Off the Deep End: Crossing the Line Between Horror and Fantasy
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Off the Deep End: Crossing the Line Between Horror and Fantasy


I must apologize for my absence. I’ve been slacking in my blogging and social media duties. I’ve been busy. I’ve been writing. And my writing has taken some strange turns. It’s exciting, but also very intimidating, as I swim further and further out into the sea of the fantastic, attempting to navigate the stormy waters of world building. I am writing a fantasy novel, without restraint, surreal and dark.


I think—some of you may find this strange; others, perhaps not so much—I have found comfort in the horror genre. In many ways, for the beginning writer, it is a safe place to start. While one discovers one’s place in the writing universe—one’s “voice” it is sometimes called—and what one wishes to write, it is a genre that allows a lot of freedom with character and a means to explore internal emotional turmoil and themes that are universal, within us all, and understandably poignant at even a young age.


As my writing develops, I’ve found myself drawn inexorably toward the fantastic. I’ve always been drawn to works that explore the imagination, from my early days with C.S. Lewis and Tolkien, to later with China Mieville and Clive Barker, amongst others (I read George R.R. Martin before it was cool ;)), and I knew my own attempt at a novel set in a world completely of my fabrication was inevitable.


But, I have to be careful. Writing horror is very different from writing fantasy. It is true, they often overlap (as my own work has done), but horror—good horror, I think—is about restraint and subtlety. Fantastic elements in horror are often called “supernatural”, and for good reason. They are unexplainable and contrary to the natural workings of reality as it is usually perceived, thus the uncanny is achieved, thus horror. 


Fantasy, in contrast, “goes off the deep end.” It no longer has use for the natural laws, other than as loose guidelines to be manipulated. It involves the writing of one’s own rules. It begs the imagination for possibilities, to reinvent not what is, but what could be. It’s a lot of work, and, as I’m finding, perhaps more difficult to write well than is horror.


I’m still in the early stages of the novel, so we’ll see how it goes, but I’d like to share a excerpt with you all soon, so be sure to check this space.
Oh, and don’t for a moment think of such things as swords and dungeons and wizards. And do NOT think I’d let myself become another Tolkien ripoff, or George R.R. Martin, or Robert Jordan, or anything like that. What I have so far, what I’ve been writing, looks to be a very different beast, a different experience, than anything else out there. And for my fans: don’t worry; my writing will always remain dark, violent, and disturbing. In fact, despite my claim to fantasy, my work may remain classified as horror, just like many of the works of such writers as Barker and King. ;)



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Published on April 15, 2014 13:40
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message 1: by Kimberly (new)

Kimberly I feel that the very concept of "fantasy" treads a fine line between what we construe as "horror".... Also, many so called "horror" writers are crossing that line more often lately. The "fantastic"--as something that we don't have a rational explanation for--often gets thrown into the "horror" category just for that reason.

At any rate, I think that the crossover can be done very successfully. :)


message 2: by Keith (new)

Keith Deininger No matter what, my passion is for the strange and the uncanny. I just like it when things get really strange. ;)


message 3: by Kimberly (new)

Kimberly Keith wrote: "No matter what, my passion is for the strange and the uncanny. I just like it when things get really strange. ;)"

No complaints here--I prefer a story that makes you THINK; it stays with you longer...


message 4: by Lee (new)

Lee Thompson Work it, Keith! I think a lot of amazing writers who are labeled Horror writers are really Dark Fantasist (Stephen King, Clive Barker, Peter Straub, etc.) Don't worry about labels at all, just write what you have to. Readers can tag it however they want.


message 5: by Keith (new)

Keith Deininger Hey, thanks, Lee! You can only write what you can write, right? Fuck labels. We have to go wherever our imaginations take us.


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