Everything about Horror Novel totally explained
Horror fiction is, broadly,
fiction in any medium intended to scare, unsettle, or horrify the audience. Historically, the cause of the "horror" experience has often been the intrusion of a
supernatural element into everyday human experience. Since the 1960s, any work of fiction with a morbid, gruesome,
surreal, or exceptionally
suspenseful or frightening theme has come to be called "horror". Horror fiction often overlaps
science fiction or
fantasy, all three of which categories are sometimes placed under the umbrella classification
speculative fiction. See also
supernatural fiction.
Early horror writings
Horrific situations are found in some of the earliest recorded tales. Many
myths and
legends feature scenarios and
archetypes used by later horror writers. Tales of
demons and
vampires in ancient and more recent
folklore were often quite horrific.
Modern horror fiction found its roots in the
gothic novels that exploded into popularity in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, typified by
Horace Walpole's
The Castle of Otranto (1764) as a prototype, and refined by
Ann Radcliffe's Gothic novel
The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794). A variation on the Gothic formula that remains one of the most enduring and imitated horror works is
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's novel
Frankenstein (1818, revised version 1831).
Frankenstein has also been considered science fiction, a
philosophical novel or a 'novel of purpose' by some literary historians. At the same time,
John William Polidori devised the kind of vampire story that has since become familiar with his short story
The Vampyre. This kind of supernatural character, combining evil with sinister charm, has since been much used and elaborated by horror writers.
The first published American horror story was
Washington Irving's
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.
Later gothic horror descendants included seminal late 19th century works such as
Bram Stoker's
Dracula and
Henry James's
The Turn of the Screw. Early horror works used mood and subtlety to deliver an eerie and otherworldly flavor, but usually eschewed extensive explicit violence.
Other early exponents of the horror form number such luminaries as
Edgar Allan Poe and
H. P. Lovecraft who are widely considered to be masters of the art. Among the writers of classic English
ghost stories,
M. R. James is often cited as the finest. His stories avoid shock effects and often involve an
Oxford antiquarian as their hero.
Algernon Blackwood's "The Willows" and
Oliver Onions's "The Beckoning Fair One" have been called the best horror stories. Lovecraft and
Sheridan le Fanu called some of their writing
weird fiction or weird stories.
Horror fiction reached a wider audience in the 1920s and 1930s with the rise of the American
pulp magazine. The premier horror pulp was
Weird Tales, which printed many of Lovecraft's stories as well as fiction by other writers such as
Clark Ashton Smith,
E. Hoffmann Price,
Seabury Quinn,
C.M. Eddy, Jr. and
Robert Bloch. At a lower
intellectual level were the
weird menace or "shudder pulps" such as
Dime Mystery and
Horror Stories, which offered a more visceral form of horror.
Some stories in
highbrow "literary" fiction could arguably be regarded as horror narratives: examples include
Franz Kafka's "
The Metamorphosis" (
Die Verwandlung) and "
In the Penal Colony" (
In der Strafkolonie) and
William Faulkner's
A Rose for Emily.
Contemporary horror fiction
Some modern practitioners of the genre use vivid descriptions of extreme violence or shock to entertain their audiences, often recalling
Grand Guignol theatre (see
splatterpunk). This development has given horror fiction a stigma as base entertainment devoid of
literary merit. Other writers, such as
Ramsey Campbell and
Thomas Ligotti, are cited as rejecting the portrayal of violent acts in favor of more psychological writing.
Nevertheless, popular contemporary writers such as
Dean Koontz,
Clive Barker, and
Stephen King will sometimes bring off the horror effect without the extreme violence that characterises much of the current mainstream of this genre.
Horror fiction doesn't confine itself to literature, however. Countless horror-themed movies have been released in the 20th century, notably
Dracula,
Halloween,
A Nightmare on Elm Street,
Friday The 13th, and
Night of the Living Dead. There have also been many horror television series, such as
Dark Shadows, and
Supernatural. Many
video games have used horror elements in their plotlines or gameplay as well, including
Resident Evil,
Silent Hill, and,
Quake, the
Ravenholm chapter of
Half Life 2,
F.E.A.R and the
Doom series, especially
Doom 3. Also there are some horror-based role-playing settings such as
Ravenloft and
World of Darkness. There are also many modern horror-themed board, card, and role-playing games, such as
Betrayal at House on the Hill,
Zombies!!!,
Zombie Fluxx, and
Call of Cthulhu.
Horror in early cinema
As mentioned above, there have been "countless"
horror films made. Many consider the
Edison Studios version of
Frankenstein, made in 1910, to be the first, though
Georges Méliès' 1896 film
Le Manoir du diable ("The House of the Devil" or "The Devil's Manor") is considered the first horror film by others. In the
silent film era a great many films were made in the United States and Europe, particularly Germany, with such legendary directors as
Fritz Lang,
Robert Wiene, and
F.W. Murnau. They, and other members of the
German Expressionism movement, produced such classic films as
Nosferatu and
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and
M. In Hollywood,
Carl Laemmle's
Universal Studios produced silent film classics with
Lon Chaney, including
The Phantom of the Opera. Universal, with such celebrated directors as
James Whale and
Tod Browning went into the "sound" era, making some of the most archetypal horror films of all time, including
Frankenstein,
Dracula,
The Invisible Man and many others (see
Universal Monsters). By the 1950's in the United States, horror or "monster" movies had become so popular, especially among teenagers, that most major studios were producing horror and/or science fiction films. Some small, new studios were apparently created solely to produce films of the genre.
Notable horror authors
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