Friday, June 4, 2021

HORROR, TERROR -- WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE?


If you've yet to read anything by Robert Aickman (1914-1981), you are missing out on some of the best supernatural tales ever written. Aickman, who preferred to call his work "strange stories" rather than horror, is widely recognized as a master in the field.

This article from Literary Hub and the Podcast that accompanies it (see link below), discusses Aickman's style and the subtleties between "horror" and "terror".


How Robert Aickman’s Stories Illuminate the Difference Between Horror and Terror
Kathleen Rooney Guests on the Lit Century Podcast with Catherine Nichols and Elisa Gabbert

Combining literary analysis with an in-depth look at historical context, hosts Sandra Newman and Catherine Nichols choose one book for each year of the 20th century, and—along with special guests—will take a deep dive into a hundred years of literature.

In this episode, novelist and poet Kathleen Rooney joins hosts Catherine Nichols and Elisa Gabbert to discuss Robert Aickman’s 1988 collection of stories The Wine-Dark Sea, with particular focus on the title story and the uncanny dollhouse story “The Inner Room.” Aickman’s work is often characterized as horror fiction, but he preferred the term “strange stories.” His stories take the reader imperceptibly across the gauzy line between mundane reality and surreal terror. As one of his characters says, “Dreams are misleading because they make life seem real.”

From the episode:

Kathleen Rooney: The Peter Straub introduction is so good, to the point where it would make sense to try to track it down just to read it. But he makes the comparison in it to Clive Barker and sort of says Clive Barker, one of our contemporary horror writers who’s still living in the 80s and very popular, has this great story called “In the Hills, the Cities,” and Straube is saying that Barker is almost like an inheritor or someone who would really appreciate what Aickman is doing. And I was surprised by that because to me, Barker seems a lot more overt. But I went and tracked down “In the Hills, the Cities” to read it, and I found it really disappointing because it didn’t have that subtlety and it didn’t have that slippage; it just signposted the horrifying elements so much.

The difference between horror and terror—it’s weird to get into labels, and I know Aickman really hated being called a horror writer; he bristled at that and was like, no, I write strange stories, and I think he’s right, he’s not just being a hairsplitter. Because terror is the feeling of dread and anticipation that precedes a horrifying experience, and then horror is the feeling of revulsion that typically follows the frightening thing. And to me, reading the Barker right after the Aickman, because Peter Straub told me to, made me realize Barker is for sure a horror writer; he dwells in the spectacle of the revolting thing, whereas Aickman definitely is more in the terror/strange zone where you feel so unsettled for so long before you even see anything horrifying, if you ever do.

***

Kathleen Rooney is the author of nine books of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Her most recent novel is Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey. She is also the author of the national bestseller Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk and The Listening Room: A Novel of Georgette and Loulou Magritte. She is also a founding editor of Rose Metal Press, a nonprofit publisher of literary work in hybrid genres, and a founding member of Poems While You Wait.

Elisa Gabbert is the author of five collections of poetry, essays, and criticism: The Unreality of Memory & Other Essays, out now from FSG Originals and Atlantic UK; The Word Pretty (Black Ocean, 2018); L’Heure Bleue, or the Judy Poems (Black Ocean, 2016); The Self Unstable (Black Ocean, 2013); and The French Exit (Birds LLC, 2010). The Unreality of Memory and The Word Pretty were both named a New York Times Editors’ Choice, and The Self Unstable was chosen by the New Yorker as one of the best books of 2013. She writes a regular poetry column for the New York Times, and her work has appeared in Harper’s, The New Yorker, the New York Times Magazine and Book Review, the New York Review of Books, the Guardian Long Read, the London Review of Books, A Public Space, the Paris Review Daily, American Poetry Review, and many other venues.

Catherine Nichols is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in Jezebel and The Seattle Review, among others. She lives in Boston.

Click HERE for the link to the Podcast, "The Wine Dark Sea".

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