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Also, you may have noticed I now have a newsletter signup in the right column under the "About Me" section. I intend to send no more than one per month, and only in months when I have an actual announcement (book/magazine releases, basically).
Also, you may have noticed I now have a newsletter signup in the right column under the "About Me" section. I intend to send no more than one per month, and only in months when I have an actual announcement (book/magazine releases, basically).
This week's woman in horror is one you might recognize from blogging circles already. She posts true stories about serial killers and creepy events. Today, she's talking about Truly Horrible Women:
Since we’re
celebrating Women in Horror this month, it’s only fitting to ask why women have
such a tough time getting a fair shake in this genre.
Part of it is
undoubtedly still skepticism that the so-called “fairer sex” have the ability
to make their readers cringe, shiver, or gasp the way male writers do.
Which is BS, of
course. Here are five true accounts that prove the female of the species can be
just as deadly as the male.
Katherine Knight
Many a woman has
grown frustrated by a partner’s unwillingness to pop the question. When
Katherine’s boyfriend John Price refused to marry her or let her move into his
home, she had a most unusual way of expressing her displeasure.
After having sex
with Price on February 29, 2000, Katherine waited until he fell asleep. The
Australian woman then stabbed him at least 37 times, skinned him, and hung his
skin from a meat hook. As if that weren’t enough, she decapitated him and
lovingly roasted parts of his body with a variety of vegetables. She invited
Price’s children over for dinner, clearly intending to serve them their own
father.
Thankfully, Price’s
employer became concerned when the man didn’t show up for work, and went to the
house to investigate. After seeing blood at the front door, the employer and a
co-worker notified police, who discovered Price’s head in a pot on the stove.
Gwendolyn Graham and Cathy Wood
Nurses are supposed
to heal, right? During the late eighties, Michigan nurse’s aides Gwendolyn and
Cathy had a bizarre concept of what “taking care of their patients” meant.
Bored of the same
old routine at the Alpine Manor Nursing Home and desperate to prove their love
for each other, Gwendolyn and Cathy developed a macabre game. They started
murdering their elderly patients, choosing victims whose initials would spell
“MURDER.”
When that grew too
taxing, the women decided to count each murder as a day, feeling that every
killing bonded them for life. After the two women split, Cathy told her
ex-husband about the five murders, and he eventually went to the cops. The
nurses’ diabolical murder plot came to light after some good ol’ fashioned
police interrogation.
Belle Gunness
A Norwegian-American
serial killer, Belle is suspected to have murdered over forty people in Indiana
in the 1800s, including her husbands and children.
Belle used ads
asking for husbands to lure men with money to her farm. Once they were on her
property, she served them dinner and then split their heads with a meat chopper
while they were eating. Other times she simply poisoned their coffee.
When a hired man and
would-be suitor threatened to betray her, a mysterious fire broke out at the
Gunness residence. Once the smoke cleared, the bodies of Belle’s three children
and a headless woman were found. Originally believed to be Belle, the
decapitated corpse was eventually ruled out, as it had belonged to a 5’3”
woman, while Belle was at least six feet tall and weighed over two hundred
pounds.
So many remains were
found on her property after the fire that it was impossible to tell how many
victims she had claimed, especially since she had fed several to her hogs. To
this day, Belle has never been found, though for years there were reported
sightings of her across the United States.
Amelia Dyer
Single mothers have
never had it easy, but back in England’s Victorian age, they faced ostracism
and worse. Some of the most desperate turned to so-called “baby farmers,” women
who would temporarily adopt their infants for a fee and care for them until the
mothers were able to return for their children.
One of those baby
farmers was Amelia Dyer, who had originally trained as a nurse. While there is
some indication that Amelia intended to care for the children, she quickly
realized her profits would be greater if the infants died. And thus began her
career as a murderess. She would wind tape around the babies’ necks and watch
in delight as they suffocated.
Imagine the horror
of the mothers who came to Amelia, distraught and begging for their children,
only to be told their babies were no more. The law finally caught up with the
baby farmer when the body of an infant girl was fished out of the Thames. The
corpse had been wrapped in paper marked with the name of the alias Amelia was
currently using.
During her trial, Amelia plead insanity and was executed by hanging in June 1896. It is estimated she could have murdered as many as four-hundred children, making her one of the most prolific serial killers of all time.
During her trial, Amelia plead insanity and was executed by hanging in June 1896. It is estimated she could have murdered as many as four-hundred children, making her one of the most prolific serial killers of all time.
Juana Barraza
In the late ’90s and
beyond, a serial killer stalked Mexico City’s elderly women, strangling them to
death. Because of the strength required to manually strangle, police were
convinced the killer was a man.
They were wrong.
