The publishing world is ever changing. What was a thriving online market yesterday could well be bankrupt tomorrow. A publishing company that was an unquestioned pillar can crumble. A beloved author can seemingly go out of her way to destroy her reputation.
And a beloved horror review site can shutter.
Sadly, Haunted MTL is no more. And, I might as well rip this band-aid off now, there will not be another season of AA.
I might write the story in book form, if anyone is interested. I was certainly going somewhere with the story.
I started working for Haunted MTL in 2019. I’d already published several novels by this time, but this was something different. This was an actual writing job.
I loved my time writing for Haunted MTL. I met so many amazing writers and made friends with several. There is nothing better than writing friends. I got to see horror movies that I might never have seen. Some I wish had never assaulted my eyeballs, like Antichrist. Some I loved very much, like Silent Night and Pooka. I conducted live tweet events during American Horror Story and Dexter, and got to talk to fellow fans all around the world.
Being a critic was a fantastic experience. If you want to be a good writer, one important exercise is to dissect a piece of work that you have strong opinions about, good or bad, and consider why it either works or doesn’t work. As a critic, that was exactly what I did twice a week. And I even got paid for it.
I was also invited to participate in several charity anthologies, which is always great. We conducted storytelling events through the years, writing short stories together. Including several years of Christmas and holiday horrors.
We did podcasts. We did events. We once read A Christmas Carol together and posted it. It was a laugh.
It was too good, maybe, to last.
I will miss Haunted MTL. I will miss the sense of writing camaraderie. Of being on staff. Of being part of a team.
But even as I mourn, I know it’s time to move on. As I said at the top, the publishing world is ever changing. And so even as this spooky door closes, another will open.
If you find yourself in this sort of situation, I’m so sorry. But remember, setbacks like this don’t necessarily reflect on you. Sometimes projects don’t work. We are artists, and art is subjective. Sometimes we’re going to do our level best and still not succeed. All there is for us then is to dust ourselves off, have a little cry, and write another story.
Then another, and another.
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