Author: Lauren McMenemy

Trembling With Fear 5-7-23

Hello, children of the dark. It’s going to be short this week, because I am mourning my balance. Not that I ever had any. Clumsy me managed to fall down the *entire staircase* at home last week, just as you were reading your weekly dose of darkness from TWF. Seven hours in A&E (E.R. for our American friends) later, it turns out I have a broken ankle, as well as a broken foot bone and a severely bruised knee (and ego). I’ve been stuck on the couch 24/7 ever since. 

Everyone says to me: “Hey! What a great opportunity for creative reflection and getting some writing done!” Truth is, this just adds pressure, making me think of all the things I’m not doing that I “should” be. Truth is, my focus right now is on healing, at least to a point where my ankle isn’t the size of Jupiter and throbbing madly. 

But I’m always here for you, children of the dark. Let’s get on with this week’s offerings.

In our short story, Donna JW Munro sees dead people. This is followed by three delicious quick bites:

  • Steven Holding goes on a helluva trip,
  • Hannah Foster investigates a supernatural serial killer, and
  • David Turnbull does some puppy training.

Over to you, Stuart.



Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

Progress is slowly being made on the next set of ‘Trembling With Fear’ print books, and the website move to the new host is in the works. We were going to try and launch the new layout in conjunction with the new host but I don’t believe that is going to happen. More info on that soon! 

Last week, we added a link to our Shadowed Realms: The 2022 Indie Dark Fiction Anthology under ‘Trembling With Fear’ in our menu above. For those unfamiliar with the anthology, in it, we’re looking for the best 1,000-9,000 word dark fiction published in semipro and token-paying markets in 2022! This reprint anthology will be paying 1 cent per word, and we’re very excited to start taking a look at your work!

For those looking to support the site, we’re always open Ko-Fi donations and always have our Patreon going.

As always, I hope you had a great weekend.

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

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Trembling With Fear 4-28-23

Hello, children of the dark. We’re back with this rare fifth instalment of Trembling With Fear in a single month. Gotta love it when the calendar does those weird things. Tomorrow it shall be May – May! Already! (I’m becoming a broken record, I know) – and for those in the Celtic world, tomorrow (1 May) is in fact Beltane, the Gaelic May Day Festival. It’s also the midpoint between the spring equinox and the summer solstice in the northern hemisphere, and a time of celebration for many pagans. This is the time for folk horror stories, too, when the land is blooming and getting ready to reveal its fruits. What story seeds does that conjure for you?

And as we’re speaking of conjuring from seeds, my cold, dead heart has been full of joy this last week or so. I know it’s unseemingly to toot our own trumpets, especially in public, but I’ve enjoyed seeing so many people who’ve attended my drabble workshops around the place then go on to submit to us here at TWF towers. I hadn’t realised how many were out there, actually taking my ramblings as a jumping off point, and bearing such dark and delicious fruit. We have one such drabble this week, actually, and there were quite a few in the backlog of submissions we had after the gremlin had a field day in our back office systems. It really does make me happy to know that you’re all out there, creating, drawing life from the world and beyond, and letting that flow through your fingers to make all sorts of menace for these pages. Keep it up, children of the dark. I always want more.

(And, hey, in the spirit of trumpet-tooting, hit me up on the socials if you want to know more about forthcoming workshops and suchlike.)

For now, though, let’s stroll through this week’s menu, which features a real variety of tales for your delectation. Our short story sees Ceferino Ruiz gets to know his neighbour better – or does he? This is followed by three delicious quick bites:

  • Mike Rader has a fungus problem,
  • K.L. Bexon channels a hopeless vampire, and
  • Kellee Kranendonk undergoes the surgical experience no one wants.

Over to you, Stuart.

Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

Finishing my current MBA class, working on sorting out getting into a course this summer, a ton of meetings, and a Take Your Kid to Work Day has had me slammed. Sorry, nothing fun to say this week!

We’ve added a link to our Shadowed Realms: The 2022 Indie Dark Fiction Anthology under ‘Trembling With Fear’ in our menu above. For those unfamiliar with the anthology, in it, we’re looking for the best 1,000-9,000 word dark fiction published in semipro and token-paying markets in 2022! This reprint anthology will be paying 1 cent per word, and we’re very excited to start taking a look at your work!

For those looking to support the site, we’re always open Ko-Fi donations and always have our Patreon going.

As always, I hope you had a great weekend.

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

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Trembling With Fear 4-23-23

Hello, children of the dark. How are these days treating you? How’s your creative impulse? 

I ask for a reason: did you know there’s more than these weekly editions under the TWF banner? They did take a small sabbatical in the second half of last year (for reasons of me not understanding my remit properly; sorry!), but they are back in a big way and we’re looking for more.

