Creative Horror by Michael A. Arnzen 

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Live Instigation

Instigation-FINALCOVER-400hThought I’d toss up a quick reminder that I’ve been erratically posting Instigation prompts to twitter all month, which are feeding into the new Instigation Showcase page. I conceive of all this as being not only an extension of this department on the blog, but also the recently-released ebook. If you’re on twitter, just follow @MikeArnzen — if you’re not, you can always see what I’m posting to that nefarious site on the archive I keep called “The Nest” right here at gorelets.com/nest. Here’s a sampler of some recent favorites:

 

 

    “Construct a scenario involving a contemporary equivalent to firewalking on hot coals.”

“Pick an occupation (eg. banker, fireman, etc.). Your title is: ‘Bring me the Head of the [Occupation].’”

“Your character spots a broken scalpel blade, in the corner of library’s restroom floor.”

“The setting: a cannibal food truck.”

“Create a strange gathering of feathers.”

 

And sometimes I toss out some images, too, like this one, recently posted to my flickr gallery:

#Instigation prompt for writers - @alexandapple quote from @odysseyworkshop t-shirt

The dark side should breed and spread, don’t you think? If you come up with anything based on these and publish it (or post it online), I’ll happily add your name with a link back, to the Instigation Showcase!

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Instigation: Creative Prompts on the Dark Side – New E-book Now Available!

Cover for InstigationInstigation: Creative Prompts on the Dark Side by Michael Arnzen:

Instigation: Creative Prompts on the Dark Side is a treasury of twisted tips, strange scenarios and disturbing sparks to help ignite the fuel in your creative furnace. Its aim? To push you into the danger zone of your imagination, by thinking in unconventional ways and trying things you never thought — or dared — to try before in your writing, art, or dreams.

See the catalog page for more information.

DIRECT PURCHASE FROM MASTICATION for $3.99:




ALSO NOW AVAILABLE FROM: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | iTunes

Arnzen on iBookstore

NOTE: This book is currently only available in .mobi, .epub, and .pdf formats, which are readable in most ebook devices and computers. It will soon also be available directly from more ebook distributors like amazon and Barnes and Noble. A print edition is not currently available (though you can get a large sampler in the hardcover only edition of The Gorelets Omnibus published by Raw Dog Screaming Press).

NOTE 2: Backers of The Fridge of the Damned kickstarter project should have received an email with information on acquiring their complimentary copy. If not, let me know.

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Announcing the Instigation Showcase

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Announcing the Instigation Showcase!

From now on, anyone who publishes a response to a prompt or is inspired to write something specifically in response to Instigation: Creative Prompts on the Dark Side or the Instigation department on this weblog will be listed on the new Showcase page dedicated to helping broaden your audience.

Over the years, I’ve received numerous emails from writers who produced new work based on the prompts in The Goreletter, and I’m happy to have finally figured out a way to showcase your work. Share your links to work (whether on a blog or in a book) that has Instigation as its source, via e-mail or comments on the blog and you’ll be listed. That easy. And remember to check back from time to time to read the work of others… it’s bound to inspire you to pick up your demonic pen.

[NEWSFLASH: TONIGHT (3/15) is Instigation Eve! Help us get ready to launch the book this evening. Folks are sharing links to masticationpublications.com and tweeting their own bizarro prompts using the hashtag #Instigation.

Don’t forget: subscribers to the Mastication Publications newsletter will get a discount code to use when purchasing Instigation directly from this website!

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Sneak Cover Design of Instigation Posted

We’ve got a devilish new cover design in the works for my upcoming e-book, Instigation: Creative Prompts on the Dark Side. Visit the book’s catalog page to take a sneak peek at what’s in store!

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Twisted Prompts for Sicko Writers (31)

Begin with a Woman…

+ Begin with a woman…defiantly shaking a phantom (or prosthetic) arm at the heavens.
+ Begin with a woman…requesting plastic surgery to make her something LESS (beautiful, endowed, perfect, etc).
+ Begin with a woman…who reads more than she should into her ‘time of the month.’
+ Begin with a woman…discovering something alive in the meat drawer.
+ Begin with a woman…in love with a man BECAUSE he survived her murder attempt.
+ Begin with a woman…applying mascara to a corpse.
+ Begin with a woman…alienated by the newborn creature in her arms.
+ Begin with a woman…baking a dangerous cake.
+ Begin with a woman…and end with a man.

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Review the entire “Instigation” department for more prompts. You can share your writing here on The Goreletter by clicking on the ‘comment’ link.
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Instigation fans… stay tuned for the return of The Fridge of the Damned! And even more exciting news for writers in the year ahead. Don’t miss out! Subscribe to The Goreletter today.

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Every Horror Writer’s Nightmare

This image from Futurama (found on the wonderful TvTropes.com) cracks me up, but it also encapsulates every horror writer’s dilemma: escaping the conventions and the dominant trappings of the genre.

