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Nakia Cook

Supernatural Suspense and Horror Author

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writing process

Book of Master Lists #2: John Carpenter’s The Thing

by Nakia

John Carpenter's The Thing, Featuring John W. Campbell's novella, Who Goes There?
Photo by Nakia Cook

Released on June 25, 1982, John Carpenter’s The Thing, the first in the Apocalypse Trilogy, (The Thing, Prince of Darkness and In The Mouth of Madness), made me a lifelong fan of the genre.

I’ve talked about how an impossible-odds story appeals to me in the past, and I’ll say it again here. The idea of a group of rag-tag individuals banding together against the unknown gets me every time.

This movie keeps you on the edge of your seat. It attracts as it repels. How do you defeat something that takes you over at the molecular level?

I wonder, do the people who are consumed by the being die completely, or is the mind stuck inside it somewhere, witnessing the horror but unable to do anything about it?

When I watch this movie, another one also comes to mind: Leviathan, starring Peter Weller, and the late, Richard Crenna. If I recall correctly, the creature merged with its victims, fusing them together into a horrid, hydra-type being.

The difference, is that the thing hides in plain sight. It looks and talks like its victims, fooling all but the most observant.

How do you defeat something that takes you over at the molecular level?

What I’ve learned watching horror movies is that humor is an asset. I believe the two are closely related. One wrong turn and something meant to be funny turns flat. Another turn makes it disturbing.

Joaquin Phoenix did a masterful job of it in Joker. That stand-up bit was excruciating.

The infamous surgery scene in The Thing, creates tension, then ramps it up big time. The one-liner delivered by one of the supporting actors sums it up nicely: “You’ve got to be f*cking kidding me.”

No, my dude, it’s even worse than you can imagine.

What this scene does is allow us to take in the horror, process it, then let off some steam. But not too much. And we get to take a momentary breather.

We’re grateful that can watch from afar while empathizing as the crew deals with the sickening absurdity of the situation.

The shock and humor separates us from the alien, showcasing our humanity.

This is the bit that I love. Throw a protagonist with or without a group of supporting characters into a situation, and show me their humanity. Show me what separates them from the antagonist. And make them suffer for my entertainment.

I hope that my own writing is able to capture both the horrors of life with doses of comic relief along the way. It’s one reason why I tend to focus on one or two colorful characters, stretching their personalities just to the point of absurdity, injecting a little fun into an otherwise tense moment.

Overall, the movie critics deemed it a failure. It was released on the heels of E.T. and Blade Runner made its debut the same day. Now that I’m older, I’ll take either one of these films over E.T. My six-year-old self would say I’m insane.

It just goes to show, some movies don’t age as well over time, people’s tastes change, and genius is sometimes revealed in a second viewing.

I was stoked to discover that John W. Campbell wrote the novella, Who Goes There?, which first printed in August, 1938. I rushed to buy a copy and can’t wait to dive in.

There’s an introduction, written by William F. Nolan of Logan’s Run, and his screen treatment of the story is in the back of the book.

In it, Nolan talks about the initial release of The Thing, produced by Howard Hawks in 1951. Straying too far from the original, hardcore fans were not pleased with this rendition and it was back to the drawing board.

The next time your work is ignored or receives negative feedback, keep this movie, now a cult classic, in mind. Maybe you haven’t reached your audience just yet.

Nakia Cook

This is the first topic in my Book of Master Lists, where I try to capture the essence of what gets me going as a writer.

What is the culmination of who I am as an author and how I view the world?

Oh, I chose to house it all in a Moleskine Expanded. We’ll see how the paper holds up.

Filed Under: Book of Master Lists, writing process Tagged With: book of master lists, MOVIES, notebooks, novellas

Book of Master Lists

by Nakia

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When I first started down the path of serious writing, I bought two cheap notebooks from the dollar store. They were flimsy a6 sized books; spiral-bound with perforated pages. I still have them somewhere along with tons of other notebooks that harbor both good and cringe-worthy ideas. Mostly cringe-worthy, if I’m honest.

