• Nat Cassidy: Stephen King Wrote My Foreword & Why Theater Makes Better Horror
    Jun 16 2026

    In this episode of Talking Horror, Rachel Redd sits down with Nat Cassidy, USA Today bestselling author of Mary, When the Wolf Comes Home, and the brand-new short story collection I Know a Place, Rest Stop, and Other Dark Detours. Nat dives deep into how his background as a New York playwright and theater actor ultimately shaped his approach to pacing, dialogue, and creating deep, immersive tension on the page.

    We discuss his childhood memories of browsing graphic VHS covers at Blockbuster, the intentional choices behind writing a premenopausal female protagonist in Mary, and what it was like to receive a dream-come-true foreword from Stephen King. Whether you're a fan of slow-burn body horror, action-packed thrillers, or a theater kid who loves a dark twist, this conversation is for you.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 – Podcasting Interventions & Questioning Authors

    00:38 – Introducing Nat Cassidy & The Messiness of Being Alive

    03:14 – Childhood Monsoons, Macabre Textbooks, and a Mother’s Horror Legacy

    07:18 – The Magic of 80s Video Stores & Unexpected Scares in Kids' Movies

    16:02 – Discovering Shakespeare's Macbeth & The Hyperactive Child Actor 1

    9:49 – Writing Stephen King Knockoffs Set in Maine

    22:39 – How Playwriting Teaches Authors to Capture and Keep an Audience 2

    8:37 – Designing Tension in a Sunken Submarine with a Low Budget

    35:09 – Writing Mary: Tackling Invisibility and Hormonal Thresholds

    42:31 – Sensitivity Readers, Toxic Patriarchy, and the NIH Reading List

    53:54 – When the Wolf Comes Home: Moving from Slow-Burn to Terminator 2 Action

    1:00:08 – Receiving the Ultimate Blessing: The Stephen King Foreword 1:11:36 – I Know a Place: Public Restrooms, Squids, and Live Violin Performances

    1:19:18 – The Album Experience: Why You Must Read Short Stories in Order

    1:21:20 – The Ultimate Literary Bromance: Appreciating Clay McLeod Chapman

    1:26:36 – Why Horror People are the Best and Most Welcoming People in Fiction

    Grab a copy of "I Know a Place": https://amzn.to/43VW6ih

    Connect with Nat Cassidy:

    Website: https://www.natcassidy.com/

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/natcassidy/

    Twitter/X: https://x.com/natcassidy

    Follow Talking Horror Podcast:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelreddreads/

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rachelredd

    If you enjoyed this episode, please Like, Subscribe, and hit the notification bell to help us grow the horror community!

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 31 mins
  • Unapologetic Women and Double Standards in Horror with CJ Leede
    Jun 9 2026

    In this episode of Talking Horror, Rachel Redd sits down with CJ Leede, author of Maeve Fly, American Rapture, and the brand-new release Headlights. CJ dives deep into how her background writing dystopian stories in grad school ultimately pushed her to seek pure catharsis and freedom through horror fiction.

    We discuss her childhood love for unlimited reading and media, the process of writing an unapologetic female Patrick Bateman, and exploring the dark realities of purity culture and religious trauma. Whether you're a fan of extreme splatterpunk, a romance reader who loves a dark twist, or just looking to dive into an immersive void that processes grief and loss, this conversation is for you.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 – Grad School Revelations & Discovering Horror

    00:09 – Introducing CJ Leede & Her Unapologetic Characters

    03:58 – CJ's Horror Origin Story & Media Freedom as an Only Child

    13:59 – Unexpectedly Landing in the "Extreme" and "Splatterpunk" Horror Space

    26:30 – The Inspiration Behind Maeve Fly & Finding Catharsis in Anger

    32:48 – Balancing Maeve’s Monstrous Actions with Empathy and Relatability

    36:12 – The Double Standard of Justified Violence for Women vs. Men in Literature

