Or: What I
have learned about scary stories in the three years of Schattenspiele.
First off a
rhethorical question: What do an erotic story and a scary story have in common?
Answer: What you don´t see is what´s the most interesting. In other words:
Tension and build-up, with the goal being the best possible stimulation. While
shocking moments are important, they should be used sparingly, even if that
does not seem logical at first. But I´ll elaborate.
There are different kinds of fear, let´s just
put them into three categories for now:
Unsettling:
Something is off, something is alarming or even just uncomfortable. You might
not be able to put your finger on it, but it´s there (probably) and it´s
haunting. It might or might not be enough to get your imagination starting.
Scary: You
know that something is there and it´s out to get you. It´s not here yet,
though, but you know that it´s going to come, inevitably and with no or only a
small hope of avoiding it. And when it happens, it´s gonna be BAD.
Shocking: It
is there, immediate, no distance in between and the self loses itself for a moment
in a pure, overwhelming moment of fear. Maybe it came out of the blue, maybe
there was a build-up, but the result was even worse or something entirely
different, but equally terrifying as what was expected.
Now what an
author might want at the end of the tale is “shocking”, but what they really
aspire most of the time is “unsettling” or “scary”. Why? Because while shock is
indeed the most intense feeling, it´s over soon. I bet every one of us has
witnessed a jump scare in our lives. Yes, it´s bad, but when it´s over, it´s
over and a sweet release of endorphin ensures us that we are indeed still
alive. Shock alone only releases tension, is what I want to say. You need
context to make it last. You want to make it last. And yes, horror authors have to be sadists. Actually,
most authors have to be sadists. Comes with the territory.
What you
need to prepare a good scare is a “dark hallway”. A “dark hallway” is something
we all encounter in our daily lives that unsettles us irrationally, meaning
that we cannot logically explain why it unsettles us. We can find explanations,
but since the phenomenon is in itself harmless, it stays irrational. It needs to be relateable. So, for example, if you as an author are scared of buttons it´s not enough to show a button on every page to make someone uncomfortable, since most people aren´t. You need to find the root of your fear and try to convey it to the person reading your story to feel with you. A dark hallway on the other hand has the advantage that it tends to unsettle most people.
This is
something you can build upon, in many different ways, making the unsettling
scary. A dark hallway, to pick up the example again, is a good place for an
attacker to hide. Even if the hallway seems empty, since we cannot see
completely, the fear still remains. One possibility is to show or hint at an attacker
that actually exists, could be a murderer roaming the house or something
supernatural. Even better if said supernatural attacker somehow utilizes the
fact that it cannot be seen or uses shadows.
For example: There is a
monster in the house that can only move in the dark. Our protagonist sees said
dark hallway, unsure if it is there, the eyes fixated on the dark spot where he
thinks it might be. He knows that it can´t move forward any further, the light
prevents it and his hand is on the switch. But then a small hand-like blurry
thing moves over the wall, it seems to sizzle in the light and a faint scream
is heard. It moves towards the light bulb and finally crushes it. In the next pages
the protagonist retreats further and further into the house in a battle of wits
that might or might not be hopeless while said monster is out to get him.
The shock
element would be the sight of said monster, it might be in the beginning of the
story to help build up tension or in the end as a grand finale, in any way it
should be a sight that neither the protagonist nor the reader wants to see
again.
And that is
how I build up moments in horror stories. Of course I don´t always stick to
this, some stories don´t need shock moments at all, some just live off of them,
also it really depends on what you understand as unsettling, scary or shocking,
of course. But I hope I was able to bring you a bit of insight into how this
can work.
- Nekromantenhase
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