By Peter N. Dudar
I wrote SPIDERS after my father
died. Before Dad passed away, I was a
strict disciple to the notion that in the ghost story, ghosts are NEVER the
antagonist. I believed that the ghost’s
role in such tales was to be the catalyst to a mystery; that they were a loved
one to be avenged (Hamlet’s Father), or a tool to expose some terrible
wrongdoing (Straub’s Ghost Story). I’d always felt that a true haunting came
with the protagonist having to delve into deep psychological darkness in order
to uncover the truth to these hidden mysteries.
I felt that authors that used ghosts as antagonists were doing the genre
an injustice, as they were reducing the ghost to the same realm as the vampire,
zombie, and serial killer (and I can recall with great clarity and frustration
an argument I had with a colleague that Freddy Krueger of the A Nightmare on Elm Street series was NOT
a ghost, although nowadays I’m not so sure I was correct). Beyond that, both literature and Hollywood
were producing new, scary works that also prescribed to this opposing view of
ghosts as antagonist. Joe Hill’s Heart Shaped Box was a significant
critical success, with the ghost of Craddock McDermott stalking the aged rocker
Jude Coyne and his girlfriend Georgia.
The film world was turned upside-down with Japan’s image-laden Ringu (The Ring) and Ju-on (The Grudge), both of which featured
ghosts that not only had mysteries, but also had an insatiable lust to torment
the living. And a tidal wave of knock-offs came crashing behind them.
I don’t consider this to be a bad
thing. Far from it; I found the ghost
story to be exciting again. But not just
the ghost story in itself, I found the new surge of fan appreciation to be
invigorating and inspiring. Heart Shaped Box was not just an
intense, break-neck story…it was an homage to the myth and legend of rock ‘n
roll. The Japanese films and their
Americanized reboots were steeped in dark tone and atmosphere and upsetting
imagery. Even the faux-documentary films
like Paranormal Activity were
scare-inducing thrill rides. It was just
that I was a stubborn cuss that wasn’t ready to change my perspective about
what I thought I knew best.
WHERE SPIDERS FEAR TO SPIN has a
ghostly antagonist. I’d be lying if I
didn’t say that my perspective on the ghost story changed after my own father’s
death. After all, the ghost of Andrew
Mills IS a father and IS out for his own personal revenge, rather than
expecting his daughter Theresa to solve any mysteries and avenge him so that he
can rest in peace. The book is, by
extension, my own personal coming to terms with my father’s death, even if my
Dad’s passing has absolutely nothing in common with Andy Mills. With this story, I wanted to take on a fresh
perspective…something I had not examined before but needed to do so to cope
with my own loss. This book is chock
full of dark, disturbing imagery and tone.
It revolves internally with death and afterlife and the shadowy spaces
in between. And at its core is a
redemption tale, which continues to fascinate me. I think my father would have liked it.
And therein lays the key to the
ghost story; that perspectives change.
Even though children will always thrill and shriek at campfire ghost
stories, even though horror films will find new ways to expose supernatural
occurrences, even though we horror writers will invent new characters to haunt
and be haunted, our understanding of death and how we feel about it will never
be satisfied. Ghosts were not meant to
be metaphors like their monstrous brethren of vampire, zombie, and serial killer. Ghosts are intimate reminders of our own
mortality. Ghosts are US in the future
tense, in a future that is unpredictable within a landscape of darkness and
uncertainty. Ghosts are the conflicts we
create for ourselves when we turn off the lights and imagine what death will
hold for us.
…and in the darkness, all things
are scary.
_______________________________________________________________
Peter N. Dudar is the
Bram Stoker Award-nominated author of A
Requiem For Dead Flies, Dolly and Other
Stories, The Angel
of Death, and Blood
Cult of the Booby Farmers. His short fiction can be found in numerous anthologies
and online fiction sites. He currently lives in Lisbon Falls, Maine,
where he continues to write fiction, a film review column for CinemaKnifeFight.com, and his own personal blog, "Dead By Friday", on
WordPress. Dudar is a member of the New England Horror Writers, and hosts
a writers group called The Tuesday Mayhem Society. His latest book, Where
Spiders Fear To Spin, will be released on June 1st through Books and
Boos Press.
No comments:
Post a Comment