    43:44 – Exploring Purity Culture and Religious Trauma in American Rapture

    48:05 – Horror as an Empathy Machine and Safe Space to Face Reality

    52:30 – Finding Camaraderie and Support in the Welcoming Horror Community

    55:27 – Headlights: Writing a Male Protagonist & Refusing to be Boxed In

    1:01:08 – Guarding Peace and Ignoring the Pressure of External Expectations

    1:03:51 – Processing Grief, Death, and Hope Through Headlights

    1:08:45 – What’s Next: A Sneak Peek at Books Four and Five

    1:12:19 – CJ’s Favorite Books to Reread for Inspiration

    Books mentioned:

    Headlights: https://amzn.to/43WViJK

    American Rapture: https://amzn.to/3QfoCrA

    Maeve Fly: https://amzn.to/4dZb3pq

    Connect with CJ Leede:

    Website: https://cjleede.com

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cjleede

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@cjleede

    Follow Talking Horror Podcast:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelreddreads/

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rachelredd

    If you enjoyed this episode, please Like, Subscribe, and hit the notification bell to help us grow the horror community!

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 15 mins
  • Evil Video Games and Feminine Rage with Tatiana Schlote-Bonne
    Jun 2 2026

    In this episode of Talking Horror, Rachel Redd sits down with Tatiana Schlote-Bonne, author of The Mean Ones, Such Lovely Skin, and the upcoming dark fantasy What Feeds Below. Tatiana dives deep into how her background writing deeply personal essays about family trauma and living with her mother's ex-boyfriend ultimately pushed her to seek pure escapism through horror fiction.

    We discuss her childhood exposure to Resident Evil and Stephen King , the catharsis of surviving toxic male gaming lobbies , and balancing the mentally taxing world of publishing with the physical discipline of Olympic weightlifting. Whether you're a cozy gamer , a powerlifter , or just looking to dive into an immersive void filled with diabolical mushrooms, this conversation is for you.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 – Horror as a Comfort Genre & Writing for Fun

    00:36 – Introducing Tatiana Schlote-Bonne & Her Bizarre, Unsettling Worlds

    02:41 – Childhood Tastes: Goosebumps, Dean Koontz, and Resident Evil

    04:31 – Chasing Scares & Desensitization in Horror Movies

    08:50 – From High School Family Trauma to the Iowa Non-Fiction Writing Program

    16:31 – The Pivot from Memoir to Fiction During the Pandemic

    19:31 – The Parallels of Writing Horror and Olympic Powerlifting

    21:35 – Navigating Toxic Masculinity in Call of Duty Lobbies

    27:30 – Cozy Gaming, Brain Rot, and Video Game Inspirations

    32:22 – Such Lovely Skin: Demonic Video Games and Horrific Secrets

    38:46 – The Mean Ones: Cults, People Pleasing, and 2000s Mean Girls

    46:02 – What Feeds Below: Anime Inspiration, Diabolical Mushrooms, and Body Horror

    52:23 – Adapting Voice for Protagonists & The Agony of the Publishing Industry

    55:06 – Author Confessions Rapid Fire: Ghost Rom-Coms and the Dread of Starting

    Connect with Tatiana Schlote-Bonne:

    tatiana-schlote-bonne.com


    Instagram: @thebuffwriter
    TikTok: @the_buff_writer

    Follow Talking Horror Podcast:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelreddreads/

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rachelredd

    If you enjoyed this episode, please Like, Subscribe, and hit the notification bell to help us grow the horror community!

    Show More Show Less
    58 mins
  • Johanna Van Veen Writes the Sapphic Gothic Horror of Your Dreams
    May 26 2026

    In this episode of Talking Horror, Rachel Redd sits down with the brilliant Johanna Van Veen. Known for her haunting and intimate gothic novels My Darling, Dreadful Thing and Blood on Her Tongue, Johanna dives deep into how her historical fascinations and the unique dynamic of being a triplet have shaped her deeply unsettling stories.

