from kaiju novels to paranormal-tinged steampunk and noir. She is the author of  the stand alone novels Scarabus (KHP 2002), Raiju: The Kaiju Hunter  (K.H. Koehler Books 2010), Black Jack Derringer: The Complete Collection (K.H. Koehler Books 2011),  and Tales for 3 o”Clock in the Morning (K.H. Koehler Books 2012). She has also written several series, including    The Blackburn and Scarletti Mysteries and  the Slayer trilogy (both from KHP) , the Sasha Strange Chronicles, the Horrorotica Collection, the Nick Englebrecht books, and the Mrs. McGillicuddy Mysteries (all from K.H. Koehler Books), and the Anti-Heroes serial, written with Louise Bohmer (Anti-Heroes Press, 2013) She is the owner of K.H. Koehler Books. Her short work has appeared in the Bram-Stoker winning anthology Demons, edited by John Skipp, among other places.

 

1.) Can you give our readers a brief introduction?

 

I started writing books going all the way back to second grade, when I wrote, drew and stapled together a dinosaur book (rather unexpectedly, I might add) for my grade-school teacher. By the time I reached high school, I was regularly writing creepy little gothic, horror and science fiction stories all over the place. They were garbage, of course, but they lead me to reading Stephan King, Anne Rice, Ray Bradbury, Agatha Christie, and countless other authors in a huge array of genres. Wonderful brain food for a young girl with a slightly spooky, overactive imagination! Now I attempt to emulate those authors with my own unique twist on the genres. It seemed a natural progression.

 

2.) Why do you write horror?  What draws you to the genre?

 

 
I have a lot of anger management issues, admittedly, and, yes, typing up carnal destruction does help feel the mental alligators. But, essentially, I write it because I believe horror is truly the most psychological of all genres. It’s the genre that dives deepest into the human psyche, tearing loose all the most primal concerns of the human race and putting them on morbid display: loneliness, fear, death, change. I guess I enjoy trying to figure out what makes humans tick.
 
3.) Can you describe your writing style or the tone you prefer to set  for your stories?

 

I’m a fairly eclectic writer, and I’ve been known to change voice and style frequently, depending on the sub-genre of the project or the particular needs of the story. In fact, some readers have trouble recognizing that I’ve written certain books at all, especially my pulp series like The Scorpion or Nick Englebrecht because those books are written in a decided “male” voice, you might say. But overall, when in “horror mode”–as opposed to, say, “pulp mode,” “steampunk mode”, or “mystery mode”–I usually try to convey feelings of isolation and oppression in my work. I’m interested in the inner workings of the damaged loner, the anti-hero, the freak, the castoff from society, the villain. I have to say I love the jaded, reluctant, sometimes even misanthropic voice of the Byronic Hero.

 
4.) Who are some of your influences?  Are there any women authors who  have particularly inspired you to write?

 

I’ve loved many authors over the years (from afar!). Probably the most influential are Poppy Z. Brite, Agatha Christie, Arthur Conan Doyle, Edgar Allen Poe, and many of the pulp writers like Walter B. Gibson and Norvell. W. Page. More recently, I’ve come to love the ultra-clean, “power-ballad” styles of authors like Louise Bohmer and Christa Faust. They’re like a modern, more sadistic version, of Ernest Hemingway. I secretly owe them much as they have helped clean up my, at times, purplish–or, at least, mauve–prose.

 

5.) What authors do you like to read?  Any recommendations?

 

See above! You cannot go wrong with any of them.

 

6.) Where can readers find your work?
 
My ebooks are available from all the usual suspects, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Nook and Smashwords. Recently, I started offering them at All Romance/Omnilit as well–a wonderful and often-overlooked resource for selling your work, I find.

 

7.) Is there anything else you’d like to share with librarians or readers?

 

Only that I appreciate all my fans’ support and that their feedback is always vitally important to me. Reviews are always welcomed and I love listening to my readers’ opinions. It helps me shape my future works.

 

Want to learn more? Visit Karen Koehler’s blog— it has links to all of her books at a variety of online bookstores.

Monster Movie Month: Guest Post by K.H. Koehler- Godzilla On My Mind

How can you possibly have Monster Movie Month without Godzilla? While technically most of the Godzilla and other giant monster movies of Japanese cinema (referred to as kaiju) aren’t horror movies, you can’t deny that there are some truly creative approaches to monster-making in the genre. K.H. Koehler, a self-confessed kaijuholic and author of many books, including her own ongoing kaiju series, The Kaiju Hunter, has taken some time to share her Godzilla obsession and discuss Godzilla fiction.