I am, of course, talking about the Unholy Trinity and the Serial sections of our humble publication. Permit me to give you a brief lowdown (and you can also find details here on our submissions page).

The Unholy Trinity is three drabbles that work as stand-alone stories, but can also be tied together to tell something larger. This tie could be theme, it could be plot, it could be character – but the three stories must work both alone and together. 

Then we have the Serials, which are longer stories that can be broken up and published over the course of several weeks. For the Serials, your tales can go up to 15,000 words – but they must be able to logically break into 4-10 instalments of 1000-1500 words in length. And if serialising was good enough for Dickens’ work… 

Anyways, those two sections are led by the wonderful Shalini Bethala, who would love to see the Horror Tree inbox flooded with new works to keep her Brooklyn nights busy. What have you got? How’s that creative impulse now?

In the meantime, we’re still working our way through those previously-trapped drabbles, so bear with us and enjoy this week’s offerings as you wait.

In this week’s menu, Greta T Bates is here to break your heart. This is followed by three delicious quick bites:

  • Christopher Blinn goes to battle,
  • Stéphane G Perahim is keeping an eye on her fitness, and
  • Ron Capshaw has a hunting warning for us all.

Over to you, Stuart.

Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

This is the last full week of my current MBA class so hopefully, next week I’ll be able to get a few things done if my brain doesn’t take a break on me.

And while we had progress last week on the new layout, there is nothing to report this week. *twitches*

Moving on. We’re catching up on TWF and the anthology and getting ever closer to this year’s release. No ETA quite yet.

Just as a reminder, we’re taking submissions to a new Horror Tree anthology titled Shadowed Realms: The 2022 Indie Dark Fiction Anthology. In it, we’re looking for the best 1,000-9,000 word dark fiction published in semipro and token-paying markets in 2022! This reprint anthology will be paying 1 cent per word, and we’re very excited to start taking a look at your work!

For those looking to support the site, we’re always open Ko-Fi donations and always have our Patreon going.

As always, I hope you had a great weekend.

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

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Trembling With Fear 4-16-23

Hello children of the dark. We’ve had a real-world horror story unfolding in our home this week… yes, we’ve got mice. Somewhere. In the walls, maybe. Though there is evidence of them elsewhere. Tiny bite marks. Tiny specks of poo.

So we spent our long weekend (we get a four-day weekend for Easter on this side of the pond) clearing *stuff*. The other half thankfully did all the mucky jobs; it brought him face-to-face with some of our tiny furry friends, who have been ethically caught and released in the local woodland. Maybe we’ve got them all; we’re not sure. I might’ve just heard a squeak behind me. 

But it also meant I had to – god forbid – clear out my piles of books. I don’t like getting rid of stuff at the best of times, but my books are precious. I’ve tried to do e-readers but I just need the paper in my hands for the full experience, y’know? At least our local charity store has been gifted a stack of mid-2000s Lonely Planet guides and all of those books I got when I was trying to be literary but realised I would always be a spooky girl at heart.

It’ll probably do me good. If nothing else, there’s more space for new stories now! (Sorry, mum.)

In the meantime, we’ve still got all those trapped drabbles to review, so bear with us and enjoy this week’s offerings as you wait.

In this week’s menu, Austin Mooney waxes lyrical with a very gross bit of body horror. This is followed by three delicious quick bites:

  • C.D. Kester has some family troubles,
  • Lauren Carter shows great devotion, and
  • Mike Rader takes faith to new heights.

Finally, if you had a dark speculative story published in a semi-pro or token paying market in 2022 then submit it to Horror Tree‘s new indie dark fiction anthology! Because why should the “best of” anthology fun be confined to the pros? Get the details here.

Over to you, Stuart.

Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

Some exciting news on the new website front. We’re making progress once more! As of the time of writing this post, I was able to give the new layout a quick demo that works fantastic speed-wise on my desktop, laptop, and mobile. Now, we’re going through our first round of actual edits and after that I’m going to be getting some feedback from some of our team. Fingers crossed this means that we’ll have a real update for you soon! 

Just as a reminder, we’re taking submissions to a new Horror Tree anthology titled Shadowed Realms: The 2022 Indie Dark Fiction Anthology. In it, we’re looking for the best 1,000-9,000 word dark fiction published in semipro and token-paying markets in 2022! This reprint anthology will be paying 1 cent per word, and we’re very excited to start taking a look at your work!

For those looking to support the site, we’re always open Ko-Fi donations and always have our Patreon going.

As always, I hope you had a great weekend.

