Scott Nicholson

Scott Nicholson
Occupation Writer, screenwriter
Nationality American
Period 2000present
Genre Horror fiction, speculative fiction
Website
hauntedcomputer.com

Scott Nicholson is an American author specializing in horror or thrillers, often set in rural Appalachia. His debut, The Red Church, was a finalist for the Bram Stoker Award.[1]

Thank you for the Flowers

The anthology Thank you for the Flowers was a collection of 13 short stories in which Nicholson merges "the macabre with science fiction and fantasy tales loaded with everything from biting satire to fluffy sentamentalism." In a review in The Dispatch, some of Nicholson's work constituted "a seeming glorification of metaphor".[2] This collection featured the award-winning short story Vampire Shortstop.

Nicholson wrote stories that were included in Eden Studios's zombie anthologies edited by James Lowder.[3]:341

The Farm

Nicholson's book The Farm was his fifth thriller, and was based around his experiences near his home in North Carolina. In an interview with The Times News, Nicholson noted that his fascination with Appalachian religions and goats influenced him in the writing of the book. In the article, Nicholson was quoted as saying:

"The core of the story is the relationship between the mother and daughter," Nicholson said. "Then these weird things start happening because she was into drugs. I kinda wanted her to be an outsider coming in to the little mountain community, being rebellious, going overboard, being really defiant so she could stand out. Because she's so weird she doesn't think anyone will believe her when things start happening with the goats. ... The situation is pulling them apart instead of drawing them together to deal with it."[1]

They Hunger

In an interview with The Times News Nicholson described the book as "Deliverance with vampires".[1]

Prizes

Bibliography

Novels

Short stories

Comics

References

  1. 1 2 3 Laube, Leigh Ann (September 10, 2006). "On the Shelf: The Farm haunted by goats". The Times News. Retrieved 2011-01-28.
  2. Wright, Cherriece (October 12, 2000). "Author's compilation a good mix of genres". The Dispatch. Retrieved 2011-01-28.
  3. Shannon Appelcline (2011). Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907702- 58-7.
  4. "L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future – 1999". Retrieved 2011-01-28.

External links


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