Presenting Author-Joe Hill
Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2021 5:05 am
**WARNING** Joe Hill's books are meant for an adult audience. They contain mature themes and graphic depictions of violence and other things of adult nature. NOT RECOMMENDED for anyone under the age of 17. You have been warned 
Name of the author: Joe Hill
Main genre: Horror, Dark Fantasy, Science Fiction
Main audience: Adult
Main books: Heart-Shaped Box, Horns, NOS4A2, Locke & Keye, The Fireman
Short summary of the author: Joe Hill is the son of Stephen and Tabitha King. It's no wonder, really, why he has a taste for delicious creepiness; one could say he it's almost a family legacy. At any rate, his first official foray into the genre was in front of the camera rather than via written word. At age 9, he appeared in the 1982 film Creepshow, which was written by his father (who was also his co-star). Much to his credit, when he decided to pursue writing as a career, he wanted to do so on his own merit, thus why he chose an abbreviated form of his middle name (Hillstrom) instead of writing under the moniker of King. He publically confirmed the rumors of his real identity in 2007, a year after his first novel debuted.
He has a number of awards under his belt, including the William L. Crawford Award for best new fantasy writer (2006). the Bram Stoker Award for Best Fiction Collection (20th Century Ghosts), and the Eisner Award for Best Writer for his long-running comic book series, Locke & Key, just to name a few. He has been published in such magazines as "Subterranean Magazine", "Postscripts" and "The High Plains Literary Review", as well as several anthologies.
Like his father, several of his works have been adapted for film and television. In 2014, his novel, Horns, was adapted for the big screen, starring Harry Potter himself, Daniel Radcliffe as the central character. A television series based on the novel NOs4A2 ran on AMC from June 2, 2019, to August 23, 2020. An adaptation of his graphic series Locke & Keye began streaming on Netflix in February 2020.
In his personal life, In 1999, he married Leanora King, whom he had met at Vassar College. They had three children (the eldest among them being Ethan King, now an actor). The couple divorced in 2010 and in 2018, he married publisher Gillian Redfearn of Gollancz Publishing. The couple maintains a house in New Hampshire.
One of my favorite quotes by Hill is his response to the question, "What defines a good horror story?".
His response:
Name of the author: Joe Hill
Main genre: Horror, Dark Fantasy, Science Fiction
Main audience: Adult
Main books: Heart-Shaped Box, Horns, NOS4A2, Locke & Keye, The Fireman
Short summary of the author: Joe Hill is the son of Stephen and Tabitha King. It's no wonder, really, why he has a taste for delicious creepiness; one could say he it's almost a family legacy. At any rate, his first official foray into the genre was in front of the camera rather than via written word. At age 9, he appeared in the 1982 film Creepshow, which was written by his father (who was also his co-star). Much to his credit, when he decided to pursue writing as a career, he wanted to do so on his own merit, thus why he chose an abbreviated form of his middle name (Hillstrom) instead of writing under the moniker of King. He publically confirmed the rumors of his real identity in 2007, a year after his first novel debuted.
He has a number of awards under his belt, including the William L. Crawford Award for best new fantasy writer (2006). the Bram Stoker Award for Best Fiction Collection (20th Century Ghosts), and the Eisner Award for Best Writer for his long-running comic book series, Locke & Key, just to name a few. He has been published in such magazines as "Subterranean Magazine", "Postscripts" and "The High Plains Literary Review", as well as several anthologies.
Like his father, several of his works have been adapted for film and television. In 2014, his novel, Horns, was adapted for the big screen, starring Harry Potter himself, Daniel Radcliffe as the central character. A television series based on the novel NOs4A2 ran on AMC from June 2, 2019, to August 23, 2020. An adaptation of his graphic series Locke & Keye began streaming on Netflix in February 2020.
In his personal life, In 1999, he married Leanora King, whom he had met at Vassar College. They had three children (the eldest among them being Ethan King, now an actor). The couple divorced in 2010 and in 2018, he married publisher Gillian Redfearn of Gollancz Publishing. The couple maintains a house in New Hampshire.
One of my favorite quotes by Hill is his response to the question, "What defines a good horror story?".
His response:
Full confession here, I have only actually read one of Hill's novels, and have never seen any of his film adaptations. Somehow, I just never got around to it, and quite honestly, I was afraid that I would come away severely disappointed as there was no way (in my rather limited opinion) that he could 'hold a candle to his father (who I actually really like). I must say that I was pleasantly surprised and will definitely be looking into Mr. Hill's other works. I won't say that I like him as much as I do his father, but he certainly holds his own.“Horror” is a word that describes what you feel when you or someone you care about is faced with the worst. When a work of fiction stirs a sense of “horror,” we’re entering a heightened state of empathy. Someone is in terrible trouble – the swamp monster has a girl by the ankle and is pulling her down into the weeds – and we want her to escape, to paw her way back to the surface of the water, to taste the air again.
This is why the most important ingredient in any work of horror fiction is not a cleverly engineered supernatural menace. It’s your central characters. If they’re well developed, well imagined, unique, and uniquely lovable, we will feel horror for them when the army of laughing, knife-wielding puppets comes for them. If they’re unexceptional “types,” they’ll just bore us. Instead of rooting for them, we’ll be on the side of the puppets, cheering every time one of our straw man heroes is cut down.
With this in mind, it’s easy to see that a lot of the slasher films of the 80s failed as horror, but sometimes worked in the way the Warner Brothers cartoons work: as giddy, silly slapsticks.