So persistent was
their belief in female fragility that, even when several witnesses reported
seeing a woman leave the scene of the murders, the police clung to their theory
that the killer was a man. They detained and questioned transvestite
prostitutes, putting them through a brutal, humiliating investigation.
Justice caught up with Juana when a tenant discovered his freshly murdered landlord and called police, who were able to nab the serial killer before she could escape.
Justice caught up with Juana when a tenant discovered his freshly murdered landlord and called police, who were able to nab the serial killer before she could escape.
Instead of the man
they had been searching for, their murderer was a forty-eight-year-old single
mother of four who could bench press over two hundred pounds. Juana was well known as The
Silent Lady, a professional wrestler in the sport of luche libra – Mexican
masked wrestling. Wearing a butterfly mask and hot-pink spandex, she was a
stunning sight in more ways than one.
*
Reviewers have described J.H.
Moncrieff’s work as early Gillian Flynn with a little Ray Bradbury and Stephen
King thrown in for good measure.
She won Harlequin's international search for “the next Gillian Flynn” in 2016. Monsters in Our Wake, her deep-sea thriller with Severed Press, hit the top of Amazon’s horror bestsellers list, beating King's re-released It to the top spot. Her supernatural suspense GhostWriters series has earned rave reviews from Kirkus, BlueInk, and Library Journal.
She won Harlequin's international search for “the next Gillian Flynn” in 2016. Monsters in Our Wake, her deep-sea thriller with Severed Press, hit the top of Amazon’s horror bestsellers list, beating King's re-released It to the top spot. Her supernatural suspense GhostWriters series has earned rave reviews from Kirkus, BlueInk, and Library Journal.
Moncrieff began her
writing career as a journalist, tracking down snipers and canoeing through
crocodile-infested waters. Her articles have appeared in many publications,
including Chatelaine, FLARE, Writer’s Digest, and The Globe and Mail.
When not writing, she loves exploring the world's most haunted places, advocating for animal rights, and summoning her inner ninja in muay thai class.
When not writing, she loves exploring the world's most haunted places, advocating for animal rights, and summoning her inner ninja in muay thai class.
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jhmoncrieff/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JH_Moncrieff
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.ca/jhmoncrieff
#
Now for some links. Please bear in mind that I'm not endorsing them, merely passing them along. Always do your own due diligence before submitting.
Accepting Submissions:
Sycamore Review is seeking poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and art. Pays $50 for fiction/nonfiction and $25 for poetry. Reading window closes March 31.
Arachne Press is seeking stories and poems for the peace-themed anthology An Outbreak of Peace. Up to 2500 words. Pays in royalties. Deadline March 31.
Pantheon Magazine is seeking dark short fiction with a transformation theme for Gorgon: Stories of Emergence. Up to 2000 words. Pays $.06/word. Deadline for this theme is March 31.
Post Mortem Press is seeking short stories written by women for the anthology She's Lost Control. Up to 10,000 words. Pays $.0005/word plus royalties. Deadline March 31.
JMS Books is seeking queer and erotic romance with an astrology theme for the anthology What's Your Sign? 12,000 words or more. Pays quarterly royalties. Deadline March 31.
Writer's Co-op is seeking weird short stories and poetry for their anthology The Rabbit Hole. Up to 5000 words. Pays in royalties (or you can donate them to the Against Malaria Foundation.) Deadline March 31.
Circlet Press is seeking short erotic stories involving tentacles (must be consensual) for Safe, Sane, Consentacle. 2500 to 8500 words. Pays $25. Deadline March 31.
Mojo is seeking fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. Pays $15. Deadline March 31.
Have you heard of any of these women before? Do you think women can be as terrifying as men? Any of these links of interest? Anything to share? What woman in horror would you recommend?
May you find your Muse.
12 comments:
Those were all rather horrible. I think feeding the children their father was the worst.
While all of these stories creeped me out, that first one? Yikes! :o
Several were nurses. That is just wickedly evil.
Okay, I'm officially freaked out! Where do you find these stories? I've never heard of any of these women. I have to say that I'm glad I escaped knowing about them. Now I think I need therapy. :-)
It's astounding how many nurse serial killers there are. I plan to write a post of it one day.
Those are some really creepy stories. Imagine roasting some up to serve for dinner - I’m going to have nightmares about that.
Hi Shannon and Jean - those stories are revolting ... I obviously read too many of them - ghastly ... I'll get myself some tea and hope the images created fall away! Very Truly Horrible Women! Cheers Hilary
'Lovingly roasted' !
Maybe it will inspire your next mystery. :)
I'm a true crime addict. There's a ton of shows and books geared to freaks like me. I found quite a few of these lovelies through Investigation Discovery's show "Deadly Women."
Insert evil laugh here.
Thanks for having me, Warrior Muse! I believe I've sufficiently horrified all your blog readers now.
Mission accomplished.
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