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Talking Scared

Talking Scared
Author: Neil McRobert
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© 2024 Talking Scared
Description
Conversations with the biggest names in horror fiction. A podcast for horror readers who want to know where their favourite stories came from . . . and what frightens the people who wrote them.
286 Episodes
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Joe Lansdale is here to give us all a smack upside the head.
We are talking about The Essential Horror of Joe R. Lansdale – his brand new career-retrospective, collecting the stories that have defined him for decades as one of the most edgy, provocative writers of the grim and grotesque.
We cover some of the classics, like “Bubba Ho Tep,” “Mr Weed Eater” and “On the Far Side of the Cadillac Desert with Dead Folks” – asking where the craziness came from, and finding the roots in Joe’s colourful life.
But we also discuss more serious matters, such as the hatred depicted in “The Night They Missed the Horror Show,” and what it means in our current puritanical, easily-outraged era.
Enjoy! Beware!
Other books mentioned:
The Thicket (2013), by Joe R. Lansdale
Paradise Sky (2015), by Joe R. Lansdale
The Nightrunners (1987), by Joe R. Lansdale
“A Rose For Emily” (1930), by William Faulkner
“Cannibalism in the Cars” (1868), by Mark Twain
“Duel” (1971), by Richard Matheson
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), by Mark Twain
Neither Beg Nor Yield: Stories With an S&S Attitude (2024), edited by Jason M. Waltz
Swords in the Shadows (2025), edited by Cullen Bunn
The Only Good Indians (2020), by Stephen Graham Jones
The Buffalo Hunter Hunter (2025), by Stephen Graham Jones
The Gunfighters: How Texas Made the West Wild (2025), by Bryan Burrough
Lonesome Dove (1985), by Larry McMurtry
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Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social on Instagram/Threads, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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Mine isn’t the only Good Boy released into the world this week. You may have heard of a little film that shares my books name.
I joke – Ben Leonberger’s Good Boy is everywhere, and rightly so. It’s a haunted house movie told from the POV of Ben’s dog Indy (playing himself). It’s a magic trick of filmmaking and puppy eyes.
Ben came on the show for a generous chat about making the movie. He tells us about the technical hurdles to be jumped, the mammoth 400 day shoot, the portrayal of fear through a dog’s eyes… but mostly we talk about his bond with Indy and why we both believe dogs are the ultimate horror movie heroes.
This is a dog-lover’s delight. Happy Friday!
Enjoy
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Ah the arrogance of writers. Now I am one, officially, I thought I’d better do something fitting.
So I set up a whole episode of my podcast to talk about my own book – Good Boy! My debut novella about small English towns, the bonds between men and dogs, and a battle between bravery and monsters.
Thankfully, I have friends who will facilitate this type of nonsense, so thanks to Nat Cassidy and Rachel Harrison for asking me questions and flattering my ego.
We talk about literary and personal inspirations, about what I’ve learned from 5 years of interviewing authors, about local folklore and the composition of monsters… and of course, about dogs!
This was the greatest pleasure for me. I hope you enjoy it half as much.
Other books mentioned:
IT (1986), by Stephen King
From a Buick 8 (2002), by Stephen King
The Fisherman (2016), by John Langan
Any Human Heart (2002), by William Boyd
The October Film Haunt (2025), by Michael Wehunt
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Another day, another episode about the weird-arse end of nowhere!
We remain in the North of England for this second part of a weeklong celebration of the Northern Weird Project – six novellas published by Wild Hunt Books (including one by yours truly!).
This time it’s conversation with Matt Wesolowski, about his train-bound folkloric horror, Don’t Call Mum, Jodie Robins, with her magical seaside lament for lost youth, The Off Season, and Stephen Howard, who has sent the uncanny home into a whole new paroxysm of sorrow, withThis House is Not Haunted But We Are.
We moan about the weather. About trains. About southerners. It’s all very northern and grim.
But there are also ghosts, monsters, mad circuses and VAMPIRE RABBITS!!!
