18 - Gabriel Bergmoser and It's Only a Joke Mate!

Send us a text Merry Christmas and/or time-off-work-week! For all of you currently freezing your asses off in cold climes, this week’s episode may make you feel a little too warm under the collar. Our guest is Gabriel Bergmoser, an author who exploded onto the horror scene in early 2020 with The Hunted, a pulpy, violent, visceral hell ride through the Australian wilderness in the company of very human prey and predators.  Considering the amount of people hanging from hooks and suffering violent deaths in his fiction, Gabriel proves to be a thoroughly charming guest. We talk at length about the problem of masculinity down under (and, as it turns out, everywhere else!). Gabe’s thesis includes anecdotes from Australian history and the time that he was personally chased down the street by a kid with a nail-studded cricket bat. The Hunted is an EXCEPTIONAL horror novel. It flaunts its genre credentials, allowing us to get back to the blood and guts basics of the genre. At the same time, though, it’s got a lot to say about a lot of things. You’ll read it in one night and still think about it months later. The Hunted was published in May by Faber and Faber Oh, and a listener asked me to finally flesh out the list of my top-ten horror novels of all time. You don’t have to ask me twice, so at the end of this episode you’ll get some extra bonus content (whether you want it or not) whilst I indulge myself in banging on about books I love. I get quite pretentious in parts. Red Dragon (1981), by Thomas Harris The Golden Age (1985), by Louis Nowra Soon (2017), by Lois Murphy A Head Full of Ghosts (2015), by Paul Tremblay The Haunting of Hill House (1959), by Shirley Jackson Lunar Park (2005), by Bret Easton Ellis The Terror (2007), by Dan Simmons Beloved (1987), by Toni Morrison Ghost Story (1971), by Peter Straub The Little Stranger (2009), by Sarah Waters Swan Song (1987), by Robert R. McCammon The Stand (1978), by Stephen Kind House of Leaves (2000), by Mark Z. Danielewski IT (1986), by Stephen King Come talk books with us on Twitter @talkscaredpod, on Instagram, or email direct to talkingscaredpod@gmail.com. Thanks to Terry Smith Audio for sound editing and Adrian Flounders for graphic design. Support the show Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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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.