This is one of the reasons why I continue to publish the Instigation series of “dark prompts for sicko writers,” even if my tongue is sometimes in my cheek. But here’s a few for you now, inspired by this comic:

+ Imagine what lies beyond the side of the frame. What is chasing the creatures? Or where are the characters being chased to?
+ Take a page from King: Write about a writer haunted by his own creations.
+ Take any character from the Stephen King universe…and make it worse. Go where King wouldn’t go.
+ List as many iconic characters from your genre as you can come up with. Now mash them together and dream up a fresh reason for their outrage — the reason for their assembly.

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Twisted Prompts for Sicko Writers (30)

+ Treat an everyday object as a magic wand.
+ Discover a collection of ears.
+ Play a horrifying game of pinata.

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Review the entire “Instigation” department for more prompts. You can share your writing here on The Goreletter by clicking on the ‘comment’ link.

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Horror Poetry Writing Workshop in The Gorelets Omnibus

My fellow weird writers might want to take note of this.

One of the neat bonus features available only in the hardcover edition of The Gorelets Omnibus is a “horror poetry writing workshop” that includes a handful of essays I’ve written about the craft over the years (for places like Byline magazine and the Science Fiction Poetry Association’s Star*Line magazine, among others). The chapter titles are:

    “The Poetics of Horror”
    “The Element of Fear in Horror Poetry”
    “Horror Haiku”
    “The Dead Draft: When Poetry Fails”
    “New Media Horror: Six Lessons from an E-Poet”

Rounding out this virtual workshop in the book is a complete collection of Instigation prompts (aka “Twisted Prompts for Sicko Writers”) that have not only appeared on gorelets.com and in the Goreletter newsletter, but also from my former weekly column in Hellnotes newsletter. I think there are something in the order of 300 creative prompts, all counted…maybe more. Here’s an excerpt from the book that samples of just a few, which I recently shared on my page at scribd.com. :

Instigation: Twisted Writing Prompts – An excerpt from The Gorelets Omnibus

You can order the hardcover edition of The Gorelets Omnibus from amazon.com, or wherever books are sold, including directly from the publisher.

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Dark Promptings: Personal Horrors with Tim Waggoner

Order at Amazon.com!

“Dark Promptings” is a special series of guest-written creative writing prompts, aimed at sparking the imagination’s gasoline for writers from any genre…but with a dark or devious discoloration, just like the Instigation department at Gorelets.com. The guest contributors are folks who wrote articles appearing in my fat new non-fiction book for fiction writers of all kinds, Many Genres, One Craft: Lessons in Writing Popular Fiction, making a stop here at gorelets.com as part of their Virtual Book Tour across the web. (You can find my own VBT essays elsewhere).

Writers and creative people: drop on by our book’s meaty weblog to learn more about the book, or order Many Genres today.



Our next “Dark Promptings” come from writing teacher and reputable dark author, Tim Waggoner. If you haven’t read Tim’s surreal and bizarro brand of horror, you’ve been missing out on some of the most talented weirdness that’s out there.

I saved his generous prompts for last, as Halloween (and also Nanowrimo) has arrived. Tim’s prompts are those which remind us to “write what you know” and to draw the best ideas from your own fears. He describes these prompts this way:

“In order to write effective — and original — horror, you have to dig into your own psyche and find out what scares you. Worried that no one will be frightened by the same things you are? Don’t be. As Aristotle said, the only way to get to the universal is through the particular. By focusing on your own personal fears and giving them shivery life on the page, you’ll be connecting to your audience — guaranteed…If you want to write truly effective horror, don’t merely recycle the imaginings of others. Write the stories only you can tell.”

Follow along with these guided steps, weirdos…

1.
Begin with your childhood. Regardless of whether your wonder years were TV movie of the week fodder or (seemingly) uneventful, anyone who’s survived childhood has a wealth of story material waiting to be mined.What were you afraid of as a child? The dark; thunder and lightning; the barking German shepherd next door; Mommy and Daddy yelling at each other? Make a list of your childhood bogeymen, and write at least a paragraph about each item. Don’t think in terms of story, just write whatever comes to mind. Try to focus on your feelings and what sparked those feelings — remember, horror is an emotion.

2.
Next — and this might be difficult — make a list of any disturbing events in your childhood. Encounters with schoolyard bullies, severe illnesses, deaths of friends and family members. Again, write at least a paragraph on each item. Digging into your childhood traumas might not easy, might even be disturbing for you. But if you want to write horror — real horror, not Freddy vs. Jason stuff — then you need to have at least a nodding acquaintance with your dark side. Besides, writing is cheaper than therapy.

