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3 Reasons Why Horror has Cultural Value

3 Reasons Why Horror has Cultural Value

Posted on September 8, 2020September 9, 2020 by Richard

3 Reasons Why Horror has Cultural Value: Though they capture the imaginations of many, tales of the weird, the fantastical, and the horrifying tend to be regarded as lesser works of literature–assuming they’re considered literature at all.  

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An Unlikely Heritage

Posted on June 16, 2020 by Sherri Crandall

I am sharing a story about by grandfather who was a violinist and as a young man lived in China. The story connects his love of music and the country of China to my daughter whom we adopted from China and now plays his violin.

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Slither and Me by Jean Fineberg

Posted on June 6, 2020 by Richard

Jean Fineberg is a poet and jazz musician with an M.Ed. in Psychology. Her father left a new poem of his every on the table every morning.

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Among the Cattails by Christopher Seiji Berardino

Posted on May 3, 2020May 3, 2020 by Richard

The searchlights from the guard towers were yet not lit, and in the blue of twilight, the garden looked like a tiny village. Bridges of desert wood crossed a shallow pond, connecting sandy peninsulas that stuck out into the water like rounded chins. A squat gazebo sat stoically above a thicket of cattails, standing careful guard over the many rows of watermelon, daikon, and lettuce.

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This Is Just To Say (during Corona Virus) by Christopher Berardino

Posted on April 29, 2020April 29, 2020 by Richard

Christopher Berardino is a writer of Japanese-American descent from Orange County, CA. He received an MFA in Fiction from Cornell University in 2018. His work has previously appeared in Flash Fiction, Blind Corner Literary Magazine, The Copperfield Review, FLARE: The Flagler Review, and others.

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5 Things You can do to Build A Believable Character

Posted on April 29, 2020January 25, 2023 by Dawn Hurley

The main goal of a fiction writer is to create a character that the reader will become invested in, care about, and remember long after the story is finished. Charles Dickens’ Ebenezer Scrooge, Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre,

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Daily Writing Prompts

Posted on April 20, 2020December 2, 2023 by Richard

Welcome to our daily writing prompts page. These were started in our writers group over at Discord, and Kimberlee @Urania_theMuse, one of our members, took over the responsibilities and has been doing a great job. We will be adding new prompts each day. Please follow Kimberlee on Twitter and leave a comment below. If you…

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Maddie

Posted on April 4, 2020 by Zachary Bryant

A selection from a group of shorts I’m currently working one. My interest is compiling a collection of intense life defining moments through the lens of fiction. Intentionally abrupt, disruptive, and thought provoking in 1000 words or less.

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Art by Kez Bonser

Posted on April 2, 2020April 2, 2020 by Richard

As a “Distinction” graduate of Britain’s Nottingham School of Art (Adams Building, Lace Market, Nottingham, UK) Kez Bonser is experienced working with acrylic, pen/ink, 3D and iPad – in the service of story illustration, sketch art, formal portraiture, cartoon art, comic logos, nature art, etc.

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drought by Stella Vinitchi Radulescu

Posted on April 2, 2020April 2, 2020 by Richard

Stella Vinitchi Radulescu was born in Romania and left the country permanently in 1983, at the height of the communist regime. Writing poetry in three languages, she has published numerous books in the United States, France, Belgium, and Romania. Her last collection of poetry I scrape the window of nothingness – new & selected poems was published in…

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Top 5 Simple Daily Habits To Improve Your Writing Skills

Posted on March 15, 2020January 25, 2023 by Richard

Writing books, blog posts, articles, or even good captions for your photos on social media can be a difficult task. You need to get some inspiration, understand exactly what you’re going to write, and be able to wrap your ideas into a proper style. Some people think that writing is all about talent, but the truth is that writing is a skill.

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“I’ve Got An Agent Request: Now What?”

Posted on March 1, 2020April 28, 2020 by Desideria Mesa

Holy rusted metal, Batman! They want more. They really want more! It almost seems surreal, like a dream and a cruel joke all at once because what started as angst over waiting for a literary agent to respond to your query has suddenly turned into a mountain of anxiety

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Equinox

Posted on March 1, 2020March 1, 2020 by Richard Stuecker

  Equinox   At twilight fish sleep suspended — a cut glass bowl once held roses against mid-winter sun; dust defines a narrow hall, shadows slope down hardwood, half awake awaiting, darkness slips over the city, fog creeps hides stars, doorways disappear, misty streets slide, empty alleys, a cat cries, a door slams. Silence  …

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Art by Jack Fishburn

Posted on January 8, 2020 by Richard

‘ I was born In Armthorpe, England, and then moved to Saskatchewan when I was 10. I learned about the Zeno paradox and Benoit Mandelbrot and have since been enthralled by the beauty of fractals.

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Art by Reneta Isin

Posted on December 18, 2019December 19, 2019 by Richard

Reneta Isin is a professional artist from Lovech, Bulgaria, and a graduate of the National School of Applied Arts in Troyan. She mostly works with a palette of oil colors, specializing in portraiture

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Latest

  • P.G. Sundling on Science Fiction Quiz #1: “100% This quiz was a lot of fun. My favorite part of the quiz was realizing I’m 2 degrees of…” Jun 1, 22:05
  • Dawn on 50 Fantasy Tropes used in Fiction: “Thanks for this. Just discovered you today.” May 26, 15:31
  • Tamara Shaffer on 2025 50 Words of Horror Year Long Challenge: “The Awakening She came to me in a dream, a huge hood atop her cape, faceless, moving fluidly toward me,…” May 26, 12:12
  • Elizabeth Butler on HALFWAY TO HALLOWEEN: 50 Words of Horror Contest: “The heat, unbearable, craving something cold. She wasn’t imagining it, an ice-cream van appeared in front of her. Rushing over…” May 23, 14:05
  • Elizabeth Butler on HALFWAY TO HALLOWEEN: 50 Words of Horror Contest: “Fawna was trapped among the twisted trees. No matter where she ran, she lost her way. The wind howled around…” May 23, 14:05

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Blindsight by Julie Dexter a poem

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Read 1979, Hungary By Zary Fekete

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Damn if You Do…by R.S. Nelson

 

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