Doreen Petersen
asked
Jonathan Janz:
How did you come up with the idea for The Darkest Lullaby? I'm reading it now and it's soo good.
Jonathan Janz
Hey, Doreen! Thank you so much for saying that and for reading that book!
As with most of my books, the ideas came from several places. On one hand, I had read several "quiet" horror novels that appealed to me, stories that put more emphasis on atmosphere than on plot. A couple examples would be T.M. Wright's STRANGE SEED and Charles L. Grant's THE SOUND OF MIDNIGHT (and, to a lesser degree, Grant's THE HOUR OF THE OXRUN DEAD). I wanted to capture the feeling and mood of those stories. Now that I think about it, another that spoke to me was T.E.D. Klein's THE CEREMONIES. But you get the point.
In addition to the above, I wanted to take the young-couple-purchases-a-potentially-haunted-house story and do something different with it. Hopefully, I accomplished that.
Lastly, I've always loved the notion of the revenant, that vengeful presence whose cruelty defies even death. To have not one revenant, but two, was an appealing and frightening notion to me. In a way, the novel connects to both HOUSE OF SKIN and THE SORROWS, which preceded it.
Thanks again for your question, and I hope you enjoy the rest! :-)
JJ
As with most of my books, the ideas came from several places. On one hand, I had read several "quiet" horror novels that appealed to me, stories that put more emphasis on atmosphere than on plot. A couple examples would be T.M. Wright's STRANGE SEED and Charles L. Grant's THE SOUND OF MIDNIGHT (and, to a lesser degree, Grant's THE HOUR OF THE OXRUN DEAD). I wanted to capture the feeling and mood of those stories. Now that I think about it, another that spoke to me was T.E.D. Klein's THE CEREMONIES. But you get the point.
In addition to the above, I wanted to take the young-couple-purchases-a-potentially-haunted-house story and do something different with it. Hopefully, I accomplished that.
Lastly, I've always loved the notion of the revenant, that vengeful presence whose cruelty defies even death. To have not one revenant, but two, was an appealing and frightening notion to me. In a way, the novel connects to both HOUSE OF SKIN and THE SORROWS, which preceded it.
Thanks again for your question, and I hope you enjoy the rest! :-)
JJ
More Answered Questions
Haley K
asked
Jonathan Janz:
Hi Jonathan, I just read COTD. My only disappointment is that I did not find this book sooner! Seriously, I loved it so much. One of my favorite kind of books to read is coming of age/horror/scifi. So of course I loved it. My question is did you write Savage Species after COTD? COTD is the only book of yours I have read so far, so does Savage Species continue on that story?
Jen from Quebec :0)
asked
Jonathan Janz:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
I just finished your novella and LOVED it (I am Jen from Quebec-- we've spoken on the horror group thread about how we both enjoy PLAUSIBLE horror) Anyways, I am now on to the book, and WHY did you choose THAT person to be the Sweet 16 Killer? It just (in my mind) does not make any sense, especially as he was painted as such a sweet, caring uncle...even RON would make more sense....I guess I am just asking WHY HIM?
(hide spoiler)]
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