Recently, I watched a video by Sarra Cannon on YouTube where she explains how she’s made a Book of Master Lists to pinpoint influences for her writing. I think it’s a brilliant idea. Apparently, the idea came about after reading Alexandra Sokoloff’s Screenwriting Tricks for Authors.

It sort of gives me junior high school scrapbooking vibes and I’m here for it.

Having a notebook dedicated to your influences can help to sort out the essence of what drives the inner workings of your stories. It may reveal what connects your writing to what you love in others’ works and a little about yourself too. 

Early Exposure

An overwhelming number of subjects in my collection are from the sci-fi and horror genres, which is surprising. I’m not a die-hard fan like Rob Zombie or anything. I have Love Jones, Pretty in Pink, and Purple Rain in there too. Heck, I love Jackie Brown, Rambo, Rocky, and Uptown Saturday Night too.

Funny story. Growing up, I was an Army brat, and we lived in Germany in the eighties. The people in our neighborhood loaned each other movies on video tapes to copy. We had a VHS tape with The Amityville Horror, along with 1001 Rabbit Tales. It was a race against time to turn off the end credits of the Bugs Bunny movie before the creepy kids started singing the theme song of Amityville. Don’t ask me why my parents didn’t copy it to a different tape. I guess I would have stumbled across it anyway, but still. 

I’ve finally purchased a copy of the paperback. I hear it’s not as good as the movie, but we’ll see.

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When I turned nine or ten, something clicked, and I embraced the horror. The Friday the 13th franchise was big back then. I still love Evil Dead, Dario Argento’s Demons, and campy stuff like Night of the Comet and Squirm. Probably my favorites are The Thing, American Werewolf in London, and Dawn of the Dead. Exceptional stuff. 

Where I Get My Influences From Now:

These days, there’s not much that I find frightening. Horror’s not what it used to be. I enjoy reading older stories that I might have missed when I was younger, like ‘Salem’s Lot. I read it last year and I’m still thinking about it.

What made it stay on my mind? Was it the cast of characters? Did I care what happened to them? Mostly, no. I think it was the mysterious villain who drew me in. He was foreboding and dangerous, and the simple townspeople were up against impossible odds. How the hell were they going to win? This is what you can pick apart in your list.

Early in my career, I was introduced to the idea of creating a set of Master Lists in order to figure out what inspired me and why.

Sarra Cannon

The Book of Master Lists is like an artist’s study. Instead of pulling out a sketchbook to try your hand at painting Monet or Manet, or figure drawing, the writer studies an array beyond (and possibly including), the fine arts. We can pull our inspiration from art, books, film, video games (yay, Resident Evil), and other forms of media. It’s a curated collection of what gets you going.

My biggest problem is narrowing the scope. It could get out of hand.

How do I contain it?

What type of notebook is best for this undertaking? I’m on the fence. Will a bound notebook do the job? If I choose a larger one like the Miqel Rius one, will it suffice? Or, the Moleskine expanded? I thought about using a discbound notebook, but the mediums I use would weigh the pages down. I know, I’m overthinking it, but hey, writer here.

The Process

This is an exercise in spontaneity; I’m winging it. I uploaded images of movie posters to Canva (I love Canva), and set them all to the same size, then printed them on sheets of sticker paper. Writing why I liked these movies and what elements stuck with me over time is a useful way to develop ideas and isolate tropes. I plan to do this with books if the stickers hold up and I might list my favorite characters from both mediums and cross-reference them with others, noting similarities and what makes them endearing or interesting to me.

Since it’s a work in progress, I’ll be sharing more in the future as it comes along. Share if you’re making one! Sarra is inviting everyone to post pics on Instagram under the #bookofmasterlists hashtag.

Nakia

I enjoy a twisted story—especially if there are jinn, witches and vampires. I’m challenging my readers to imagine a world of diverse Muslim characters caught up in otherworldly situations.

nakialcook

Filed Under: Book of Master Lists, writing process Tagged With: book of master lists, notebooks, writing inspiration, writing process

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