    We discuss her childhood terror of reading the Dutch equivalent of Goosebumps, the catharsis of writing unlikable women and sapphic romances in traditional gothic settings, and the bizarre history of bedazzled catacomb saints. Whether you're a lover of dark folklore, a fan of emotionally complex monster-human relationships, or just looking for your next gothic horror obsession, this conversation is for you.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 – Welcome to Talking Horror & Connecting Across Time Zones

    04:10 – Johanna’s Horror Origin Story: Dutch Goosebumps

    07:17 – The Family Computer & Learning to Blind Type

    10:25 – Drowning Fairies & Mermaid Curses: Dutch Folklore Explained

    12:53 – Being a Triplet & Channeling Sibling Dynamics into Middle-Grade Fiction

    15:21 – A Modern Millennial Meet-Cute: Tumblr Fanfiction

    17:08 – The Tumultuous Road to Publication & Scrapped First Drafts

    30:17 – My Darling, Dreadful Thing: Grief, Mediums, and Comforting Monsters

    39:54 – Blood on Her Tongue: Vampires, Unlikable Women, and Forms of Hunger

    45:54 – Book History, 17th-Century Gratitude Journals, and Puritans

    53:28 – Power Structures & Why Queer Romance Belongs in Gothic Fiction

    57:33 – Bone of My Bone: The Thirty Years' War and Bedazzled Skeletons

    1:06:25 – Future Releases & Rapid-Fire Gothic Game

    Connect with Johanna Van Veen:

    Website: https://johannavanveen.com/

    Instagram: @johannavanveen1997

    Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/42245290.Johanna_van_Veen

    Follow Talking Horror Podcast:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelreddreads/

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rachelredd

    If you enjoyed this episode, please Like, Subscribe, and hit the notification bell to help us grow the horror community!

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 12 mins
  • Neena Viel Raised Her Brother in Her 20s and Turned the Nightmare Into a Horror Novel
    May 19 2026

    In this episode of Talking Horror, Rachel Redd sits down with the hilariously brilliant Neena Viel. Known for her critically acclaimed and terrifying debut Listen to Your Sister, Neena dives deep into how becoming the guardian of her teenage brother in her early 20s inspired her to craft a horror masterpiece about the realities of parentification and invisible caretaking.

    We discuss her childhood terror of Dean Koontz, the catharsis of writing "women behaving badly," and why she has to twerk her way through writer's block. Whether you're an oldest sibling carrying the weight of the world, a fan of morally gray characters, or just looking for your next horror obsession, this conversation is for you.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 – The Pre-Writing Dance Routine & Twerking Through Writer's Block

    00:35 – Introducing Neena Viel & Her Debut, Listen to Your Sister

    01:48 – Neena’s Horror Origin Story: Dean Koontz’s Phantoms & Resident Evil

    06:46 – Childhood Reading Habits: From Large Print Romance to Goosebumps

    11:04 – Pursuing the Dream: "Grandma Thinks I'm a Lawyer"

    12:44 – The Real-Life Inspiration: Raising a Teenager in Your 20s

    14:44 – The Corporate Grind, Pandemic Writing, and "Revenge" Drafting

    17:52 – Neena’s Writing Process: Pantsing, Candles, and the "Party Box"

    26:22 – Navigating the Sophomore Slump & Reader Expectations

    34:57 – Exploring Sibling Trauma, Dynamics, and the Hilarious Character Jamie

    43:27 – Character Building: Giving Siblings Distinct Voices Using the Senses

    46:37 – Balancing Humor with Dark Themes (and the Famous Shower Scene)

    49:59 – The Horrors of Parentification & The Invisible Labor of Women Caretakers

    57:56 – A Sneak Peek at I’ll Watch Your Baby: Morally Gray Women Behaving Badly

    1:01:47 – Book 3 Preview: The Trail Provides, A Hiking Horror Satire

    1:06:05 – Author Recommendations: Tananarive Due, Steven Barnes, and Debuts

    Connect with Neena Viel:

    Website: https://www.neenaviel.com/

    Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/49276349.Neena_Viel (Note: As Neena mentions in the episode, she isn't on platforms like Instagram and TikTok!)

    Follow Talking Horror Podcast:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelreddreads/

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rachelredd

    If you enjoyed this episode, please Like, Subscribe, and hit the notification bell to help us grow the horror community!

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 10 mins
  • Ashley Winstead on Revenge Writing, Cults, and Toxic Ambition
    May 12 2026

    Ashley Winstead joins Rachel Redd on Talking Horror to explore how thriller and horror serve as a powerful mirror for the human condition, from the suffocating weight of hyper-competitiveness to the complex dynamics of control and submission.

