
“El corazón delator” de Edgar Allan Poe
Was Poe’s The Tell-Tale heart inspired by Dickens?
Was Poe’s The Tell-Tale heart inspired by Dickens?
Celebrating the master of the macabre – Edgar Allan Poe
Meet the members of Poe’s Crow, an online reading club
“El retrato oval” (The Oval Portrait) es uno de los cuentos más cortos que jamás haya escrito el maestro del horror Edgar Allan Poe. En pocas páginas, ofrece una intensa historia sobre la relación entre el arte y la vida, por medio del encuentro del narrador con el retrato ovalado de una joven en un […]
Some commentary on Poe’s final poem – Annabel Lee
The many influences of E. A. Poe on Uruguayan short story writer Horacio Quiroga
A discourse on the author Stephen King. (This post originally appeared here in Spanish).
LATER is Stephen King at his best, a terrifying and moving tale of innocence lost and the trials that test our sense of right and wrong.
A review of Stephen King’s The Mist
Profiles of H.G. Wells, Ray Bradbury and an interview with Uruguayan editor and writer Víctor Grippoli
A look at one of the brightest lights in our field
Death as a theme. (Go dig up Fosse’s “All That Jazz” for another example)
On writing sanctuaries
“Science fiction has been, since Kepler’s Somnium or Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, a genre that offers creative proposals for the uncertain future.”
A discourse on Stephen King’s Carrie
An English translation of the original Spanish language piece.
Commentary on the works of Alberto Chimal and Luis Apolín.
A discussion of Algernon Blackwood’s Wendigo
What you read influences what you write. Here are some horror picks that have influenced some horror authors
A roundup of notable literary happenings.
Proyecto Cthulhu es una antología que reúne a autores hispanoamericanos de Perú, México, Puerto Rico, España y Estados Unidos, quienes muestran una clara influencia y admiración por el maestro del horror cósmico. Algunos de los autores de esta antología son Ángel Isian, Alberto Chimal, Daniel Salvo, Gerardo Lima, Yuliana Cruz, Bern Chamberlain. Un cuento […]
Hemil introduces the horror traditions established by Mary Shelley, Anne Radcliffe and their literary descendants – Raquel Castro, Tanya Tynjälä and Solange Rodríguez Pappe