Other books mentioned:
Wuthering Heights (1847), by Emily Brönte
“Rawhead Rex”, in Books of Blood Volume 3 (1986), by Clive Barker
Something Wicked This Way Comes (1962), by Ray Bradbury
The Iceman Cometh (1940), by Eugene O’Neill
White is for Witching (2009), by Helen Oyeyemi
Mr Fox (2011), by Helen Oyeyemi
Skin Thief: Stories (2023), by Suzan Palumbo
Nowhere Burning (2026), by Catriona Ward
Quest for the Hexham Heads (2012), by Paul Screeton
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It’s grim up North.
But thankfully, it’s also weird. Deliciously, darkly, disturbingly weird!
This week we are celebrating the Northern Weird Project – six novellas published by Wild Hunt Books (including one by yours truly!). In this first roundtable, I’ve gathered two of the writers and the genius behind the project, Ariell Cacciola, to talk about Northern literary culture in the North, haunted landscapes, isolated oddness, and the North/South divide.
Gemma Fairclough brings The Retreat, her story of creepy wellness culture in the Lake District, and Katherine Clements has written a psycho-geographic haunting of the Yorkshire moors in Turbine 34. Yet whilst displaying the diversity of northern weirdness, these two novellas are twinned and entwined in fascinating ways.
Enjoy – there’s more coming all week.
Other books mentioned:
Bear Season (2024), by Gemma Fairclough
The Coffin Path (2018), by Katherine Clements
Every Day is Mother’s Day (1985), by Hilary Mantel
Beyond Black (2005), by Hilary Mantel
A Place of Greater Safety (1992), by Hilary Mantel
Dark Matter (2010), by Michelle Paver
The Night Ocean (2017), by Paul LaFarge
Support Talking Scared on Patreon
Check out the Talking Scared Merch line – at VoidMerch
Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social on Instagram/Threads, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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What’s even real anymore?
Some of the best horror writer’s ask that question. Some, like Michael Wehunt, live in the spaces in between.
Michael’s new novel, The October Film Haunt bends reality in fascinating ways, in a story about online legend, digital demons and analog horror – all the stuff that keeps me awake at night.
We talk about all of it, as well as formative found-footage movies, and whether we need a new ethics for online storytelling. It’s a deep, intelligent chat (just like the book).
Enjoy. Don’t open strange emails or watch unmarked VHS
tapes.
WhiteFace Explained - Bloody Disgusting
I'm A Search and Rescue Office For the US Forest Service...
Other books mentioned:
Greener Pastures (2016), by Michael Wehunt
Wake Up and Open Your Eyes (2025), by Clay McLeod Chapman
Last Days (2012), by Adam Nevill
Horror Movie (2024), by Paul Tremblay
The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark (1995), by Carl Sagan
If You Knew Me (2025), by S.P. Miskowksi
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Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social on Instagram/Threads, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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This week brings a bumper episode, cos Philip Fracassi never stops.
Since he and I last spoke, in 2022, he’s published a wealth of amazing, terrifying, heartfelt horror, emerging as a major voice, and one of
my favourite writers.
First we spend a good hour on Philips’ new novel, The Autumn Springs Retirement Home Massacre – talking about geriatric slashers, elderly protagonists and how Phil’s own loss transformed the novel. Then we take a tour through some of his other books, including the modern classic Boys in
the Valley and the nasty demonic desk romp, Gothic.
Plus, a lot of info about future books and movie adaptations.
Enjoy! Phil is fantastic company.
Other books mentioned:
St Joseph's Orphanage - Buzzfeed Article
Boys in the Valley (2021), by Philip Fracassi
Gothic (2022), by Philip Fracassi
A Child Alone With Strangers (2022), by Philip Fracassi
No One Is Safe (2024), by Philip Fracassi
The Third Rule of Time Travel (2025), by Philip Fracassi
Serafina (2026), by Philip Fracassi
The Thursday Murder Club (2020), by Richard Osman
Fahrenheit-182 (2025), by Mark Hoppus
“The Veldt” (1950), by Ray Bradbury
Daytide (2026), by Chris Panatier
The Reformatory (2023), by Tananarive Due
Your Favorite Scary Movie: How the Scream Films Rewrote the Rules of Horror (2025), by Ashley Cullins
EVENT LINKS
Good Boy Book Launch, with Gemma Amor (October 10th) – Tickets
Powerhouse of Horror Party (October 24th) – Tickets
Creepaway Summer Camp (June 29th – July 3rd 2026) – Tickets
Support Talking Scared on Patreon
Check out the Talking Scared Merch line – at VoidMerch
Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social on Instagram/Threads, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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Do you like your vampires slick and suave or rugged and raging?
