by Jeannie Wycherley | Feb 22, 2018 | Guest Post, Women in Horror Month, Would like to read
What’s the Future of Horror? The usual definition of Horror is a non-hero protagonist at the mercy of an unreasonable, unstoppable antagonist. The villain’s aim is to annihilate the protagonist. There’s traditionally a lot of jump-startles, gore, and chase...
by Jeannie Wycherley | Feb 21, 2018 | Guest Post, Women in Horror Month, Would like to read
Where do we women go inside our heads? What is that intimate inner space made of? Bright rooms with doors opening onto wide open vistas and alpine meadows? Labyrinths of bone, mazes intertwining, tripping, misleading? Caves filled with ideas, dancing points of...
by Jeannie Wycherley | Feb 20, 2018 | Guest Post, Women in Horror Month, Would like to read
Broken Strength I love romance stories, but what fascinates me much more is human nature. Have you ever noticed how resilient, powerful and courageous we are? That’s exactly what I explore with my characters, especially the women in my stories. Ever heard of Kintsugi?...
by Jeannie Wycherley | Feb 18, 2018 | Women in Horror Month, Would like to read
My medical thriller, Heads Will Roll, features a doctor who is desperate to get his long overdue fame, fortune, and recognition by performing a successful head transplant surgery. There’s only one problem: Dr. Farkis’ clandestine operations – performed in an abandoned...
by Jeannie Wycherley | Feb 16, 2018 | Guest Post, Women in Horror Month, Would like to read
The Importance of Horror by Joy Yehle When I was a little kid, my Grandma used to call me “Spooky” because I loved to hear the same ghost stories over and over. Not much has changed, I still love spooky tales. It’s fun to be scared, to feel the tingle that only an...
by Jeannie Wycherley | Feb 15, 2018 | Guest Post, Women in Horror Month, Would like to read
In my paranormal short story, Curse of the Ottawa, there is only one female and she is there only briefly, but she is the central character. It is difficult to be genre specific with the story. It is certainly a horror story although it takes 200 years to complete....
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