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    10 - Colin Dickey and the Obligatory Halloween Special AKA Why We Believe in Monsters

    en-usOctober 31, 2020
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    About this Episode

    It’s Halloween and in lieu of any trick and/or treating this plague year, I offer you a conversation with Colin Dickey, mystery-maestro and curator of the creepy. Colin is the author of Ghostland: An American History in Haunted Places (2016) and The Unidentified: Mythical Monsters, Alien Encounters and our Obsession with the Unexplained – books that plumb the depths of the human mind and our fixation on the creepy things at the margins of the known world.

    In this wide-ranging discussion, we touch upon the remnants of lost civilisations, cryptozoology and the link between wonder, fear and the conspiracy theory. I also offer my favourite (and fool proof) theory as to why all photos of Bigfoot are blurry.

    I hope you all have the best Halloween possible in current circumstances. It’s been great creating this podcast so far and, today, on a horror-fan’s favourite holiday, I hope you are all well and enjoyably scared. 

    Enjoy!

    Come talk books with us on Twitter @talkscaredpod or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com.

    Thanks to Terry Smith Audio for sound editing.

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    Recent Episodes from Talking Scared

    183 – Gwendolyn Kiste & Working Through Your Ghosts

    183 – Gwendolyn Kiste & Working Through Your Ghosts

    Time to get liminal and haunted. 

     

    Gwendolyn Kiste comes back to Talking Scared for another high-concept twist on the Gothic. In The Haunting of Velkwood, and entire street turns ghostly overnight. Yeah, I can’t explain that any more clearly, we’ll leave it to Gwendolyn.

     

    Despite this being a book centered on trauma and angst, we do a whole lot of laughing. Amongst the chuckles we also sneak in conversation about the many meanings of the word haunted, child-free horror fiction televisual references, and just what makes the American suburbs so damn creepy!

     

    Enjoy!

     

    The Haunting of Velkwood was published on March 5th by Saga Press

     

    Other books mentioned:

     

    • Reluctant Immortals (2022), by Gwendolyn Kiste
    • Suburbia (1973), by Bill Owens
    • Twilight: Photographs (2002), by Gregory Crewdson
    • The Daughters of Block Island (2023), by Christa Carmen

     

    Support Talking Scared on Patreon

     

    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

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    182 – Tim Lebbon & Running Towards What Scares You

    182 – Tim Lebbon & Running Towards What Scares You

    Sometimes you meet someone who just gets you.

     

    Like Tim Lebbon. A man who writes riotously good adventure-horror novels, and also likes running outrageous distances up big hills. What a pleasure it was to speak to him.

     

    The main topic of conversation is his new novel eco-horror novel, Among the Living. A story of ancient buried history and ‘intelligent’ infection, it blends the paranoia of The Thing with the ragtag group heroism and intensity of Aliens. In short, it’s good!

     

    Tim and I talk about eco-horror, about the biological menaces facing mankind in the future, we discuss how writing action helps with writing character, and I tell him why this book freaked me out so much.

     

    Oh, and we do spend some time talking about running up big hills. But we try and keep it relevant to the horror and the writing… Give me a break, how often do I meet a soul-brother like this?

     

    Enjoy!

     

    Among the Living was published on February 6th by Titan Books

     

    Other books mentioned:

     

    • Eden (2020), by Tim Lebbon
    • The Last Storm (2022), by Tim Lebbon
    • The Hunt (2015), by Tim Lebbon
    • Come Closer (2003), by Sara Gran
    • The Bang Bang Sisters (2024), by Rio Yoeurs 

     

    Support Talking Scared on Patreon

     

    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

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    181 – Haunting Hill House, with Catriona Ward, Johnny Compton & Paul Tremblay

    181 – Haunting Hill House, with Catriona Ward, Johnny Compton & Paul Tremblay

    Back from a too-short break, but ready to delve into the greatest haunted house of them all! Shirley Jackson’s Hill House. The place where the scary things walk alone.

     

    Thankfully, I am not alone. I’m joined by my own group of creepy ghost-hunters: Paul Tremblay (A Head Full of Ghosts, Cabin at the End of the World), Johnny Compton (The Spite House) and Catriona Ward (Last House on Needless Street, Looking Glass Sound). I can think of no better collective to explore the corridors of this book and house.

