Chevy Rendell
asked
David Wong:
Your blog posts often caution against essentialism (for example, the idea that all of the people who voted for Trump are hate-mongers). In John Dies at the End (a deliciously ambiguous title) the reader's assumptions are untethered (how reliable, for instance, is the narrator?); resolution is subsumed by acceptance that things (people/events) defy essential categories. To what extent, if any, was this deliberate?
David Wong
Well horror and comedy both work from a number of different angles, sometime its holding up a thing or person who is a little outside the norm and making them out to be either ridiculous or terrifying, sometimes it's doing the same with those in power (either mocking them or revealing them to be monsters, depending on the genre). With my writing the idea is that it's kind of from a different level where it's playing with what the reader has come to expect from comedy and horror both. So the thing you expect them to be afraid of isn't a threat, the thing you don't expect to be a threat turns out to be terrifying, and the moments you'd never expect to be funny are hilarious. That's the idea, anyway.
In both genres you're always playing with people's expectations, but in my case the idea is that you have certain expectations even if you're coming in expecting horror and comedy, and we're going to try to subvert those, too, so then that (in theory) will make it both scarier and funnier. Even if you're expecting the unexpected, it's going to go to a place you wouldn't have anticipated and aren't completely comfortable with.
In both genres you're always playing with people's expectations, but in my case the idea is that you have certain expectations even if you're coming in expecting horror and comedy, and we're going to try to subvert those, too, so then that (in theory) will make it both scarier and funnier. Even if you're expecting the unexpected, it's going to go to a place you wouldn't have anticipated and aren't completely comfortable with.
More Answered Questions
zoggian
asked
David Wong:
I just finished "Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits", and I was wondering if at some point in the outline/draft process, Andre and Molech were supposed to be related in some way? I had that idea stuck in my head because both of them use the word "daddy" to describe fathers (Andre for Zoey's, Molech for his). Was their use of "daddy" an intentional red herring or just coincidence? The book was great, by the way.
David Wong
5,729 followers
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