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To the Trope and Beyond: Romance Heroes

Posted by Nancy M. Young 
· Tuesday, February 2nd, 2021 

From alpha through beta, gamma, and all the way to omega, the current trend in creating romance heroes may be all Greek to you. But whether you crave a guy who’s brooding and dominant, affable but capable, or downright dangerous, there’s a trope for that. To fashion a hero who can carry an entire novel, though, you need to venture beyond the trope.

On February 13th, 2021, I’ll be discussing how to move beyond the parameters of alpha-plus characters as a panelist at the Carolina Book and Writer Conference during the Ink of Love session. Zoom in, or check out the recording later!

Image may contain: text that says 'arolina BOOK & WRITER CONFERENCE DIGITAL PRINT'

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Writing Horror

Posted by Nancy M. Young 
· Wednesday, October 7th, 2020 

I know what scares me. And because I was born to research, I know why. Fear theories abound—at least seven in various psychological journals I read recently. For my purpose as a writer, though, I prefer the prism of evolutionary theory, as discussed in The Psychologist (from the British Psychological Society).

Our primitive brains harbor instinctive, very understandable fears:

Fear of being eaten.

You get that, right? For years, I watched Jaws on the last day of school, each time experiencing thrill and dread during the 4th of July scene on the beach. As a kid glued to Shock Theater on TV, I lapped up Lugosi in Browning’s Dracula and Lon Chaney Jr. in The Wolf Man, then slept with my blanket tucked over my neck. Romero’s Night of the Living Dead probably scarred me for life. So did Tolkien’s Shelob.

Fear of contagion.

Given the current health crisis, we all get this one. The horror genre oozes with examples. Will you ever forget the xenomorph chest-burster in Alien? Vampirism and zombie death/life are catching too. Remember the rapid spread of the virus in Brooks’ World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War?In the movie Slither, the parasite works as a conscious disease that utterly transforms its hosts.

Violations of the person.

The third is my favorite fear category. It’s a vague term, I know. A better one might be Freud’s term unheimlichkeit, meaning uncanniness. These are the situations (or beings) that set off your Spidey-sense. I have a recurring dream that perfectly illustrates the fear. It’s late at night. I wander into the bathroom and pause in front of the mirror over the sink. As I look at my reflection, I sense that something is off. Then she grins at me.

Just writing the description creeps me out.

And creepy is another good word to describe this category. It’s an uneasiness, a tingle that’s like a flashing yellow light warning you to watch out. It’s Shirley Jackson telling you from the beginning that Hill House is not sane. From the outside, the bricks meet neatly, but all the corners are askew.

This category covers things that might seem right at first glance, but not on the second one. Ever wonder why monsters in masks so terrify? They fall under the third category too. From the primitive brain perspective, masked entities are dangerous because their true facial expressions are hidden, so it’s impossible to assess any threat they might represent. Modern nightmares are full of these masked monsters. You might have bought Halloween masks of Leatherface, Jason Voorhees, and Michael Myers.

Then there are clowns.

Clowns are practically a case study. I know a sweet lady who dresses up as one and makes balloon animals for sick kids. But Gacy also dressed up as a clown. Clowns are problematic. Their makeup exaggerates features and hides expression. Because you can’t be sure about them, clowns are creepy. David Livingstone Smith in “A Theory of Creepiness” discusses the threat ambiguity theory. When something is off, uncanny, you can’t categorize it. The uncertainty paralyzes.

A related fear factor term is the uncanny valley. If you’re disturbed by dolls that are too lifelike or the animation in The Polar Express, you know what I’m referring to. Horror movies frequently descend into this valley when they show a critter with halting, jerky movements that hint the thing isn’t quite human. Go ahead and cringe as you recall Samara creeping out of the TV in The Ring, and Regan spider-walking downstairs in The Exorcist.

Dwelling in the uncanny valley

As a writer, I love dwelling in that uncanny valley and creating settings that signal to my readers that something is off.  The Something in the Dark series features haunted places that are scary because of their ambiguity—the possible unseen threat.

Think about it. Everything about an abandoned old mansion calls for hypervigilance: creaking floorboards, fluttering curtains, low-frequency moans from dusty ducts, cold spots, and limited exits. No wonder the Winchester House and Pennhurst are haunted. (By the way, as a teen in the seventies, I used to volunteer at Pennhurst. Even occupied, it was horrific.)

I’ve used my valley experiences countless times in my work. In Seeing Things, I recreated a terrifying graveyard hide-and-seek game. As I hid, I knew with a cold certainty that something was hiding with me.

Stephen King in Danse Macabre explains that “we make up horrors to help us cope with the real ones.” Look around. Is it any wonder horror lit is popular?

