Archive for August, 2008

Werewolves! (Not) Your Friends!

Posted on August 15th, 2008 by D. Maskull in Monsters

Werewolves, werewolves werewolves. No, I’m not keyword-stuffing - I’m speaking in a condescending tone to werewolves everywhere. Why do you play with our hearts so? Why do you tease us with your spectacular supernatural abilities, only to rip our eyeballs out and eat our throats when we get too close? We humans are just human, after all.

But I guess that means you….are just werewolf. And I thought we could make it.

So I got a Plush Werewolf to sleep with at night.

And I even made friends with other weirdos who like plush werwolves. (It’s becoming a national craze! Like being a flapper or hula-hooping!)

Now, I need a good plush vampire to go along with him…because vampires also rule.

Monster Trivia: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

Posted on August 12th, 2008 by Morticia Maskull in Monsters

An 1886 horror classic was Robert Louis Stevenson’s short novel The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Robert Louis Stevenson was already an established author, but had not delved into the realm of horror stories previously. (Instead he was known for novels like Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and A Child’s Garden of Verses.) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was quite a departure from his other works. This unique novel, which was so far ahead of it’s time, made Stevenson famous around the world.

The story is based on the true tale of Deacon William Brodie, a respected gentleman of Edinburgh whose life ended swinging from the gallows. By day, Deacon Brodie was one of the finest architects and craftsmen of Scotland, but by night, he led a band of thieves that prowled the streets at night.

While Deacon Brodie was the inspiration for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Stevenson penned the novel in about 3 days after having a very vivid dream of such a being: a man with 2 different and opposing personalities. Dr. Jekyll was an upstanding citizen, a conservative chemist born to wealth who invented a potion that allowed his alter-ego to come out in full-force. Mr. Hyde was a vile scoundrel who sought thrills in cruel and criminal activities. Soon Mr. Hyde becomes the dominant personality and Dr. Jekyll only a shadow.

Robert Louis Stevenson was a master story teller. In spite of his life-long tuberculosis illness, he managed to travel the world, penning classic works we still enjoy today. He was a dreamer in the literal sense, attributing many of his ideas to dreams he had which were given to him by his own “brownies” or “the Little People” who lived in his brain and conjured up ideas while he slept.

Eerie Magazine Cover of the Day

Posted on August 6th, 2008 by D. Maskull in Monster Magazines

Eerie Magazine Cover of the Day

Monster Trivia: Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus

Posted on August 4th, 2008 by Morticia Maskull in Monsters, Scary Stuff

Monsters are fascinating. The idea of monsters has been around since the beginning of mankind and we continue to think up new and more terrifying monsters. But where did they come from? Who thought up these beings made to scare us? Well, some creatures are based on folklore, some to explain the unexplainable, and some purposely made just to scare us.

Frankenstein is one such monster.

First, please be aware (if you have not read the gothic novel by Mary Shelley, first published in 1818) that the name Frankenstein refers to the mad scientist who created the re-animated monster. In the book, the creature is never given a name. But today most of us refer to the creature as Frankenstein.

Mary Shelley grew up surrounded by literature and books: her father owned a bookstore where authors and intellectuals converged and Mary was able to meet many of the writers of her day. Plus, both her parents were writers as well. When she was 16, she fell in love and ran off with a writer, Percy Shelley. They traveled much and Mary even wrote her first work based upon her travels.

One cold evening, while they were with friends Lord Bryon, John William Polidori, and Claire Clairmont near Geneva, Switzerland telling ghost stories, the idea came about for each of them to write a scary story to frighten the others. That night Mary had trouble thinking of what to write but then the idea came to her, probably inspired by recent scientific and medical breakthroughs of the time, the Industrial Revolution, and the contemporary interest in alchemy.

She began writing the story and when her husband read it, he encouraged her to write a full novel. She did. And it was an instant success. She was 19 years old at the time.

If you have not yet read Frankenstein, you should. The story is compelling and poses some interesting comparisons between conflicts in the story and in real life. It’s not just a good story that spawned an entire genre of horror stories, but a piece of literature that deserves a deeper analysis.

Regardless of the background of how Frankenstein came to be, he continues to be a central horror figure in our culture - and rightfully so.

Eerie Magazine Cover of the Day

Posted on August 1st, 2008 by D. Maskull in Monster Magazines

Eerie Magazine Cover of the Day