If it’s the latter, you’ll very much enjoy KeithRosson’s Coffin Moon. It’s a 70s-set bareknuckle revenge road trip of a book, with some of the meanest vampires you’ll ever meet (and love).
Keith is back in the show for the second time in a year, to talk all about it. We get into his problem with ‘classic’ vampires aesthetics, the lure of backstory, taking hard advice from editors, and violence… a whole lotta violence!
This is a joy of a book, and a blast of a conversation.
Enjoy!
Other books mentioned:
Fever House (2023), by Keith Rosson
The Devil By Name (2024), by Keith Rosson
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil (2025), by V.E. Schwab
King Sorrow (2025), by Joe Hill
EVENT LINKS
Good Boy Book Launch, with Gemma Amor (October
10th) – Tickets
Powerhouse of Horror Party (October 24th) – Tickets
Creepaway Summer Camp (June 29th – July 3rd
2026) – Tickets
Support Talking Scared on Patreon
Check out the Talking Scared Merch line – at VoidMerch
Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social on Instagram/Threads, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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It’s walk or die this week on Talking Scared, as we’re joined by the screenwriter of The Long Walk.
JT wrote and directed 2024’s cult-hit Strange Darling, and now he’s brought his pen to bear, in finally bringing Stephen King’s beloved early novel to the screen. Along with director, Francis Lawrence, JT has created one of the best King adaptations EVER(!!) and he joins me to talk about exactly how they got this shuffling monster over the finish line.
JT tells us all about his journey from actor to writer and director and his feelings about creative control. We discuss the obvious structural hurdles that kept this film from being made for so many years. We acknowledge it’s strain of very dark humour, but also how seriously the movie contends with the threat of the gun in American life.
It’s a good conversation about an awesome movie.
Enjoy
Support Talking Scared on Patreon
Check out the Talking Scared Merch line – at VoidMerch
Come talk books on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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School is back in session. Professor Langan is here!
No-one gives good literary conversation like John Langan – and this week he returns to Talking Scared to discuss the watery influences, metafictional experimentation, and snake-legged women in his new collection: Lost in the Dark and Other Excursions.
It’s my favourite collection of John’s so far, and as ever, he merely used it for a jumping-off point into a cosy fireside conversation about all the books and stories that he keeps in his Alexandrian Library of a head!
It’s the most accessible college course you’ll ever take.
Enjoy!
Other books mentioned:
The Fisherman (2017), by John Langan
Corpsemouth and Other Autobiographies (2022), by John Langan
Survivor Song (2020), by Paul Tremblay
Fever House (2023), by Keith Rosson
King Sorrow (2025), by Joe Hill
Great Expectations (1861), by Charles Dickens
Dombey and Son (1848), by Charles Dickens
Jane Eyre (1847), by Charlotte Bronte
Why I Love Horror: Essays on Horror Literature (2025), edited by Becky Spratford
“Lamia” (1820), by John Keats
She Said Destroy (2017), by Nadia Bulkin
Issues With Authority (2025), by Nadia Bulkin
A Game in Yellow (2025), by Hailey Piper
EVENT LINKS
Powerhouse of Horror Party (October 24th, 2025) – Tickets
Creepaway Summer Camp (June 29th – July 3rd 2026) – Tickets
Support Talking Scared on Patreon
Check out the Talking Scared Merch line – at VoidMerch
Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social on Instagram/Threads, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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Ready for some rough rural Gothic?
Kailee Pederson’s Sacrifical Animals was one of my top horror novels of 2024. I missed Kailee first time round, but now the book is out in paperback, I jumped at the chance to speak to her.
I was NOT prepared for how highbrow this would go though. From a story about toxic families, American Gothic and Chinese mythology, we found our way to opera, classic Latin texts, and more.
But we also talk about violence and sex and evil. So it really does cover all the bases.