     

    We get INTO it. The crafted magic of that infamous opening paragraph, the long legacy of creepy houses in American fiction, the choice between the haunted void and hideous, mundane reality. Plus, a raft of film recommendations, and a few brief forays into our favourite real haunted places.

     

    This one was necessary. Hope you enjoy it.

     

    Other books mentioned:

     

    House of Leaves (2000), by Mark Z. Danielewski

    Carrie (1974), by Stephen King

    ‘Salem’s Lot (1975), by Stephen King

    The Shining (1977),  by Stephen King

    The Spite House (2023), by Johnny Compton

    The Art of Fiction: Notes on Craft for Young Writers (1983), by John Gardner

    The Letters of Shirley Jackson (2021), edited by Laurence Jackson Hyman

    When Things Get Dark: Stories Inspired by Shirley Jackson (2021), ed. by Ellen Datlow

    “Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad” (1904), by M.R. James

     

    Support Talking Scared on Patreon

     

    Visit the Talking Scared site

     

    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

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    180 – Chuck Palahniuk & What Kind of Sex Do You Want?

    180 – Chuck Palahniuk & What Kind of Sex Do You Want?

    Yes I put sex in the title to make you download it. Did it work?

     

    It shouldn’t be necessary, ‘cos this week’s guest is an absolute literary icon. Chuck Palahniuk, author of Fight Club, Haunted, Lullaby, Choke, and last year’s Not Forever, But For Now – a writer who helped shape the nihilism and extremity of 90s and noughties fiction. The man who makes people faint with his short stories. 

     

    He’s here, talking to us!

     

    In this conversation Chuck and I roam all over the blasted map of his fiction. We talk about transgression and provocation, about extremity in life and story, about bad reviews, toxic interviews and toxic masculinity. And yes, we talk about “Guts.”

     

    This was a privilege. I hope you are shocked and appalled.

     

    Enjoy!

     

    Other books mentioned:

     

    • Fight Club (1996) by Chuck Palahniuk
    • Haunted (2005), by Chuck Palahniuk
    • Lullaby (2002), by Chuck Palahniuk
    • Diary (2003), by Chuck Palahniuk
    • Rant: The Oral Biography of Buster Casey (2005), by Chuck Palahniuk
    • Adjustment Day (2018), by Chuck Palahniuk
    • Cold Comfort Farm (1932), by Stella Gibbons
    • Rosemary’s Baby (1967), by Ira Levin
    • “The Lottery” (1948), by Shirley Jackson
    • Interview with the Vampire (1976), by Anne Rice
    • Geek Love (1989), by Katherine Dunn
    • Most Delicious Poison: From Spice to Vices – The Story of Nature’s Toxins (2023), by Noah Whiteman
    • Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke (2021), by Eric LaRocca

     

    Support Talking Scared on Patreon

     

    Visit the Talking Scared site

     

    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

    Support the show

    179 – Ally Wilkes & The Ethics of Eating Your Friends

    179 – Ally Wilkes & The Ethics of Eating Your Friends

    Are you hungry? 

     

    If so we have a chewy, salty, deeply flavoured feast for you this week. Ally Wilkes returns to Talking Scared to discuss the icebound horrors of her new novel, Where the Dead Wait. It’s a tale of Arctic exploration gone very wrong, complete with haunting, human suffering and the morbid fascination of cannibalism!

     

    Don’t pretend that hasn’t whet your appetite.

     

    Ally and I get into the raw details of consuming human meat, we talk about queerness in historical horror fiction, we discuss the nature of haunting and how a historical horror novel can have links to a sci-fi horror classic, and we talk reminisce about the time Ally nearly died on a Himalaya in an appalling coat.

     

    Jolly good fun wot wot!

     

    Enjoy!

