I’ve interviewed fellow contributor to Among the Headstones: Creepy Tales from the Graveyard, Pamela Turner, as part of the preparations for the release of the anthology early next year. Full details about the haunting anthology are provided at the end of the interview.
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How do you feel about cemeteries? Do find them creepy?
When I was growing up in my hometown, I believed the local cemetery was haunted. No one had told me it was. I believed it because I read horror anthologies in elementary school, and it fed my imagination. I remember thinking how scary it must be for those living near the cemetery, especially after dark. Now cemeteries are some of my favorite places to visit. I like learning about the different symbols, looking at the statues, and even discovering a unique headstone.
How would you like to be buried?
Since my husband was a veteran, I will probably be buried with him in the veterans’ cemetery. On Veterans Day this year, I met a veteran who told me that when a spouse dies and is buried with the veteran, his or her information is engraved on the other side of the veteran’s headstone. Next time I go to the cemetery, I’m going to look for this.
What scared you when you were a child?
Dolls. Believing my dolls would steal my soul, I made them face the wall before I went to bed. And one was a Raggedy Ann doll. At the time, I didn’t know about the infamous Annabelle, which was probably a good thing. I’ve since read Algernon Blackwood’s short story and watched the Night Gallery episode.
What’s your favourite horror book? What do you like about it?
The Shining by Stephen King is my favorite horror novel. A family is trapped in a hotel during the winter with the father/caretaker slowly going mad and threatening his wife and son. But his wife fights back to save her family.
Who is your favourite Gothic author? Why?
Shirley Jackson is my favorite Gothic author. Her novel The Haunting of Hill House is, along with The Shining, one of the creepiest stories I’ve read. It impresses me how she made the house itself a character and a sinister one. Also, I’ll never forget the ending. What I’m curious about is what happened in Hill House to cause the haunting, although I don’t think that’s ever explained.
For readers who are new to your fiction, which of your books would be a good start?
My novella The Ripper’s Daughter, which takes place ten years after the Ripper’s murder spree. Prostitutes are showing up dead in Louisville, Kentucky, and a former detective inspector turned vampire/tavern owner fears Jack is responsible.
ABOUT PAMELA TURNER
Pamela Turner’s love for the paranormal began in elementary school, where she discovered anthologies filled with ghosts, witches, vampires, and other creatures that go bump in the night. Then there was Rod Serling’s Night Gallery and that creepy doll. Fearing her Raggedy Ann doll would steal her soul, Pamela made the doll face the wall before she went to bed.
Despite this, her interest in the supernatural continued. In middle school, she penned her own tales of terror. Fellow students enjoyed them, and she dreamed of becoming a published author.
After a short stint as a freelance magazine writer, she decided to return to writing fiction. She's also an award-winning screenplay writer.
Currently, she writes paranormal suspense featuring vampires, dragons, angels, and demons. Just don’t expect her angels to always be good or her demons to always be evil.
Many of her stories are set in Louisville, Kentucky where she lives with her daughter and herds three rescue cats. When not writing, she enjoys anime and manga, weaving, aviation, cemeteries, and abandoned buildings.
You can find her at https://pamturner.net
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PamelaTurnerAuthor
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pamturner97/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/pamelaturner
ABOUT THE BOOK
AMONG THE HEADSTONES: CREEPY TALES FROM THE GRAVEYARD
This anthology, edited by Rayne Hall, presents twenty-seven of the finest - and creepiest - graveyard tales with stories by established writers, classic authors and fresh voices.
Here you will find Gothic ghost stories by Robert Ellis, Lee Murray, Greg Chapman, Morgan Pryce, Rayne Hall, Guy de Maupassant, Myk Pilgrim, Zachary Ashford, Amelia Edwards, Nina Wibowo, Krystal Garrett, Tylluan Penry, Ambrose Bierce, Cinderella Lo, Nikki Tait, Arthur Conan Doyle, Priscilla Bettis, Kyla Ward, Edgar Allan Poe, Paul D Dail, Cameron Trost, Pamela Turner, William Meikle and Lord Dunsany who thrill with their eerie, macabre and sometimes quirky visions.
You'll visit graveyards in Britain, Indonesia, Russia, China, Italy, Bulgaria, Thailand, USA, Australia, South Africa and Japan, and you can marvel at the burial customs of other cultures.
