Christian
publishing is uncomfortable with certain fiction genres, what’s generally
called “speculative” but includes science fiction, paranormal, and horror. And
yet some of the most successful speculative writers, like Stephen King,
acknowledge the presence of Biblical imagery throughout many of their works.
For
a number of years, Mike Duran, author
of a number of Christian horror story collections and novels, has written about
Christian publisher’s reluctance to embrace anything in speculative fiction. Publishers
know their audiences, however, and is to the audiences that Duran now turns his
attention. Christian
Horror: On the Compatibility of a Biblical Worldview and the Horror Genre
makes a solid case why Christian readers’ attitudes toward the horror genre is
misguided and possibly dangerous.
Duran
has written an apologetic for the horror genre in Christian fiction, and it’s
an impressive piece of work. And he lays claim for horror some of the most
famous works in Western literature.
“Many
have suggested,” he writes, “that the epic poem Beowulf is one of the earliest horror stories ever written. Possibly
the oldest surviving long form in Old English, Beowulf is often cited as one of the most important works of Old
English literature. Though the story is in essence a pagan myth, most believe
it was originally written down by a Christian monk who incorporated Christian
elements into the text.”
He
doesn’t stop with Beowulf. He also makes a convincing case for Christian
elements being incorporated into Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, H.G.
Wells’ The Invisible Man and
especially Bram Stoker’s Dracula, a
work in which there is nothing subtle about Christian influence. And then there
is the Bible itself, filled with any number of horrific stories.
Mike Duran |
Duran
examines religious themes in horror and horror themes in religion; how the
evangelical culture has in general responded to the horror genre; what he terms
“toward an apologetic” for Christian horror; and the main objections Christians
voice against horror and similar genres.
I
don’t ready much in the horror genre, but I’ve read books by Duran, Mike Dellosso, and T.L. Hines, among
others, and I have found the quality of the writing and stories to be at least
equivalent to if not considerably better than much of what’s published in
mainstream Christian fiction.
And
Duran is right: it doesn’t always have to be an Amish romance.
Related:
My
reviews of Duran’s Subterranea
and The
Resurrection.
Photograph by George Hodan via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
1 comment:
Glynn, thanks for mentioning Mike's book. I'm very interested in reading it. I've caught a lot of grief over the years for the "horror" nature of some of my books. And while I've strayed from that genre and gravitated more toward straight thriller writing I still enjoy a good scary story! Life can be horrific (I know from personal experience) and supernatural (we serve a supernatural God!) so why shouldn't we work those elements into our fiction? I think Christians should be the most profoundly qualified authors to write in the horror genre.
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