Horror Aficionados discussion

This topic is about
The Devil's Mistress
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April 2021 Group Read with Guest Author, David Barclay
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David, can you tell us a little on what your inspiration was and how this story came to fruition?

After finishing it I got the urge to re-watch The Witch (aka The Vvitch, 2015). @David, what are some of your witchy influences? Any movies, tv shows, or video games that inspired you?

From there, it was mostly about figuring out the details. Where it was set, who the major characters were, and some of the nuances of the relationships. I settled on the early eighteenth century, at the tail end of the witch trial madness, and a small fictional town in the Colonial South. The hardest part was figuring out the cadence of the language, both in the narrative and the dialogue. Once I got those things ironed out, the story was written pretty quickly.
As for witchy influences... The Witch was definitely an important one. I tend to love those mood-heavy character-driven horror films, especially if they're a bit ambiguous or metaphorical. There are a few others that I looked at for tone. Black Death and Name of the Rose come to mind.
For books, the biggest touchstone was Robert McCammon's Matthew Corbett series. Those books are set a few years earlier and lean a little more into historical fiction, but they're just fantastic. I love pretty much everything he writes. For other recent historical horror, I'd cite Clay Chapman's The Remaking and John Langan's The Fisherman. The Devil's Mistress is a bit different, of course, but I remember they were fresh in my mind as I was writing.

Another question, did you find it easier to harder to write horror in a historical setting? I know a lot research goes into historical fiction, but did the setting also help you in building the tension and crafting the story?

David, you mentioned McCammon. Was he an early influence for you growing up? Which other authors shaped you as a writer?

These days, I read a lot of horror but occasionally branch out into traditional thrillers, sci-fi, and fantasy. I also have a particular love of contemporary Southern Gothic. Authors like David Joy, Joe Lansdale, and Donald Ray Pollock have been some influences of late, in tone and writing style, if not content.




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