Tips for Writing Horror Fiction

By Robert Gannon, published Oct 17, 2007
Published Content: 63  Total Views: 15,257  Favorited By: 0 CPs
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Writing horror fiction can be one of the most challenging things anyone can ever try. Here are some tips on how to approach the genre in an accessible and effective way.

No matter what, make sure the writing is solid. Many people already believe horror is an inferior style and will look for any excuse to say the story isn't good. Make sure the story is free of any grammatical, spelling, punctuation, or syntax errors that could take a reader out of the moment.

You need strong, identifiable characters, especially for horror. If the reader doesn't care about your characters, they won't become invested in the story. If they don't become invested in the story, they won't be scared by the story. If the reader isn't scared, you're not doing your job.

Now, defining scared - that's a challenge in and of itself. One of my favorite recent horror short stories is Being Right by Michael Marshall Smith (reprinted in the recent Summer Chills anthology edited by Stephen Jones). If you skim through the story, there are certain elements that seem pretty standard for horror: a mysterious tome, a rainy day, and an ominous voice. But those elements aren't particularly scary in the context of the story. The familiarity with the character's problem - he believes he is always right, no matter what his wife says - and how he goes about attempting to solve it is what creates the sense of unease. Dread, more than straight-forward fear, drives the story and pushes it firmly into horror.

What is scary is very subjective, so it's best to write something that scares you.

Try writing about an actual event that scared you in your life. My first horror story I ever felt comfortable sharing (long since lost, of course), involved a string of events that I'm still convinced were caused by a ghost in my house. The genuine nature of the story to me allowed me to effectively tell it to other people. Since I thought it was real, I wrote it like it was real, and that is what scared people.

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