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New Stories on Their Way

Posted by Nancy M. Young 
· Tuesday, May 12th, 2020 

I’m thrilled that moonShine review will be publishing two more of my short stories soon!

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I WON!

Posted by Nancy M. Young 
· Tuesday, May 12th, 2020 

Chicago judges had much to say about my newest Regency novel, THE BURDEN OF GOOD BREEDING:

“The plot was very skillfully set up. I was immersed in the story. The conflict was instantaneous and heart-wrenching for the heroine.”

” wonderful opening that grabs the reader from the start… “

“compelling”

“engaging and potent”

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Ghost Hunting Adventure

Posted by Nancy M. Young 
· Thursday, December 5th, 2019 

Over the Thanksgiving holiday, I went on a hands-on paranormal adventure in Tennessee. The guide let the group play with a variety of toys. I was in change of an electromagnetic field (EMF) detector and a flashlight. My daughter was keeper of a spirit box, which randomly scans radio signals and allows for EVPs. The EMF did flash in the red zone periodically, and the flashlight did turn on in answer to yes/no questions. One picture I took of a reputedly haunted location seemed to reveal a figure in a window.

Most compelling was a pointed response in an urban graveyard.

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Another True Ghost Story

Posted by Nancy M. Young 
· Thursday, October 24th, 2019 

Mourner in the Morning

            A cold front had blown in overnight, so the morning air felt crisp and cool. Flecks of mica sparkled in the granite gate to Raleigh’s Oakwood Cemetery, and the foliage lining the path hinted at the reds and golds to come. In the Beechwood section, the stark memorial statue of Etta White still had two weeks to go before her annual head turn on October thirty-first. But Halloween definitely hung in the air.

            Ellen and I had a standing agreement to walk in Oakwood once a week. If we followed each winding path, we could get our two-mile trek in and then reward ourselves with coffee and a Krispy Kreme on Person Street. This particular day we’d met a little later, after ten, so traffic was light.  Only two power walkers overtook our ambling pace. “Let’s turn here before anyone runs us over,” I said, only half joking.

            Ellen looked at me, looked up at the hill to our right, and sighed. “Fine.” She’s not a fan of hills.

            Huffing, we climbed past the Hall of Memory and around to Chapel Circle, then cut between the CSA gravestones to Hickory Avenue. “Look.” Ellen pointed. “It’s there again this year.” Someone had hung Dollar Store skeletons, Day of the Dead skulls, and rubber bats from a magnolia limb above a decades-old grave. Other symbols of loved ones still remembered dotted the well-manicured plots: bright sunflowers, faded roses, two mini bottles of Jack Daniels. 

            Ahead to our left, a roaring yellow backhoe dug space for the next cemetery resident.  Soon Ellen and I had to veer off the path to avoid a flooded spot. I thought that was just as well, because I didn’t want to disturb the lone mourner I’d noticed standing under a green funeral awning on the other side of the pavement.

            She had her back to us, so I hadn’t seen her face. Her figure had been tall and slim, with shoulders hunched as if she had crossed her arms in front of her chest. She wore some kind of gray sweater and slacks. In front of her, obviously the focus of her attention, was a new grave covered with wilting funeral wreaths. The wire stands that had held the arrangements had toppled over and lay like tangled wire coat hangers on the packed earth.

            Odd, I though. From the state of the flowers, the funeral must have been days ago. Maybe she’d missed it and had come late to pay her respects.

            Neither Ellen nor I said anything as we walked along the bank opposite the woman. It wasn’t until we turned in front of the mausoleum at the cemetery’s north end that I ventured to comment. “Poor woman. All alone like that.”

            Ellen creased her brow. “Who are you talking about?”

            “That lady we passed. The one under the awning back there.”

            She stared at me as if I’d gone batty. “What woman?”

            “The one—.” I turned around. Behind me I saw the awning and the backhoe and the dead flowers and the fresh graves. No gray woman was anywhere to be seen.

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Creepy in Costa Rica

Posted by Nancy M. Young 
· Thursday, July 11th, 2019 

During a recent trip to Costa Rica, I passed a few cemeteries. Like in New Orleans, Costa Rican cemeteries feature above-ground crypts, often covered in white ceramic tiles.

The ghost stories of this region are much like those everywhere: haunted prisons, hospitals, and cemeteries.

One legend stands out. La Llorona is the specter of a woman searching for her lost child, whom she threw in a river before killing herself, despairing over an affair. Similar versions have been repeated in other countries. This legend reminds me of the legend of the woman in white supposedly haunting Cabrini College, near where I grew up. That ghost makes a brief appearance in SENSING THINGS.

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