About Andrew Pyper: Andrew Pyper is a prize-winning Canadian author.
Tell me this. What is it with men and feeling like they have to act like self-destructive superheroes whenever trouble shows up?” “It’s the only way we know how to love.
Every poet — every storyteller — requires motivation.
Perhaps because my town was so naturally gothic in its architecture and relative isolation - the roads often closed in winter - my stories tended toward the ghostly and the creepily suspenseful right from the get-go.
What I see as the particularly exciting prospect for writing horror fiction as we go forward is setting stories in more internal landscapes than external ones, mapping out the mind as the home for scary things instead of the house at the end of the l...
Horror, for me, is not defined by the thing that provokes one's fear, but the human being who has contact with it.
We need to kind of refresh our fear in order to refresh our understanding of how a safe place works.
I just hated the law. I wasn't cut out for it. I couldn't imagine spending my life doing that, so I quit before I began.
I enjoy a special collegiality among other writers in the thriller community. They call me 'Canada's scariest writer,' and I love that.
There's something in human nature that says we need to have at least one symbolic place where chaos and dark desires can live.
I'd read 'Paradise Lost' as an undergrad at university but remembered little about it. No, not true: I remembered few details, but carried with me with the persuasive arguments and pitiable dilemma of its arguable protagonist, Satan.
To make the reader afraid, I had to be afraid.
If the hairs on my neck stand up while I'm writing, I figure the reader will get the same kind of shock.
Psychological horror is more interesting to me than the explicitly physical.
Monsters just outside our peripheral vision are scarier to contemplate than monsters miles away or in someplace only a fool would set foot in.