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Conversations From Studio B: Author Neil Sater on merging real-life tragedy and supernatural fiction in 'Atrocity'

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Manage episode 508059986 series 3368508
Content provided by WOUB Digital and WOUB News. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by WOUB Digital and WOUB News or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
In this episode of "Conversations From Studio B," WOUB’s Emily Votaw talks with Cleveland-based author Neil Sater about his most recent novel, "Atrocity: The Haunting of Moravian Village." The book tells the story of Sean Davidson, a teenager whose life takes a sudden, nightmarish turn after a mysterious stranger emerges from the night and intrudes on a deliberately strange campfire gathering with his best friend. The supernatural forces that terrorize Sean are fictional, but their roots lie in a very real historical tragedy: the Gnadenhutten Massacre, also known as the Moravian Massacre. On March 8, 1782—towards the end of the American Revolutionary War—Pennsylvania militiamen led by David Williamson brutally killed 96 unarmed and pacifist Native Americans, nearly two-thirds of them women and children, at the Christian mission village of Gnadenhütten, near present-day New Philadelphia, Ohio. In the interview, Sater discusses working closely with representatives of the Native American tribes connected to those who died in the massacre. He also discusses his efforts to raise awareness of this history and the inspiration he finds in rural Ohio—specifically, Tuscarawas, Coshocton, and Holmes Counties—which he fictionalizes as Homer County, the setting for "Atrocity," as well as his two other horror novels: "Phantom Realm: the Haunting of Misery Mansion" (2023) and "Mercy Killing: the Haunting of Ghoul House" (2024).
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377 episodes

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Manage episode 508059986 series 3368508
Content provided by WOUB Digital and WOUB News. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by WOUB Digital and WOUB News or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
In this episode of "Conversations From Studio B," WOUB’s Emily Votaw talks with Cleveland-based author Neil Sater about his most recent novel, "Atrocity: The Haunting of Moravian Village." The book tells the story of Sean Davidson, a teenager whose life takes a sudden, nightmarish turn after a mysterious stranger emerges from the night and intrudes on a deliberately strange campfire gathering with his best friend. The supernatural forces that terrorize Sean are fictional, but their roots lie in a very real historical tragedy: the Gnadenhutten Massacre, also known as the Moravian Massacre. On March 8, 1782—towards the end of the American Revolutionary War—Pennsylvania militiamen led by David Williamson brutally killed 96 unarmed and pacifist Native Americans, nearly two-thirds of them women and children, at the Christian mission village of Gnadenhütten, near present-day New Philadelphia, Ohio. In the interview, Sater discusses working closely with representatives of the Native American tribes connected to those who died in the massacre. He also discusses his efforts to raise awareness of this history and the inspiration he finds in rural Ohio—specifically, Tuscarawas, Coshocton, and Holmes Counties—which he fictionalizes as Homer County, the setting for "Atrocity," as well as his two other horror novels: "Phantom Realm: the Haunting of Misery Mansion" (2023) and "Mercy Killing: the Haunting of Ghoul House" (2024).
  continue reading

377 episodes

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