     

    Other books mentioned:

     

    All the White Spaces (2022), by Ally Wilke 

    The Shining (1977), by Stephen King

    What Cares the Sea (1960), by Kenneth Cooke

    The Secret Sharer (1910), by Joseph Conrad

    Frankenstein (1818), by Mary Shelley

    Ice Blink: The Tragic Fate of Sir John Franklin's Lost Polar Expedition (2000), by Scott Cookman

    Sundial (2022), by Catriona Ward

    Dead Silence (2022), by S.A. Barnes

    Ghost Station (2024), by S.A. Barnes

    Indianapolis: The True Story of the Greatest Naval Disaster in US History (2018), by Lynn Vincent and Sarah Vladic

     

    Support Talking Scared on Patreon

     

    Visit the Talking Scared site

     

    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

    Support the show

    178 – Jenny Kiefer & A Solid Foothold in Horror

    178 – Jenny Kiefer & A Solid Foothold in Horror

    The first new book coverage of 2024 – and it starts us off on suitably horrific footing.

     

    Jenny Kiefer’s debut novel, This Wretched Valley, has been getting a huge amount of early buzz in horror circles. It’s the story of four unlucky adventurers, who head into the Kentucky woods and meet all manner of nasty sh*t. 

     

    It’s a tightly wound tale of misadventure, that takes at least some inspiration from the Dyatlov Pass mystery. And if you don’t know what that is… boy have you got a wiki hole to disappear down.

     

    Jenny and I talk about writing and selling a brutal debut, arthouse horror influences, the terror of climbing and research serendipity… plus, what she thinks happened to those poor Russian hikers over 60 years ago.

     

    Enjoy!

     

    Other books mentioned:

     

    • The Ruins (2006), by Scott Smith
    • The Laws of the Skies (2019), by Grégoire Courtois
    • Dead Mountain: The Untold True Story of the Dyatlov Pass Incident (2013), by Donnie Eichar
    • The Marigold (2023), by Andre F. Sullivan

     

    Support Talking Scared on Patreon

     

    Visit the Talking Scared site

     

    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

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    177 – John Langan & Fishing For Mythologies

    177 – John Langan & Fishing For Mythologies

    To kick off a new year of Talking Scared, I’ve gone and hooked us a big guest, with a whopper of a story.

     

    John Langan is the author of The Fisherman. It’s one of the great works of supernatural fiction written this century, but its story doesn’t end at its back-cover. The strange mythology of The Fisherman extends beyond, swimming further downstream, to pop its monstrous head above the surface in John’s wider universe of short stories and novellas.

     

    In this special episode, we talk at length about The Fisherman – about the classic books, real-world legends and cultural beliefs that inspired it, and about the process of building a  whole new mythos.

     

    John is the poet-scholar of horror. This is the class you wish you’d taken in college. 

     

    Enjoy!

     

    Other books mentioned:

     

    House of Windows (2009), by John Langan

    “Mother of Stone”, in The Wide Carnivorous Sky and Other Monstrous Geographies (2013), by John Langan

    “Bor Urus”, in Sefira and Other Betrayals (2019), by John Langan

    Our Share of Night (2023), by Mariana Enriquez

    The Croning (2012), by Laird Barron

    The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All (2013), by Laird Barron

    Pet Sematary (1983), by Stephen King

    “The Monkey’s Paw” (1902), by W. W. Jacobs

    Absolom, Absolom (1951), by William Faulkner

    “The Call of Cthulhu” (1928), by H.P. Lovecraft

    The Marriage of Cadmus and Harmony (1988), by Roberto Calasso

    “Development” (1889), by Robert Browning

    Ironweed (1983), by William Kennedy

    Come Closer (2003), by Sara Gran

    Motherless Child (2012), by Glen Hirshberg

    Screams From the Dark: 29 Tales of Monsters and the Monstrous (2022), edited by Ellen Datlow (contains “Glen Hirshberg’s “Devil” and John Langan’s “Bludzuger”)

    Furnace (2016), by Livia Llewelyn

     

    Join the Laird Barron Readalong

     

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    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

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    176 – The Best Horror Novels of 2023

    176 – The Best Horror Novels of 2023

    Another year done. We squeaked through without another plague or a nuclear apocalypse (don’t tempt fate Neil!!) and along the way, oh the stories we read! 

     

    The only thing left to do after mopping away the chalk pentagrams, is to run you through my very favourite books of the year. The so-called Best Horror Novels of 2023, as chosen by me. Ten of them to be precise, cos humans are obsessed with round numbers. Mwaha, in fact I talk about thirteen!!