3.
Pay attention to the events in the news which upset and anger you. Clip newspaper and magazine articles and keep them in a folder. Don’t merely collect every article on murder you find. Look for stories which arouse an emotional reaction in you, stories which fascinate you.

4.
Another area you can explore for ideas is the realm of dreams. Every morning, as soon as you get up, record your dreams in a journal. A friend of mine in college had been keeping dream journals for years. When he first started, he only remembered having two or three dreams a night. But after a couple years of faithfully writing in his journal, he routinely recalled fifteen or sixteen. And while many of them weren’t more than snatches of everyday life replayed on the mind’s dream-screen, he always had at least a couple that were quite surreal and disturbing. Added up over the course of a year, that’s a lot of potential story ideas.

5.
Another technique (one I’ve stolen from Stephen King), is to take a look around you and let your imagination run paranoid. Choose a minor aspect of your life or an ordinary event and tell yourself that something is wrong with it. Seriously wrong.

6.
Lastly, ask yourself what’s most important, most dear to you. What do you treasure? Who do you love? Now ask yourself what if these things were threatened, removed, altered, turned against me? How would you feel? And most importantly, what would you do about it? Your answers to these questions will provide some of your best and most personal story ideas.





Tim Waggoner’s latest books include Ghost Trackers (written in collaboration with Jason Hawes and Grant Wilson of the Ghost Hunters television show) and the “Matt Richter” Nekropolis series put out by Angry Robot Books. He teaches writing at Sinclair Community College, as well as the Writing Popular Fiction at SHU. He also now keeps a blog on the craft worth revisiting regularly: Writing in the Dark.

Tim’s contribution to Many Genres, One Craft: Lessons in Writing Popular Fiction is called “Pick Up the Pace” and gives some great guided advice on building atmospheric and suspenseful prose style.



Read more “Dark Promptings”

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Dark Promptings: Love Wrestling with Matt Duvall

Order at Amazon.com!

“Dark Promptings” is a special series of guest-written creative writing prompts, aimed at sparking the imagination’s gasoline for writers from any genre…but with a dark or devious discoloration, just like the Instigation department at Gorelets.com. The guest contributors are folks who wrote articles appearing in my fat new non-fiction book for fiction writers of all kinds, Many Genres, One Craft: Lessons in Writing Popular Fiction, making a stop here at gorelets.com as part of their Virtual Book Tour across the web. (You can find my own VBT essays elsewhere).

Writers and creative people: drop on by our book’s meaty weblog to learn more about the book, or order Many Genres today.



Our next “Dark Promptings” are a batch of potential titles and/or themes from author Matt Duvall. Matt — a former wrestler — is around six feet tall, and weighs about 215 pounds; he likes to eat chicken wings, drink beer, and watch cage fighting… and he also holds an MFA, teaches English, and writes highly original women’s adventure fiction. Yes: women’s adventure fiction. Surprised? Don’t be. He’s good at it. And I bet he’s already got your attention pinned to the mat.

About these offbeat and funny prompts, he writes “Write a story to fit each of these titles or themes. The story can be any genre…but if it’s women’s adventure fiction, I get a cut.” Pick your favorite and see what it brings to the imagination…

  • The Day the Jell-O Wrestled Back
  • The Coach Who Loved Fast Women
  • My Ex Marks the Spot
  • The Snowboarder and the Beast
  • Chokehold on My Heart



Matt Duvall was a professional wrestler who appeared on national TV shows and was included in Pro Wrestling Illustrated magazine’s Top 500 wrestlers for 1996. He completed his MFA at Seton Hill University, which is also where he met his wife, Natalie. His short fiction has been published in a number of venues, including Chizine, The Ultimate Unknown, and Eye Contact. When he’s not teaching high school students, Matt practices Krav Maga, runs half marathons, and tries to avoid mowing the yard.

Matt’s contribution to Many Genres, One Craft: Lessons in Writing Popular Fiction is called “Powerman Writes Women’s Fiction: On Writing What You Know” and, drawing from experience, explains how writers can mine their own experience to flesh out even the most outlandish flights of fancy.



Read more “Dark Promptings”

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Dark Promptings: For the Bible Tells Me So with Lee Allen Howard

Order at Amazon.com!

“Dark Promptings” is a special series of guest-written creative writing prompts, aimed at sparking the imagination’s gasoline for writers from any genre…but with a dark or devious discoloration, just like the Instigation department at Gorelets.com. The guest contributors are folks who wrote articles appearing in my fat new non-fiction book for fiction writers of all kinds, Many Genres, One Craft: Lessons in Writing Popular Fiction, making a stop here at gorelets.com as part of their Virtual Book Tour across the web. (You can find my own VBT essays elsewhere).

Writers and creative people: drop on by our book’s meaty weblog to learn more about the book, or order Many Genres today.