    In this episode, Ashley and Rachel dive into:

    The Power of Words: How being a shy "Navy brat" moving every two years led Ashley to find companionship and an innate love for language within books.

    • Poetry as a First Love: Why Ashley’s process remains rooted in "painterly" self-expression and the precision of prose, inspired by poets like Richard Siken and Mary Oliver.

      The 10-Year Hiatus: The "lore" of how a traumatic car accident and 12 MFA rejections led Ashley to quit writing for a decade while she worked in the music and TV industries.

      Academic Thick Skin: How the "grind" of earning a PhD in literature finally gave Ashley the resilience to face the criticism inherent in the publishing world.

      The "Revenge" Thriller: How being told her fantasy novel lacked plot motivated Ashley to "revenge write" her debut thriller, In My Dreams I Hold a Knife, in a fugue state.

      Cults and Control: A deep dive into The Last Housewife and how it explores patriarchal submission and the real-life Sarah Lawrence sex cult.

      Faith vs. Fear: Exploring the existential and religious trauma themes in Midnight is the Darkest Hour, where faith often acts as a "bandage" for the wound of uncertainty.

      Grief as a Detective: How the loss of her father fueled This Book Will Bury Me and its exploration of how grief makes us susceptible to obsession and true crime sleuthing.

    Whether you are a "prose snob," a fan of "unreliable narrators," or an eldest daughter fueled by spite, this conversation offers a fascinating look at the grit behind the glamour of storytelling.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 — The car accident and 12 rejections.

    02:15 — Intro: Welcome Ashley Winstead to Talking Horror.

    03:09 — Growing up shy: Books as an escape for a Navy kid.

    05:14 — First Love: Why poetry and Richard Siken are Ashley’s "Bibles".

    13:54 — The 10-year break: Music industry, Hollywood, and the PhD grind.

    22:17 — Genre Hopping: From YA Fantasy to "Revenge Writing" a thriller.

    32:26 — In My Dreams I Hold a Knife: Toxic ambition and 10-year reunions.

    42:16 — The Last Housewife: Exploring "tradwives," submission, and cults.

    55:43 — Midnight is the Darkest Hour: Religious trauma and faith as a mask for fear.

    1:03:54 — This Book Will Bury Me: Processing grief through true crime obsession.

    1:14:23 — Coming Soon: A sneak peek at Hot Girl Murder Club.

    Follow Ashley Winstead:

    Website: ashleywinstead.com

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ashleywinsteadbooks/

    Follow Talking Horror Podcast:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelreddreads/

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rachelredd

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 19 mins
  • Diana Rodriguez Wallach on the Horror of the Troubled Teen Industry
    May 5 2026

    Diana Rodriguez Wallach (award-winning author of The Silenced, Small Town Monsters and Hatchet Girls) joins Rachel Redd on Talking Horror to explore how horror serves as a powerful mirror for real-world fears, from the dangers of charismatic leaders to the dark side of the troubled teen industry.

    In this episode, Diana and Rachel dive into:

    The "Psychic" Origin Story: How a chance encounter with a Salem psychic and a vivid dream launched Diana’s career as a YA author.

    Horror as a Social Tool: Why "the zombie is never just a zombie" and how horror allows authors to tackle heavy themes without sounding like an after-school special.

    The Book Banning Loophole: The surprising reason axe murders are often more "acceptable" in school libraries than stories about identity or romance.

    Raising Awareness: Using The Silenced to shed light on the terrifying reality of wilderness programs and therapeutic boarding schools.

    Dual Timelines and Gripping Hooks: Why Diana loves crafting "before and after" narratives to keep readers on the edge of their seats.

    The Journalist’s Eye: How Diana’s background as a reporter fuels the intense research and factual history woven into her fiction.

    Beyond YA: A sneak peek into Diana's upcoming adult horror short story and her "secret project" moving into adult fiction.

    Whether you're a fan of 90s classics like Christopher Pike, a writer looking to sharpen your craft, or a reader who loves stories that "push the boundaries," this conversation is a must-listen.