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

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Trembling With Fear 4-9-23

So, dear children of the dark, I have a confession to make. Regular readers will know of my tendency towards begging for drabbles. Yes, begging. I tried to cloak it in all manner of things, but let’s call a spade a spade. Truth is, we were running super short on drabbles; we had a few emails trickling in but it had been months since we had a regular run.

Turns out there was a reason. It’s our bad.

Thank you to the drabbler who poked me to ask if I’d received the submission, because that resulted in an investigation that revealed the darkest of worst nightmares for a digital publication: the well-oiled machine had come unstuck, and anything submitted via the website was not getting through to us in the system. Since, like, the end of January. (I *knew* it must’ve been quiet for a reason!)

All hail hero Stuart, who spent his Saturday poking around in the backrooms of Horror Tree HQ and managed to find the issue: a plug-in that had turned itself off. Rather than cry “sabotage!”, he got to work removing the clogs and all the emails came flooding in. And, embarrassingly, while I had been sitting here begging you all to submit drabbles, there were actually more than 70 waiting for us in the digital ether. 

So, our most humble apologies. Occasionally we get a tech gremlin in the process that sends submissions from the website, through the various turns, until it reaches my email. But never have we had a wholesale clog that stopped the machine entirely. On behalf of the TWF team, I thank submitters for their patience, as ever. You’re all the best. 

Let’s never speak of this again, yes?

Over to this week’s menu, Sam Lesek has something short for you this week but it truly packs a punch. This is followed by three delicious quick bites:

  • Joshua Gage takes to the haunted high seas,
  • M.S. Martinez makes a discovery on a desolate beach, and
  • Robert Allen Lupton brings a fairy tale.

As a final word: did you see the amazing new anthology that Stuart and Holley Cornetto are putting together? If you had an awesome dark story published in a semi-pro or token paying market in 2022 then submit it to Horror Tree‘s new indie dark fiction anthology! Because why should the “best of” anthology fun be confined to the pros? Get the details here.

Over to you, boss.

Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

So. Yes. As we’ve been getting a TON of e-mails sent in directly, it hadn’t been clear that our contact form e-mails hadn’t come through. We’re going to be busy combing through these (though are still open to drabbles in the meantime! I just can’t promise a fast turn around.) 

Just as a reminder, we’re taking submissions to a new Horror Tree anthology titled Shadowed Realms: The 2022 Indie Dark Fiction Anthology. In it, we’re looking for the best 1,000-9,000 word dark fiction published in semipro and token-paying markets in 2022! This reprint anthology will be paying 1 cent per word, and we’re very excited to start taking a look at your work!

We hit over 100 followers on Medium! THANK YOU SO MUCH TO EVERYONE who gave us a follow! I won’t be begging you on this for awhile. 🙂 

For those looking to support the site, we’re always open Ko-Fi donations and always have our Patreon going.

As always, I hope you had a great weekend.

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

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Spec Fic for Newbies: Why Sub-Genres Matter

Spec Fic for Newbies: Why Sub-Genres Matter

By Lauren McMenemy

 

Genre is just a marketing construct, right? It’s not helpful, just a way to direct booksellers on which shelf to put the novel on? Well, no – especially not if you’re in the world of speculative fiction. What would you say to a splatterpunk writer whose book was put next to the latest YA paranormal romance? Sparkley vampires aside, speculative fiction is so far-reaching that its many varied subgenres can be more help than hindrance to all involved in this world.

 

Which is why Tiffani Angus and Val Nolan have brought us Spec Fic for Newbies: A Beginner’s Guide to Writing Subgenres of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror, which is now out on Luna Press Publishing. Fear not the academic-sounding title and the fact it was written by current and former academics; this is a fun trek through the history, the tropes, the necessities and the WTFs of 30 spec fic subgenres. It’s designed as a welcoming embrace for both new and seasoned spec fic writers looking to learn a little more about what’s out there in this wide world (and beyond).

 

To celebrate the book’s release, I had an equally fun chat with the authors over Zoom, which you can watch over on Horror Tree’s YouTube channel. Or, read the transcript below. (Thanks to otter.ai for transcribing so I didn’t have to; this has been edited for clarity.)

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Trembling With Fear 4-2-23

Hello, children of the dark. Insert obligatory “how is it April already” and/or “daylight savings sucks/is the best” reference in here. I hope those who have recently moved clocks forward are starting to settle into the lighter nights, and those who have or are moving them back (I think Aussies and Kiwis did it last night?) haven’t had too much chaos. Take this as a reminder to check the time before you need to head to work lest you turn up an hour early (or late!).