Enjoy!
Other books mentioned:
Wuthering Heights (1847), by Emily Bronte
East of Eden (1952), by John Steinbeck
Blood Meridian (1985), by Cormac McCarthy
The Road (2006), by Cormac McCarthy
Absolom, Absolom (1936), by William Faulkner
Salome (1893), by Oscar Wilde
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Check out the Talking Scared Merch line – at VoidMerch
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And so this infected Summer of the Stand comes to an end. With Part Two of The End of the World As We Know It – more conversations between contributors to this epic anthology, each expanding King’s OG novel in
new ways.
This time around we have 8 guests, each armed with a story, pitted together in four short burst of conversation. I’m not saying who, cos that would spoil the fun… but there are BIG names.
We discuss sadness and hope, evil birds and heroic dogs, varied visions of the far far future, and we look at how the Superflu has ravaged other parts of the world beyond the USA.
This anthology really is a who’s who of horror in this golden, apocalyptic age of ours – and it’s been a privilege to put these episodes together for you.
But I am off for a nap now.
Enjoy!
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No full treatment of The Stand would be complete without a look at Mick Garris’ landmark television adaptation. In 1994 he put together an adjacent epic, transforming 1300 pages into 8 hours of prime-time viewing.
It was my introduction to Stephen King. It is one of my fondest memories with my dad.
So it’s a true honour to get Mick on the show to talk about how it all came together. The scriptwriting with King, the killer cast, the Hollywood gossip, and the traffic-stopping shoot.
Plus, we talk about how Mick’s creative life has been entwined with King’s – for better or for worse.
Enjoy
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The Summer of The Stand continues!
We may have reached the final pages of the novel, but the power of its story expands ever outwards. Now we turn to the brand-new anthology of stories set in King’s plague-shocked world
In The End of the World as We Know It: New Tales of Stephen King’s The Stand, editors Brian Keene and Christopher Golden have pulled together 36 of the biggest and brightest names in horror, and charged them with expanding Captain Trips and the good-versus-evil battle to new frontiers.
With so many contributors to consider, no single roundtable could ever suffice. So I’ve done something a little different, and a little more befitting of this mammoth project. It’s a lot of conversation, about a lot of very different stories.
Enjoy!
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The fourth Let Us Palaver Nat is all about The Stand and Randall Flagg, and how it all connects to The Dark Tower – all the stuff that Chris (and you virgin listeners) could not, should not, yet know.
We also get especially geeky (even by OUR standards) about all the easter eggs and Tower references that Nat has packed into his short story for the forthcoming expanded Stand anthology.
If you’ve been to the Tower before, enjoy this. If not, stay away or the Dark Man will get you!
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So, the circle closes… for now.
Here is the second and final part of our deep dive into Stephen King’s The Stand – the first of many major diversions on our way to The Dark Tower.
Last time we introduced the plague and the all-American heroes who survive it; this time we meet some of the weirder folk from the fringes of this apocalypse.
And we finally tangle with Randall Flagg, the Dark Man, the Walking Dude – our link to Mid-World and the travails of Roland Deschain.
We are loving making this for you. We hope you're enjoying listening.
Pre-order Chris’s Shitshow HERE
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Time for a side quest.
Yes, this is the Dark Tower Readalong… you are not mistaken. But there are other worlds, and other books, and some of them have to be read for the fullest, most satisfying experience of Stephen King’s great saga.
In this first (of what will be many) diversions from the Ka-Tet’s quest, Nat, Chris and I turn to The Stand – the titanic tale of two tribes going to war. It’s a big big book, so this had to be a two-part thing. Here in episode one, we introduce Stu, Frannie, Larry and Nick, and discuss all things phlegmy and flu-like, and hint at why this book plays its part in the Dark Tower.
Plus. Rick Astley. Just wait.
Part Two is out next week, or available immediately on Patreon.
M-O-O-N, that spells thank you, to anyone who signs up and supports the show. Laws yes!
Enjoy!
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Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social on Instagram/Threads, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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After we spent last week in the muck and mire, this episode takes us up where skies are blue.
Just watch for the mushroom clouds.