    Timestamps:
    00:00 — A life-changing career prediction in Salem.
    00:26 — Intro: Welcome Diana Rodriguez Wallach to Talking Horror.
    02:15 — Double Nominations: Celebrating The Silenced at the Bram Stoker and Thriller Awards.

    03:09 — Why Horror? Growing up on Christopher Pike and R.L. Stine.
    04:24 — "The zombie is never just a zombie": Using horror to talk about the real world.
    05:26 — The Book Banning Issue: Why "bloody axes" get a pass in the Bible Belt.
    07:51 — Intentional Storytelling: Raising awareness for the troubled teen industry.
    09:44 — The dual timeline obsession: Crafting Hatchet Girls and The Silenced.
    12:06 — The Full Story: 9/11, hotel reporting, and the dream that changed everything.
    15:59 — You can't take the journalist out of the writer: Research and factual history.
    17:28 — What’s Next: Adult horror anthologies and secret projects.
    19:01 — The "Training" Phase: Why authors find it hard to look back at old work.

    Follow Diana Rodriguez Wallach:

    Website: dianarodriguezwallach.com

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dianawallachauthor/

    Follow Talking Horror Podcast:

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelreddreads/

    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rachelredd

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 17 mins
  • Kiersten White Wrote a Bestselling Horror Story That Might Heal Your Religious Trauma
    Apr 28 2026

    Kiersten White (New York Times bestselling author of Hide and Mister Magic) joins Rachel Redd on Talking Horror to explore why horror is the ultimate tool for navigating religious trauma, from the "invisible" God of a high-control childhood to the cathartic power of a cursed children’s show.

    In this episode, Kiersten and Rachel dive into:

    • Religious trauma and the "sucky foundation" of being raised in a high-control Mormon environment.
    • Dismantling purity culture and the process of "healing the shit out of" trauma through fiction.
    • Why Mister Magic serves as a "holy grail" for survivors seeking to reclaim their identity from toxic beliefs.
    • The millennial horror of Hide: sacrificing the next generation for a measly $50,000 and the "unlikability" of human desperation.
    • Giving Lucy Westenra her groove back: reclaiming Dracula’s most tragic victim through a queer, feminist lens.
    • The "T-shirt book deal" and the secrets to writing for iconic franchises like Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Star Wars.
    • The real star of the show: Kimberly, the 40-pound, "opportunistic omnivore" tortoise living in Kiersten’s backyard.

    Whether you're a "self-proclaimed chicken" who loves scary stories, an author navigating the "murky areas" of different genres, or a survivor looking for the hope and catharsis hidden in the dark, this one is for you.

    Timestamps:

    • 00:00 — Intro: Does horror still scare a professional horror writer?
    • 01:47 — Why horror? Taking control of childhood fears.
    • 03:16 — Forbidden stories: Growing up in a high-control religious environment.
    • 08:33 — The "Twilight" effect and accidentally starting a career in YA.
    • 10:50 — Writing for teens vs. adults: Hope vs. "we’re on our own".
    • 13:39 — Re-imaginings: Having a creative conversation with Dracula and Frankenstein.
    • 18:02 — The "Sunnydale" T-shirt deal and pitching a Ben Solo novel.
    • 23:49 — Balancing ADHD, humor, and darkness across different "cookie jars".
    • 29:09Hide: Greek myths, reality TV, and the horror of the American system.
    • 36:50Religious Trauma: Why Mister Magic is for the people "crying in the DMs".
    • 47:25 — Reclaiming Lucy Westenra: Why the men in Dracula are the real villains.
    • 54:26The Fox and the Devil: Forensic science, world fairs, and joyful queerness.
    • 1:08:17 — Meet Kimberly: The dinosaur-sized tortoise in the backyard.
    • 1:10:06 — Upcoming projects: Graphic novels and Wild and Wicked.

    Follow the Guest (Kiersten White):

    • Website: kierstenwhite.com
    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/authorkierstenwhite

    Follow Talking Horror Podcast:

    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelreddreads/
    • TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@rachelredd

    If you enjoyed this episode, please Like, Subscribe, and hit the notification bell to help us grow the horror community!

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 13 mins