
Subverting Horror Tropes: The Things We Lost in the Fire by Mariana Enríquez
Mariana Enriquez employs traditional horror tropes and makes them her own in her short story collection. A true example of “Write what you know.”

The Haunted House in Tell Me I’m Worthless by Alison Rumfitt
An analysis of the Haunted House in Rumffit’s majestic book.

Crystallization in The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones
One of the craft aspects I enjoyed the most while reading The Only Good Indians is what Benjamin Percy refers to as crystallization. It comprises the cyclical repetition of an image or an event in a way that it later becomes a symbol in the story reminding the reader of whatever meaning the writer has tethered to it. Creating a sense of dread, tension, and anticipation.