The guest is Scott Carson, pseudonym of thriller writer, Michael Koryta, and author of The Chill (2020), Where They Wait (2021), and last year’s phenomenal Lost Man’s Lane. His new novel, Departure 37 is something totally different – it has Cold-War conspiracy, AI anxiety, tech-terror and nuclear brinkmanship.
Y’know, it’s like the news … but fun!
Scott and I discuss all of that, as well as the aviation mysteries that fascinate us both, and I give a much-deserved nod to the 90s brilliance of Michael Crichton.
Enjoy!
Other books mentioned:
Where They Wait (2021), by Scott Carson
Lost Man’s Lane (2024), by Scott Carson
The Chill (2020), by Scott Carson
Sole Survivor (1997), by Dean Koontz
The Shining (1977), by Stephen King
Nuclear War: A Scenario (2024), by Annie Jacobsen
Six Days of the Condor (1974), by James Grady
The Auctioneer (1975), by Joan Samson
King Sorrow (2025), by Joe Hill
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Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social on Instagram/Threads, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com
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Daniel Kraus has never lacked for ambition in his fiction – but Angel Down may be the most audacious horror book of the year. It’s the story of broken men and a fallen angel in the trenches of the First World War.
Oh … and it’s told in one long 300 page sentence. Cos
Daniel can.
It’s not a gimmick, nor pretentiousness. No, this week,
you’ll hear how the medium is very much the message. As well as our
conversation about angels in horror, capturing the particular nightmare of 1914, and all the practical challenge that come with this single-sentence attempt.
It’s an inspiring episode.
Enjoy!
Other books mentioned:
Whalefall (2023), by Daniel Kraus
Blood Sugar (2019), by Daniel Kraus
The Death and Life of Zebulon Finch: Volume One (2015), by Daniel Kraus
Ducks, Newburyport (2019), by Lucy Ellman
Hurricane Season (2017), by Fernanda Melchor
Wolf at the Table (2024), by Adam Rapp
The Remembered Soldier (2025), by Anjet Daanje
From Under the Truck (2024), by Josh Brolin
Support Talking Scared on Patreon
Check out the Talking Scared Merch line – at VoidMerch
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Back on the trails for a mind-melting trip this week.
Wendy Wagner is in the hot-seat, playing shaman as we discuss The Girl in the Creek – her brand new novel of fungoid-terror, eco-thrills and psychedelic strangeness. It’s a beautiful, bewildering hallucination of a book.
Wendy’s inspirationsrange from cutting edge science to the antics of Scooby Doo and the gang, along with a sprinkle of Lovecraft, and a hint of self-hypnosis. We cover it all, along with a discussion of eco-grief, higher states of consciousness, weird non-fiction obsessions and a little bit of trail running chat – which I promise we make macabre.
Enjoy!
Other books mentioned:
“An Infestation of Blue” (2023), by Wendy Wagner
The Deer Kings (2021), by Wendy Wagner
Entangled Lives (2023), by Merlin Sheldrake
Are We Smart Enough To Know How Smart Animals Are? (2016), by Frans de Waal
The Zoologist’s Guide to the Galaxy: What Animals on Earth Reveal About Aliens – and Ourselves (2020), by Arik Kershenbaum
“The Colour Out of Space,” (1927), by H.P. Lovecraft
Lost in the Dark, and Other Excursions (2025), by John Langan
The October Film Haunt (2025), by Michael Wehunt
Support Talking Scared on Patreon
Check out the Talking Scared Merch line – at VoidMerch
Come talk books on Bluesky @talkscaredpod.bsky.social
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Had never heard of Michelle Paver- went out and bought these audiobooks because of this episode and I'm so glad I did! This podcast overall is bad for my bank account, but I'm so glad it gets me to support these authors (especially the ones my library isn't buying).
Respect your decision. I agree this is not the place to have a discussion as to whether straight white (male) authors are more discriminated against than traditionally marginalized authors, and ignoring such comments to have a different discussion then allows them to go unchallenged. I personally think some views (demonstrably false, anti diversity) don't deserve the platform a debate gives them. I also think it matters to whom and what you provide a platform generally.
This was fantastic! Truly special episode.