Monday, May 16, 2005

Horror-copia

Whoa. If you were here from the beginning, or at least read from the beginning, you know that one of the reasons I started Little Terrors was that I couldn't find any other horror blogs. Well, thanks to my work with Dark, But Shining, I'm now overwhelmed with them.

In just the last few days, I've found the following horror blogs:

The Mystery of the Haunted Vampire
M Valdemar
The Groovy Age of Dracula
Laylasweetie
Classic-Horror.com's Blog of the Damned

It's so much stuff that I haven't even been able to sort through it all, so I have no idea what to recommend. Regardless, here's that horror blogosphere I've been looking for! Huzzah!

More as I know it.

5 Comments:

Blogger HP said...

Hey, Sam. Glad to meet you.

I think two things are happening: 1) A number of far-flung bloggers are finding each other, and 2) more folks with an interest in horror are encouraged to blog about it.

Blogospheres are made, not born. The more horror blogs there are, the more horror bloggers there will be. I want to create a horror blogosphere because I think that what "they" are selling is not necessarily what "we" are buying.

My hope is that the horror blogosphere will influence the people distributing and marketing horror, and get them to move past the chainsaw-and-hockey-mask/Scandinavian-death-metal/Mall-goth esthetic that seems to dominate the marketing of horror.

4:12 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

This post has been removed by a blog administrator.

10:52 PM  
Blogger The Gravester said...

Hi, I notice you're looking for Horror blogs.. I've started a feeble attempt at one, just the other day, called 'GravesBlog UK' at:
http://journals.aol.co.uk/talbrobb/ScaredtoDeathBlogUK/
I'd be honoured if you stopped by to check it out.

5:37 PM  
Blogger deminizer said...

We have started a horror/dark fiction literary mag, containing both established writers (Dean M. Drinkel/Simon Grady) as well as new. Includes games, twisted humor, free to all. Submissions accepted if you have a short story or poem...www.99burning.com...

7:00 AM  
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Monday, April 25, 2005

What the - ?

OK, I don't do the search term post very often, but seriously I get some weird stuff. And the blog's not that weird, right? Plus, I wanted to share.

Anyway, on with the strangeness:

slash story movie the watcher
Is that a slash story, like Rutger Hauer having sex with another man in the movie, or a slasher story? That might lead to a surprised searcher.

lactation manga
Stop searching for this!

sermons history of a genre
You're definintely at the wrong blog.

spirals child rainbow disturbing drawing
It's 33% of the plot of most any mainstream horror movie!

whitechapel station is dangerous for asian
Good to know... I guess....

robs necrophilia fantasy
Tell us more, Rob.

large forgein object sex videos
Uh ...

short story two teenagers asleep
Sounds thrilling.

quick summary of angles ashes
Not only the wrong blog, but the wrong book.

kinky pooping
I see you there in The Netherlands - weirdo!

1 Comments:

Blogger Novice said...

I apologize for my laughter wafting across the office and disturbing you, if it is.

It's really your fault for being so funny, Sammit.

1:14 PM  

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Sunday, April 24, 2005

Dark, But Shining

I think I may have neglected to mention this, but I'm a contributor to a new, exciting group blog on horror, fantasy, and science fiction: Dark, But Shining.

Dark, But Shining is made up of Kevin Melrose, formerly of Thought Balloons, Rick Geerling, ex of Eat More People, and me.

Kevin and Rick have been doing some great stuff there and I hope to make some valuable contributions.

I'll still be posting here, too, but remember, from now on, along with being a Little Terror, I'll also be Dark, But Shining.

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Saturday, April 16, 2005

Comic Review: Fragile

Writer | Artist: Stefano Raffaele
Publisher: DC/Humanoids


I have been sold a bill of goods. You see, two or three months ago I pre-ordered one of the European horror comics originally published by Humanoids, but being marketed to the U.S. by D.C.: Fragile.

I bought it because I was promised a zombie love story. Or a story that shows that, as the large text on the front of the book trumpets, “Love Never Dies.”

It turns out, though, that in the case of Stefano Raffaele’s Fragile, love never even starts. ‘Cause if that comic is really a zombie romance comic, I’d be confused to see what Raffaele thinks of as a straight zombie comic.

OK, full disclosure time as usual: if you’ve been here from the early days, you know I don’t cotton much to zombie narratives (all nice, and complete true, things said about Sean Collins’ The Outbreak notwithstanding). I just don’t find them interesting or scary or anything other than formulaic and tired.

But! A zombie romance comic, I thought to myself, that sounds interesting. That sounds like a chance to bring a new element to the standard zombie story of a virus/plague, its incredibly fast metastasis, the collapse of civilization as we know it, etc. etc. This could be really new and really challenging, I thought.

Uh, no. Nothing of the sort.

Fragile is pretty much just a standard zombie story - except there’s a cure this time, oh, and a pretty, one-armed zombie supermodel.

The funny thing about this “zombie romance” is there’s no romance at all. Oh sure, the main character boy, whatever his name is (it’s escaped me already and I only finished the comic last night), and the main character supermodel girl keep telling us that they’re in love, but other than some moping about and the making of some google-y eyes, there’s surely no demonstration of love on the page.

To make matters worse, they seem to fall in love during the transition between two scenes.

There’s really not too much more to say about Fragile. The art is very, very nice and the story is textbook zombie/bog-standard adventure tale, and totally fails to deliver on the promise of there being an actual love story, rather than characters just taking about love. Even the comic’s interesting aspects - the transsexual character with the crush on the main character - get completely ignored in favor of things shooting each other and stuff eating other stuff’s brains.

If I sound cavalier, it’s because I feel cheated by this book. Maybe I ought to feel cheated by DC’s advertising department. I don’t know. But what I wanted was something that pushed the zombie story in a new direction (and does that ever happen? Is there ever more than one zombie story? Check out Dark, But Shining this week for further thoughts on this question) and all I got was more of the same. And when it comes to zombies - which have had more of a boom in recent years than anything other than perhaps Asian horror - do we honestly need any more of the same?

Buy Fragile at Amazon.com

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Friday, April 08, 2005

Flogging Myself

In the commercial sense, that is.

If you're not already reading the English language's best horror magazine, Rue Morgue, you really ought to be.

This is as good a month as any to start, especially since I have a short article in it. If you pick up this issue of RM, the one with the Amityville Horror cover, you'll find my review of Cube: Zero.

You can find Rue Morgue at better bookstores and newsstands, and Borders and Barnes and Noble, too.

Oh, and I'll be in RM next month, too! More on that as it happens.

1 Comments:

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