Die Booth talks Tropes
Sometimes I feel like I don’t quite belong to the
horror writing crowd. Sure, I call my work ‘horror’ because it’s the most
convenient label for it (‘Speculative fiction’ is a bit of an umbrella term and
does tend to get me looks of slight derision) but ‘horror’ is very broad.
Almost too broad, as anyone attempting to compare say, H.P. Lovecraft, M.R.
James and Dean Koontz against one another might find. Any slasher-movie fans
reading my work would probably be quite disappointed - there’s no blood, or
guts, or… well, horror, really. So I
struggle to define it.
Then I came across the term ‘fridge horror’. It’s from
the marvellous TV Tropes website,
where I can spend hours poring over the often hilarious descriptions of
character, plot and genre tropes that can be applied to all stories - written
or televised - everywhere. It’s kind of nice. It reminds you that, far from it
just being you as an author who keeps coming up with ideas that have already
been done, there are no new ideas -
it’s the way you deal with the established ones that marks you out! In fact,
far from causing the waving of pitchforks (pardon the cliché) and yells of
“Cliché!”, a familiar plot device can often serve as a welcome signpost to
readers who sometimes become alienated by anything too unfamiliar.
But I digress. Fridge Horror, as termed by TV Tropes, is “when something becomes terrifying after the
fact. Maybe you thought about this
or that plot point a little too hard, and suddenly you
realize that everyone was trapped in stasis forever,
or that the lovable child will grow up in a world where everyone
around her is dead. This can be either intentional or unintentional by
the author.”
Stories that follow this pattern are my favourite
kind. There’s definitely a place in horror for the flat-out horrifying - of
course everyone is afraid of torture and mutilation - but, apart from me not
having the stomach for that kind of horror, it’s the type of thing I read,
recoil from in immediate dread and then fling from my recollection. Other,
quieter, horrors tend to lurk around a while longer, tapping me on the shoulder
in the dark. When I’m alone at night, I don’t fear a crazed, bloody axe
murderer crashing through my door. I fear a disembodied whisper close by my
ear, too quiet to be truly certain of. Those things that aren’t terrifying on
first read, but stick around to haunt you. Everyone’s dead immediately from
that axe-murderer’s attack, but what of M.R. James’s so-briefly mentioned
character in ‘A school story’, shut in for the night with whatever invisible
presence just spoke so cosily to her? What happens to her? How will she escape
quickly when she’s just locked all the doors? Which would you prefer - the
quick, brutal demise, or the lingering unknown..?
Die Booth lives in Chester,
UK, in a tiny house with a fridge well-stocked with custard, ale and horror. You
can read several of Die’s stories in the 2011 anthology ‘Re-Vamp’ co-edited by L.C. Hu. Die’s first novel
‘Spirit Houses’, a to-be-pondered-over-at-the-fridge tale of the supernatural,
adventure and excellent Scotch, is available now in Epub and Kindle.
Comments
I know that Die is also a fan, like me, of Jacobs' The Monkey's Paw, which is so quiet, so every-day - but mounts to such a pitch of quiet horror.
I also like the terms 'Fridge Logic' and 'Fridge Brilliance', where things respectively make sense, or amaze you, long after the fact.