Horror/Scary: March 09, 2011 Issue [#4272]
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Horror/Scary


 This week: All The Time In The World
  Edited by: W.D.Wilcox Author IconMail Icon
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Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

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Letter from the editor


Time




I wasted time, and now doth time waste me.
-Shakespeare (1564-1616)



There was a time when I believed that Time did nothing more than age me, wear me down like the pounding waves erode a cliffside. I found myself barely conscious of the people and things around me; they were like figures standing at the fringes of a dream.

But now I realize that with age also comes wisdom, and Time is but the smithy that hammers us into what we were intended to be. We need Time to grow.

And above all else, time allows us to heal.

Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore,
So do our minutes hasten to their end.

-Shakespeare (1564-1616)

In writing, I have discovered how to slow Time down, how to make each mere moment, minute, second, stretch into infinity. When I apply this to my life, I begin to appreciate every instant, as if Time itself stood still and I was encased within its cocoon, able to see everything unfolding before my very eyes.

Time is but the stream I go fishing in.
-Thoreau (1817-1862)

The secret is this . . .

To slow down Time we must do the opposite of how we perceive it. We must speed it up, create urgency.

A dark outline of a man materialized in the doorway, rushing into the room and approaching fast behind her. She never saw him coming. In an instant, the stranger had lowered his shoulder and crashed into her. She fell hard against the table. Dishes clattered across the room. The candle toppled to the floor, still burning.

Notice the short choppy sentences at the end. You can feel the events happening very fast, yet every detail is described.

The urgency is created by the writer: the 'rushing', the 'approaching fast', the 'in an instant', are all techniques used to make the reader believe things are spiraling out of control, yet in reality, the writer is taking his time to describe each minor detail.

It is an illusion, smoke and mirrors. It is how we perceive extreme danger when we are caught in its grasp: bit by bit, frame by frame. Time has slowed down.

Shakespeare said it best:

Time is the king of men;
he is both their parent,
and he is their grave,
and gives them what he will,
not what they crave.


Until next TIME,


billwilcox



Editor's Picks

Let's Do The TIME Warp Again!


 Time's Up Open in new Window. (13+)
"Can You Finish This Puzzle Before Time's Up?"
#861348 by Maeven Author IconMail Icon

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#303750 by Not Available.

 Will of the Watch Part One Open in new Window. (18+)
The first in a chilling series about a serial killer who travels through time
#1350070 by Adam P. Rothstein Author IconMail Icon

 Sixty Seconds Open in new Window. (13+)
A family on a road trip discovers that a lot can happen in one minute.
#611824 by Eliory Author IconMail Icon

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#798716 by Not Available.

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#548363 by Not Available.

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#1017037 by Not Available.

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The Funeral Open in new Window. (13+)
A twelve year old loses faith in his father after the tragic death of his mother
#1171144 by W.D.Wilcox Author IconMail Icon

 
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Ask & Answer

DEAD LETTERS


Cassie Kat Author Icon
Meows:
Bill, your newsletters are the greatest, and this one was no exception. I'm fascinated by how words can convey an idea (I mean, isn't that part of what makes writing so fantastic?*Wink* ), and it hadn't occurred to me how just by using a stronger verb can invoke fear in the reader.


kristiana
Squeaks:
A movie I've seen lately depicts a serial killer who cuts the tongues from his victims and collects them in a quest for silence. A book I've enjoyed, the main character is a split personality who thinks his other side is a serial killer, but he is actually capturing and killing serial killers who are demons while he struggles with his own inner termoil....
I was just wondering, is there a trend toward serial killer stories?

Kristy,
There have always been serial killers, and there always will be. The question is, will the one you write about be the one to catch your reader's imagination, or will you settle for just the same-o-same-o serial killer?


Mr. Quill Author Icon
QuizzicallyPonders:
I have always been partial to the plain old simple crazy cannibals living in the place the group of teenage college coeds in teh mini van blew a tire at...it's one thing(usually the expected thing in most horror stories) to die horribly at the hands of a gang of brain eating zombies, but, being eaten alive by the hot chick you were trying to bang all semester(who suggested taking the trip to begin with) adds just a little more of a suprising jolt of brutality...

Mr. Quill,
You're a sick, sick man.*Laugh*



Kotaro Author Icon
BoneDiggers:
Thanks for the reminder, Bill. I went back to my story and found a couple of places for stronger verbs. *Thumbsup*


Ẃeβ࿚ẂỉԎḈĥ Author Icon
Conjures:
Verbs that paint horrible pictures--essential for a horror story! Great Newsletter, Bill.
Thanks for the vivid imagery, I think. Except, now I feel that an orifice check is in order!*Smirk* (spiders, centipedes, beetles and worms--OH MY!) On the bright side, I could make a potion out of them and do some WW magic.*Wink*
*Cool*
-WW

Thanks Witchypoo, but you've already put a spell on me.*Kiss*


Nomar Knight Author Icon
Jousts:
Awesome newsletter! I always enjoy a good lesson on imagery. Yes, power verbs rock! *Thumbsup*


SHERRI GIBSON Author Icon
TrysToGetOnMyGoodSide:
As always, your newsletter is great, Bill. You pointed out some crucial things writers should know about penning a horror story. Thank you for including my story as one of your picks this week. Coming from a superb writer like you, I was honored.




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