     

    Thanks again for listening and supporting the show. You give my addled rants a semblance of purpose, and it’s appreciated.

     

    Onward into 2024 and its multitude of horrors!!!

     

    Enjoy.

     

    Support Talking Scared on Patreon

     

    Visit the Talking Scared site

     

    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

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    175 – The Ghost Story Deep Dive, with Alan Baxter, Lauren Bolger & John Langan

    175 – The Ghost Story Deep Dive, with Alan Baxter, Lauren Bolger & John Langan

    Dickens said that Christmas Eve was a time for ghost stories, and who am I to argue?

     

    It is my show though, so I get to pick the ghost story – and I picked Peter Straub’s classic novel of the name. A tale of old men with horror in their youths, seductive evil and a town besieged by winter and… worse things.

     

    It’s a slippery beast though, this novel. So to really help pin it down, I needed help. I called and help came, in the form of Alan Baxter (author of Sallow Bend, The Gulp and many more), Lauren Bolger (Kill Radio) and John Langan, whose novel, The Fisherman, continues what I think is Straub’s American gothic legacy. 

     

    We talk about the book in granular detail – it’s monsters, it’s politics, it’s storytelling and, of course, it’s ghosts. It’s about as jolly a time as you can have talking about ancient evil visiting small towns. But enough about Santa.

     

    Light the fire, pour a drink, enjoy! You’ve earned it.

     

    Support Talking Scared on Patreon

     

    Visit the Talking Scared site

     

    Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com 

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    174 – State of the Horror Nation 2023, with Emily Hughes, Victor Lavalle & C.J. Leede

    174 – State of the Horror Nation 2023, with Emily Hughes, Victor Lavalle & C.J. Leede

    And so we come to the end of another year in horror. Time to look back at the best that 2023 has had to offer, as determined by three of the best in the business.


    My trusted horror chancellor, Emily Hughes joins me ­– alongside C.J. Leede, the author of this year’s gloriously transgressive Maeve Fly, and the maestro of the macabre himself, Victor Lavalle. Together we cover the year’s freshest nightmares in the macro and the micro, looking at wider trends and picking our own favourite horror fiction from this year’s epic crop.

     

    This is a blast. We laugh, we yell, and we declare that the nation is strong, and good, and frightening. 

     

    Enjoy!

     

    Books Picked:

    • Our Share of Night (2023), by Mariana Enriquez
    • Boys Weekend (2023), by Mattie Lubchansky
    • Black Sheep (2023), by Rachel Harrison
    • The Reformatory (2023), by Tananarive Due 
    • Out There Screaming: An Anthology of New Black Horror (2023), ed. Jordan Peele and John Joseph Adams
    • Fever House (2023), by Keith Rosson
    • Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology (2023) ed. Shane Hawk and Theodore C. Van Alst Jr.
    • Red Rabbit (2023), by Alex Grecian
    • Whalefall (2023), by Daniel Kraus

     

    Books Anticipated:

    • Horror For Weenies: Everything You Need to Know About the Films You’re Too Scared to Watch (2024), by Emily Hughes
    • American Rapture (2024), by C.J. Leede
    • Ghost Roots (2024), by Pemi Aguda
    • A Mask of Flies (2024), by Matthew Lyons
    • The Z Word (2024), by Lindsay King-Miller
    • Your Shadow Half Remains (2024), by Sunny Moraine
    • First Light (2024), by Liz Kerin
    • Bury Your Gays (2024), by Chuck Tingle
    • I Was a Teenage Slasher (2024), by Stephen Graham Jones
    • The House of Last Resort (2024), by Christopher Golden
    • The Book of Love (2024), by Kelly Link
    • King Nyx (2024), by Kirsten Bakis
    • Moon of the Turning Leaves (2024), by Waubgeshig Rice
    • In the Valley of the Headless Men (2024), by L.P. Hernandez
    • Island Witch (2024), by Amanda Jayatissa
    • The Haunting of Velkwood (2024), Gwendolyne Kiste
    • The Redemption of Morgan Bright (2024), by Chris Panatier
    • Horror Movie (2024), by Paul Tremblay
    • You Like It Darker (2024), by Stephen King

     
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