You might be able to tell from that weird opening paragraph that my brain is mush. Is it because I’m still recovering from taking part in the London Writers Salon’s 24-hour writing marathon last weekend? (And thanks to those readers who joined in! I saw you! And to our own Stuart for helping me host an hour of it – he dealt with our manic energy rather well.) Or is it just my ongoing sleep and health troubles? I won’t bore you with the details, but if you’re exhausted, burned out, not sure how you’ll keep functioning, you have my empathy this week and all weeks. 

I’ve been doing some essential admin behind the scenes on TWF, and we still have a lot of short stories awaiting publication so I’m sorry we can’t yet re-open to those subs yet unless Stuart finds a magic pot somewhere. We are always open to drabbles though, and have an insatiable appetite for them. I know I’m a bit of a broken record on this, but if you’re nervous about submitting to publications then our drabble call-outs are a good way to test the waters. I promise we’re kind and will give you honest and constructive feedback on your work.

Speaking of submissions, did you see the amazing new anthology that Stuart and Holley Cornetto are putting together? If you had an awesome dark story published in a semi-pro or token paying market in 2022 then submit it to Horror Tree‘s new indie dark fiction anthology! Because why should the “best of” anthology fun be confined to the pros? Get the details here.

As for this week’s menu, we’re embracing the creature feature. Alli Drust’s gorgeous short story tracks a developing relationship with a creepy crawler. This is followed by three delicious quick bites:

  • Christina Nordlander contemplates the march of time,
  • Nic Dracas blows it all up, and
  • Cassandra Vaillancourt discovers black gold.

Before you go, I wouldn’t be doing my friend duty if I didn’t point you in the direction of Matthew Ducharme’s new regular series for the ‘Tree about writing fantasy. His second episode, which you can read here, delves into the concept of magic.

Over to you, Stuart.

Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

We’re currently actively seeking new drabbles for Trembling With Fear as we’re getting a bit low. I’m still trying to figure out if we can open up our short stories again but it, like everything else budget related, is being held up by our website redesign. Hopefully, news there soon. 

Just as a reminder, we’re taking submissions to a new Horror Tree anthology titled Shadowed Realms: The 2022 Indie Dark Fiction Anthology. In it, we’re looking for the best 1,000-9,000 word dark fiction published in semipro and token-paying markets in 2022! This reprint anthology will be paying 1 cent per word, and we’re very excited to start taking a look at your work!

At the time of writing this post, we’re under 5 followers on Medium from 100 and would really love to hit the triple digits; please give us a follow! Once we hit that number, I’ll stop harassing you all for a bit 🙂

For those looking to support the site, we’re always open Ko-Fi donations and always have our Patreon going.

As always, I hope you had a great weekend.

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

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Trembling With Fear 3-26-23

Hello, children of the dark – well, it’s not so dark now, is it? Here in the northern hemisphere we celebrated the Spring (or Vernal) Equinox this week, marking the beginning of longer days as we head into summer. Nature is coming alive, the sun is gaining in strength. It’s a promise of much light to come. 

We don’t often associate the darkly speculative with daylight, do we? Midsommar, obviously, was an exception, but I’m curious – what are your favourite horror or dark fantasy stories set mainly in the light? Let me know in the comments below, or tag HorrorTree on your favourite social media platform (there are honestly too many now and you’re all on different ones to tell you to head to the bin fire that is Twitter).

This week’s menu is traditional fare, with plenty of dark corners and dark thoughts. We do start with a breath of fresh air from Kevin M. Folliard as he tracks the life of a romance. This is followed by three delicious quick bites:

  • Kellee Kranendonk is hiding under the stairs,
  • Catherine Berry tries to forget, and
  • Alejandro Gonzales has an unfortunate medical problem.

And finally: please send us more drabbles. Our machine is hungry. They don’t even have to be equinox themed! Delve into those dark minds and unearth 100 words exactly of your deepest fears.

Over to you, Stuart. 

Lauren McMenemy

Editor, Trembling With Fear

I’m still loving our new Trembling With Fear layout, and I hope that you are too!

By the time you’re reading this, the announcement has happened! Thanks to an idea from Holley Cornetto, she and I are taking submissions to a new Horror Tree anthology titled Shadowed Realms: The 2022 Indie Dark Fiction Anthology. In it, we’re looking for the best 1,000-9,000 word dark fiction published in semipro and token-paying markets in 2022! This reprint anthology will be paying 1 cent per word, and we’re very excited to start taking a look at your work! 

At the time of writing this post, we’re 14 followers on Medium from 100 and would really love to hit the triple digits; please give us a follow! Once we hit that number, I’ll stop harassing you all for a bit 🙂

For those looking to support the site, we’re always open Ko-Fi donations and always have our Patreon going.

As always, I hope you had a great weekend.

Stuart Conover

Editor, Horror Tree

(more…)