Our next “Dark Promptings” come from author and editor Lee Allen Howard. Lee, who edited a great anthology of horror stories all based on the ten commandments for Dark Cloud Press (in a book called Thou Shalt Not…) has a background in religious studies and you can tell from his stories that he enjoys exploring the dark side of belief systems without ever flinching or holding back. So it’s no surprise that his prompts draw inspiration from the Bible (specifically, the New International Version) in an unxpected way. He writes: “When I need dark promptings, I turn to an ancient book. What do these passages inspire you to write about?”

Just Because You’re Paranoid Doesn’t Mean They’re Not Out to Get You…
Because of all my enemies, I am the utter contempt of my neighbors
and an object of dread to my closest friends—those who see me on
the street flee from me. I am forgotten as though I were dead; I
have become like broken pottery. For I hear many whispering,
“Terror on every side!” They conspire against me and plot to take
my life. (Ps 31:11-13)

I’m Hungry and I’m Not Sharing!
The most gentle and sensitive woman among you—so sensitive and
gentle that she would not venture to touch the ground with the sole
of her foot—will begrudge the husband she loves and her own son or
daughter the afterbirth from her womb and the children she bears.
For in her dire need she intends to eat them secretly because of the
suffering your enemy will inflict on you during the siege of your cities.
(Deut. 28:56-57)

Lefty Infiltrates and Assassinates an Enemy Fat Cat
Ehud then approached him while he was sitting alone in the upper
room of his palace and said, “I have a message from God for you.”
As the king rose from his seat, Ehud reached with his left hand, drew
the sword from his right thigh and plunged it into the king’s belly.
Even the handle sank in after the blade, and his bowels discharged.
Ehud did not pull the sword out, and the fat closed in over it.
Then Ehud went out to the porch; he shut the doors of the upper
room behind him and locked them. (Judges 3:20-23)

What If They Were Let Out on Parole?
And the angels who did not keep their positions of authority but
abandoned their proper dwelling—these he has kept in darkness,
bound with everlasting chains for judgment on the great Day.
(Jude 6)

Beastly Sores: Don’t Scratch Them, They’ll Get Infected!
The first angel went and poured out his bowl on the land, and ugly,
festering sores broke out on the people who had the mark of the
beast and worshiped its image. (Rev. 16:2)


Lee Allen Howard

Lee Allen Howard has been a professional writer since 1985. He writes horror, erotic horror, dark fantasy, and supernatural crime. His publication credits include Cemetery Sonata anthology, Thou Shalt Not... anthology (Dark Cloud Press), The Sixth Seed, Severed Relations, and Stray (available on Amazon). He is currently working on his fourth novel. Lee blogs about writing and editing on his writer’s site: http://leeallenhoward.com.

Lee’s contribution to Many Genres, One Craft: Lessons in Writing Popular Fiction is called “Your Very First Editor” and is chock full of great self-editing advice.



Read more “Dark Promptings”

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Dark Promptings: Don’t Mind the Knife with Natalie Duvall

Order at Amazon.com!

“Dark Promptings” is a special series of guest-written creative writing prompts, aimed at sparking the imagination’s gasoline for writers from any genre…but with a dark or devious discoloration, just like the Instigation department at Gorelets.com. The guest contributors are folks who wrote articles appearing in my fat new non-fiction book for fiction writers of all kinds, Many Genres, One Craft: Lessons in Writing Popular Fiction, making a stop here at gorelets.com as part of their Virtual Book Tour across the web. (You can find my own VBT essays elsewhere).

Writers and creative people: drop on by our book’s meaty weblog to learn more about the book, or order Many Genres today.



Our next “Dark Promptings” come from Regency romance writer, teacher, and columnist Natalie Duvall. Her article in Many Genres offers wonderful guidance in crafting sharp dialogue, so she brings together both her love of romance and her dark wit today to challenge you: “Can you use one or more of these snippets of romantic dialogue in a short story?”

1.)
“I can’t love you when the beast is in you!”


2.)
“Your vulture eye seems to see right into the core of me.”


3.)
“Don’t mind the knife.”


4.)
“A sloe gin fizz for me and necrosis on the rocks for the lady.”


5.)
“I can’t see you tonight. I have to stay home and wash my puppet’s hair.”


Natalie Duvall

Natalie Duvall lives in a big old house in a charming little town in Central PA. When not writing Regency-set historical romances, she enjoys walking as much as possible, unless it’s cold out. She is married with cats (three of them — Albert, Chun Lee and Eliot). Her real job involves waking up way too early to teach 11th graders English. During the evenings, she is a columnist and features writer for Fine Living Lancaster. In what free time is left, she trains in Krav Maga and is a lackadaisical triathlete. She blogs at natalieduvall.com

Natalie’s essay in Many Genres, One Craft: Lessons in Writing Popular Fiction is called “Talking About Dialogue”.



Read more “Dark Promptings”

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