Now let’s open the gate - can you hear it creak on its hinges? - and enter the realm of the dead. Listen to the wind rustling the yew, the grating of footsteps on gravel, the hoo-hoo-hoo of the collared dove. Run your fingers across the tombstones to feel their lichen-rough sandstone or smooth cool marble. Inhale the scents of decaying lilies and freshly dug earth.
But be careful. Someone may be watching your every movement... They may be right behind you.
Purchase Link: mybook.to/Headstones
The ebook is available for pre-order from Amazon at the special offer price of 99 cents until 31 January 2022. (After that date, the price will go up.) The paperback is already published.
21 comments:
Interesting choice. I think 'The Shining' is Stephen King's most Gothic novel. He's not normally a 'Gothic' Horror writer, but with The Shining he went into full Gothic mode.
Thanks for having me on your blog, Cameron. Looking forward to reading the other anthology authors' interviews.
Great interview. The Shining is one of my favorites as well!
Looks like you’ve loved horror stories since you were a child! I’ve never heard anything about our local cemetery – probably because, despite being local, it's half a mile away – so I used to think it was boring. But my sister has always been a little obsessed with creepy stories, so she never let me sleep in peace. Perhaps, that’s why I’ve never been attached to dolls either.
Thank you, Unknown! Glad you also like The Shining. I first read the novel in middle school. A friend was also a Stephen King fan and let me borrow his books.
Lana, you're right. Another spooky thing from my childhood was the rumor that the woman who ran the small grocery store nearby would lock shoplifters in her store's cellar.
Great interview!! It's interesting to know how you find cemeteries as one of your favorite places. I also like wandering around cemeteries, just strolling while thinking about the past lives of those buried. I also like looking at various coffins and how they are neatly prepared by their families. I also love Stephen King! I enjoy reading his books, tho I haven't read 'The Shining' yet but it's definitely on my tbr!
Well done Pamela! Great Interview.
Thank you, jayvelthereader and Marvellous. Hope you enjoy The Shining. It's been years since I've read it, and I still remember those creepy scenes.
When I was a child, I would also put all my dolls and toys with faces out of my sight before going to bed. In my case, I never thought that they would steal my soul. To be honest, I wasn't even sure what was the problem with them but I just didn't want to see human-like creatures looking at me in the dark.
Meryem7turkmen, that's interesting about the dolls and toys. The only toys I let stare at me were my stuffed animals. Then again, I've always been an animal lover.
Ms.Turner when you are not writing, I spend the day exactly as you do with a +1 cat and except the courage required parts hahaha. It will be really interesting to read your part in the anthology, I'm really looking forward to that.
Sencer, hope you enjoy it!
I haven't read The Shining, nor watched the movie, as it's your favorite horror novel, and you do write screenplays too(I assume you're not that distant from cinema either), I must ask, which one should try first, the book or the movie? And an off-topic question, what was the best movie adaptation of a novel, not just in the horror genre?
Thank you for the interview.
I was pleased to know that you disliked dolls...As a child, I was one of those girls who preferred stuffed animals to dolls. I actually had very few dolls and I remember beating one of them because I imagined she had done many bad things...I#ve always thought there is something special about us girls who don't like dolls ha ha.
Looking forward to reading your creepy story.
Diana A.
Hi, Talha Efe AY. I would read the book first. The Stanley Kubrick version is different, particularly the ending. There's also a mini-series in which King was more involved, I believe. That one is said to be truer to the book. As for a best movie adaptation, one would be the 1941 movie The Maltese Falcon and 2011's Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy for me.
You're welcome Diana A. Hope you enjoy the story and the anthology!
Awesome interview!
What a peculiar fear to have, of dolls stealing your soul. Come to think of it, that would make for a great horror story…
I did enjoy Onryo, especially the glimpse into Japanese traditions regarding burials and commemorating the dead.
Thanks, Tudor! Yeah, that Night Gallery episode messed with my mind. I can watch it now and the ending is a nice little twist. Glad you liked "Onryo." I haven't written any haunted doll stories that I can recall but I did work on a painting of one that I've never finished. I did have an idea for a story about a little girl cursed to turn into a doll, so maybe I'll come up with something.
While writing, do you ever ponder on what the readers would think?
I decided to google your novella about JTR and found out that it is actually vampire fiction, was not expecting that. Interesting.
Also liked the "about the author" part. "Besides coffee, she likes cemeteries, cats, and old abandoned buildings." Definition of a horror writer there. :)
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