EBOOK

Gothic Atmosphere: Crafting Dread and Suspense in Fiction

Imogen Blake
(0)
Pages
312
Year
2026
Language
English

About

Atmosphere is what readers remember when the plot has gone. The chestnut tree at Macondo. The cold patch outside the nursery in Hill House. The locked door at Castle Dracula. The Gold Room party in The Shining. Years after the books are finished, these are the rooms readers can still walk into. Most writing on atmosphere treats it as a mysterious quality some writers have and others don't. Gothic Atmosphere: Crafting Dread and Suspense in Fiction takes the opposite position: atmosphere is craft, and the techniques that produce it are identifiable, teachable, and applicable across every genre fiction covers. Using Bram Stoker's Dracula as a sustained primary case study, this book unpacks the specific decisions that have kept one novel atmospherically alive for over a century - and shows how the same decisions operate in writers as different as Gabriel García Márquez, Toni Morrison, Shirley Jackson, Patricia Highsmith, William Faulkner, Ursula K. Le Guin, Kazuo Ishiguro, Han Kang, Yan Lianke, and Ling Ma. Inside, you'll learn how to: ·Build settings that act as characters rather than scenery·Calibrate sensory detail so it works without overwhelming the reader·Use threshold scenes, pacing rupture, and temporal layering to produce specific psychological effects·Adapt gothic atmospheric techniques for thriller, romance, literary, crime, fantasy, and contemporary digital fiction·Engage with non-Anglophone atmospheric traditions thoroughly enough to use them well, and recognise when surface borrowing will not do Six practical reference tools in the appendix support drafting and revision: a genre checklist, a sensory development guide, a setting-as-character worksheet, an atmospheric progression planner, a cross-cultural reference, and a psychological effect analysis tool. Whether you write gothic, horror, literary fiction, thriller, romance, crime, or anything between them, Gothic Atmosphere is the working manual for the prose-level work that makes a book worth the reader's hours.

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