For more Godzilla goodness, check out our Monster Movie Month page here.

 

Godzilla On My Mind

By K.H. Koehler


So with Toho beating the drums about a new, upcoming Godzilla movie, I can’t help but look back at my lifetime obsession with the big grey guy. Yes, I said grey, because, let’s be frank, G-man is grey, not green, and calling him green risks you receiving a tongue-lashing from the fans.

 

I remember when the first big Godzilla revolution hit our shores, and the waves it made. This was back in the day of the ill-fated Tristar Godzilla, known surreptitiously among the G-fans as “GINO”–Godzilla in Name Only. The movie was something of a legendary kaiju-fail, but its presence did get Godzilla on the fiction shelves, however briefly. Though aimed toward young adults, these books caused adult fans to crowd the fiction shelves in Wal-marts all across the country–at least, in a time when readers of any type crowded shelves. Below, I’ll talk a little bit about the books.

 

Godzilla by Kazuhisa Iwata and Mike Richardson is something of an introductory guide for Godzilla virgins into the wild and wacky world of kaijudom. It chronicles the “return of Godzilla” and reads a bit like a literary version of the film Godzilla 1985, only with teens. It’s a good enough book, though it treads no real new ground.

 

Godzilla 2000 by Marc Cerasini is a bit more fun and chronicles a secret government experiment intent on training teens to defeat monsters using super hi-tech (for their time) weapons and vehicles. I highly recommend it for action aficionados.

 

Next we have Godzilla at World’s End by Marc Cerasini and Godzilla Vs. the Space Monster by Scott Ciencin, which came out pretty much simultaneously and calls back to the old Showa (1960’s and 1970’s) series of “big battle” Godzilla, whereby Godzilla goes up against some very familiar (and popular) foes like Biollante, King Ghidorah and others.

 

Finally, we have Godzilla Vs. the Robot Monsters by Marc Cerasini which sort of rounds out the whole collection by calling back to one of Godzilla’s greatest and most dangerous foes, Mecha-Godzilla.

 

There are many other books, of course, both on the history of kaiju as well as fiction books for all different kinds of readerships, but if you want a solid place to start, and you can find them (I would check Ebay and set Google alerts to the book, if you’re interested) I suggest starting with the above books. And yes, I own them all. Forever and ever and ever. 😉

 

With the newly revised interest in Godzilla, we can only hope that a new collection of kaiju books will hit the shelves–or Kindle readers, be that as it may. We need more Godzilla weighing the shelves, and let’s be frank, who wouldn’t want Godzilla on their e-book reading device these days?

 

–K. H. Koehler

Free Halloween Reads Online

Need a quick Halloween read? Here’s a list of free reads you can find online, compiled by Michele Lee.  These have not been reviewed at MonsterLibrarian.com, so proceed at your own risk. But since the Wall Street Journal informed me today that horror lovers live for risk, I know you’ll want to at least try one out. The Journal mentioned the thrill day traders get out of playing the market in almost the same sentence… Believe me, you’re better off getting your kicks from reading free Halloween stories online. Enjoy!

Web-hosted Titles

″The Inn Keeper’s Widow″ by K. H. Koehler

″Saving Up″ by R. Thomas Riley

″Do Better″ by R.J. Sullivan

The Sepulchral Library (a short fiction blog)

″As the Crow Flies″ by Kevin Lucia

″October Blizzard″ by Joel Arnold

″The Sliding″ by Kevin Lucia (web-hosted graphic novel)

Ebooks- available for download

Fright Files by Peter Swift (available October 21st)

″The Disembodied″ by John Grover

The Turtle Boy by Kealan Patrick Burke

E-zines

Strange, Weird and Wonderful, Fall 2011

YA

The Count’s Halloween by Rusty Fischer (long poem ebook)-

The Werewolf’s Halloween Costume by Rusty Fischer (short story ebook)-

Zombies Don’t Trick or Treat by Rusty Fischer (long poem ebook)-

Children’s

On Halloween: A Choose-Your-Own-Path Book by Michele Lee & Mini Lee (ebook short story)-