I was doing a reading at a Barnes & Noble last night and one of the readers there was complaining that she had had a hard time finding my books. Oh, they were in the store, all right, but where? She tried Mystery and Sci-fi/Fantasy with no luck. Finally she asked for help and the clerk took her to Fiction and Literature.
That’s because THERE IS NO HORROR SECTION at Barnes & Noble. And there’s barely a horror section at Borders – blink and you’ll miss it, and some Borders stores don’t have one at all.
I suppose you all have noticed, too, that the AFI lists of “Top Ten Films in Ten Classic Genres” came out last week and there was no horror list…
I think things are getting pretty dire, is what I want to say, and we better start talking about it. That’s not actually the subject of my blog today, because I just wrote a column about it for Dark Scribe magazine. But while I was digging around for material for that column I found my notes from the Masters of the Craft panel, World Horror Con, Toronto, 2007. Reading through them made me remember how incredible that panel-going experience was, so I thought I’d share, for those of you who weren’t there.
Writing conventions are always invaluable on so many levels it’s hard to quantify. But there’s often, or maybe always, one particular thing that happens that is worth the whole cost and effort of attending – that may actually cause a paradigm shift in the way you approach your writing and/or your career.
For me that life-altering event was the “Masters of the Craft” panel, with F. Paul Wilson, Ramsey Campbell, Gahan Wilson, Joe Lansdale, Robert Sawyer and David Morrell. It’s always wonderful to see Paul, Ramsey, and David, who have been not just inspirations, but also extremely generous and supportive mentors (and in the case of Paul and David, bandmates…) But the combination of these author/artists in conversation together was truly transcendent.
It’s possibly impossible to distill a panel like that into anything useful for people who weren’t actually there, but I’m going to try to pass on the highlights anyway because I was so struck by the synergy of what these guys were saying about what it takes to make the kind of lasting career they all have.
Artist of the Macabre Gahan Wilson was so charming and funny and earnest when he went off on this rant: “When you start you have to have a mad conviction that you’re going to succeed. It has nothing to do with logic because the chance of succeeding in any art is hopeless. And you have to love it, be absolutely crazy about it. Don’t do it unless you’re nuts.”
Lansdale seconded him (and you must imagine this in a thick West Texas drawl): “You’ve got to be obsessed with it at first. It’s like being in love – at first you never get out of bed – but after a few years you find you’re able to do a few basic other things, like take out the garbage once in a while.”
(I think all of us who have been published, or are about to be, know this. In fact we’re so obsessed we don’t really notice how obsessed we are, and when you finally get to a point that you can lift your head up and look back on what you did to get where you are you’re pretty stunned at how insane it all seems. Thank God we don’t seem to notice when we’re actually doing it, and thank God we don’t realize how long it’s going to take when we start out, or I don’t think there would be any books published, ever.)
Then there was this:
“Writing is like a parasite. It never quits. It’s wearing. The wires are always firing and you don’t get to rest like other people.” – Joe Lansdale
I can’t tell you how good it feels to hear that from other authors. I never tire of hearing it. It makes me feel not so completely freakish. Or maybe I’m just clinging to that thought in order to justify acting like a completely insane person.
Gahan Wilson had another reason for never allowing himself to turn off: “Some nights you wake up all of a sudden and God is in the room and telling you what your story needs and you better write it down, or God will get pissed and go away.”
The panel spent a lot of time talking about what makes a breakout success. Joe Lansdale said: “It’s about voice and capturing what real human beings think about. I’ve read all the clever stories and can pretty much guess an entire story from the first chapter, so what keeps me reading is the voice, the style.” He went on to say that Stephen King was the first author he read who wrote in the voice of their (Joe’s and King’s) generation – the voice of the Sixties, with all the asides and a particular kind of stream of consciousness and incorporating so many references to music and popular culture. I’d never heard it put exactly that way before, but it made absolute and total sense.
Paul Wilson agreed, but added there was also a certain element of luck involved. “The right story at the right time will hit in a way that can make a career for life.” He referenced his own THE KEEP as an unpredictable success that made his career. And that’s also something we all have to keep in mind: the more chips we have out there on the table, the better our chances of that kind of luck striking.
All the authors talked about how unnerving it was to them that so many people they started out with at the same level of writing just dropped off along the way. Lansdale said, “This is not a romantic profession. It’s more like boxing. You get knocked down and what keeps you in the game is that you keep getting back up.”
David Morrell agreed, and warned, “Don’t chase the market. It will never work. It’s better to be a first rate version of yourself than a second rate version of anyone else.”
And Paul Wilson said the most important thing is – “You have to write what you love to read.”
The darkest moment of the panel for me was when Ramsey Campbell and Joe Lansdale both said bluntly – “No wife, no career.” Obviously that’s not going to happen for ME, so I’m ignoring it.
It was very telling to me that all the authors on the panel were perfectly willing to be chameleons in their writing. If horror wasn’t selling, they just wrote around that and called it something else. David Morrell said, “If people aren’t buying supernatural, then write a creepy ‘thriller’ that has all the atmosphere and suspense but a real-world explanation.”
But the most important moment of the panel for me was when the authors were talking about genre, and crossing genres, and Joe Lansdale swept all of that aside impatiently and said:
“Real authors create their own genre. Stephen King is his own genre. You have to throw out your conceptions of genre and develop a voice and an honesty about the human condition that becomes its own genre.”
Now THAT - is a career-defining concept. And it was great to reread this in the middle of pulling together my Dark Scribe column, because what I was trying to do was ask some hard questions about – well, what the HELL has happened to horror as a genre, and how can we fix it? Or should we even try?
It’s true - my favorite authors, the authors I read over and over again – King, Shirley Jackson, Paul Wilson, Daphne Du Maurier, Ira Levin, Anne Rice, the Brontes… really are genres unto themselves.
So that’s what I’m aspiring to from now on. Maybe rigidity about the genre is part of what got us into this mess to begin with, so from now on I’m embracing my designation as Fiction/Literature.
With a little horror on the side.
- Alex

8 Comments, Comment or Ping
Sonja Cassella
Thanks for making a point on *why* we go to conferences. I just got back from Texas Writer’s League and I missed some of that “writers write, no excuses,” attitude. Perhaps I should have gone to a panel of successful novelists … but I don’t think they had one.
Jun 24th, 2008
Alexandra Sokoloff
Hey Sonja - sorry you didn’t get as much kick from the conference as you had hoped.
That can be the problem with smaller conferences, but then again, you never can tell when something just amazing will come out of the regional ones. The important thing is that you’re getting yourself out there - that kind of commitment to your craft and business ALWAYS pays off.
Jun 24th, 2008
Gerard Houarner
thanks for sharing your experience with that all-star panel — I’ve heard them all talk about their work and passion individually, but to get them all together is like going to the church of writing. Always good to hear that, yes, I’m crazy to be doing this, but it’s okay, that’s part of the job.
Jun 24th, 2008
Alexandra Sokoloff
Gerard, you are so right - it was like going to the church of writing.
And yeah, huge relief to be reminded that crazy is part of the job.
Jun 24th, 2008
eric wilson
Good words. Man, I get so frustrated when I try to write with the market’s expectations in my head. I’d rather build a faithful readership and stay true to my own “genre,” than crank out the same thing time after time. I’ll keep it in mind as I write today.
Jun 24th, 2008
Wayne Allen Sallee
Joe Lansdale gave me my first cover blurb and I likely owe as much to him as I do the late Karl Edward Wagner for even making it as a blip on the radar. I recall when Joe’s wife was a firefighter in their hometown, and he was on a panel about Writer Dads Being Mr. Mom and how he’d have to interrupt a great stream of consciousness line because of smelly diapers. I’m old enough to recall when horror was just getting its own section in Chicago–we had Kroch’s & Brentano’s and BDalton before evil evil Border’s came to town–and before that it was dark fantasy. If its two words that make me realize how long I’ve been at this, it’s “dark” and “fantasy.”
Jun 25th, 2008
Alexandra Sokoloff
Yeah, Eric, it’s expectations, not fear, that’s the mind killer!
Wayne, that’s interesting. I thought “dark fantasy” was fairly new, but maybe I’m thinking of “dark suspense”.
Now “dark” I know is me!
Jun 25th, 2008
Dave Wilson
What a treasure trove of thoughts…and quotes. My favorite, of course, is Lansdale telling everyone to make their own genre by writing honestly…CAN I GET A WITNESS?
amen.
DNW
Jun 25th, 2008
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