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Introducing the 2023 BWiH Magazine – Special Edition!
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February is Black Women in Horror Month!

February is Black Women in Horror Month!
February may be the shortest month of the year, but the LOUDEST month when it comes to celebrations, recognitions and tributes. In 2013, February became the official Black Women in Horror Month, and each year we happily rev up at this time to celebrate the bold voices and lasting impact of black women in the horror industry.
This year, as we mark the 10th anniversary of the first Black Women in Horror list series, and 5 years after the last major update to the series, Kenya Moss-Dyme of Colors in Darkness, and Sumiko Saulson, who put together 100+ Black Women in Horror, are revitalizing the series with the launch of the BlackWomenInHorror.org website. We will start off by debuting a new series of interviews, but over time, we will honor not only trailblazers like Octavia Butler, Tananarive Due and L. A. Banks, we also recognize the women creating art and showing up every subgenre of the field. From books to film; from paranormal, sci-fi, dark romance to bad ass monsters, BWiHM will kickoff a celebration that’s far too big for one month – we’ll be following these creatives all year long!
We’ve only got 28 days so let’s make the most of it! Join us as we introduce you to the women who show up in every space of the horror universe – some you may know, but many who will become your newest darlings.
Is there a Black Woman in Horror that we should know about? Someone who was not on the original list and should be added as we improve and increase it? Old bios that should be updated? You can be a part of improving, updating, and increasing the list! Contact Sumiko Saulson at sumikoska@yahoo.com if you have any suggestions for writers who should be on the list, including yourself!
Watch this space for more information, news and links to BWiHM celebrations across all media.
Follow blackwomeninhorror.org to stay in the know.
Like and Share, and Tag us in your own posts about Black Women in Horror all throughout the month of February and use the #BWiHM and #BlackWomenInHorror hashtags!
Sumiko Saulson: @sumikoska on FB, Twitter and Tik-Tok and @sumikosaulson on IG
Kenya Moss-Dyme: FB: @kenya.mossdyme, Tik-Tok & IG: @kenyamossdyme
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At the Heart of Horror: Valjeanne Jeffers, Remembered

Around this time last year, I was interviewing authors for the Horror Writers Association’s Black Heritage Month blog series when I received the heartrending news that Valjeanne was coming toward the end of her life. She let me know that she was very ill, and asked if I could interview her over the phone, rather than via email, because of her illness. I said yes, of course, and proceeded to type up her answers as she dictated them to me over the phone. Valjeanne told me at the time that she didn’t think she’d be around very much longer. I asked her if there was anything I could do, and she spoke in glowing terms of her longtime boyfriend Quenton Veal checking on her regularly.
Just six months later, she was gone, taking her remarkable light from the world and leaving so many of us grieving. Nonetheless, her legacy lives, not just in her body of work but in the way she impacted virtually everyone with whom she came into contact.
Valjeanne was an exceedingly kind and warmhearted woman, known to many of her friends and loved ones as Sister Moon, which was her email and social media tag. Thaddeus Howze spoke of this in his memorial piece honoring her, “A name to conjure by: Sister Moon, Valjeanne Jeffers,” which ran in the San Francisco BayView.
Like Thaddeus, I never had the honor nor pleasure of meeting Valjeanne in person, though we were on many of the same virtual convention panels (particularly during the extended stay-at-home period at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic), and we had also spoken over the phone several times.

Valjeanne was one of the writers I profiled on my original list of 60 Black Women in Horror, which I put together back in 2013. Although I didn’t know her at the time, I met her the following year and interviewed her for my blog.
The first time I spoke to her on the phone, I remember her patiently explaining how to pronounce her name, Valjeanne. She was named after Jean Valjean from the Victor Hugo novel “Les Miserables” and her name was pronounced the same way, the “Jeanne” is pronounced more like “Joan” than “Jean”—most accurately, like something halfway between “Joan” and “John”, just like Jean-Luc Picard on Star Trek. Her mom was a huge fan of the play.

If you haven’t read any of her work, I encourage you to start here: Valjeanne’s stories have appeared in many anthologies – Steamfunk (2013); Griots: Sisters of the Spear (2013); Sycorax’s Daughters (2017); The City: A Cyberfunk Anthology (2015); Blacktastic: Blacktastic Con 2018 Anthology (2018); Dark Universe: The Bright Empire (2018); Luminescent Threads: Connections to Octavia Butler (2017); Blerdrotica I: Sweet, Sexy, and Special Dark (2020); Fitting In: Historical Accounts of Paranormal Subcultures (2016); and The Ringing Ear: Black Poets Lean South (2007), among others.
Valjeanne, in addition to being extremely talented and prolific, was the salt of the Earth. She was a warm, kind person who was extremely well-loved by everyone who knew her. I had the pleasure of sharing a number of tables of contents with her, including the anthologies Scierogenous II: An Anthology of Erotic Science Fiction and Fantasy (2018), Black Magic Women: Terrifying Tales by Scary Sisters (2018), Slay: Tales of the Vampire Noire (Mocha Memoirs Press (2020), Horror Addicts Guide to Life 2 (2022).

She had two series under her belt, The Immortal Series (2009, 2010, 2010, & 2021; about star-crossed shapeshifters), and Mona Livelong: Paranormal Detective (2014, 2016, & 2021). She also wrote The Switch: Clockwork (2013; a steamfunk crossover with the “Immortal Universe,”) Colony: The Ascension (2020; a space opera) and Southern Comfort (2016). She was a luminary in the steamfunk subgenre, as detailed in my San Francisco BayView remembrance of her, “The Queen of Steamfunk.”
You can find many writings by Valjeanne, along with interviews and podcasts of her, by searching her name on HorrorAddicts.net. Her short story “The Lost Ones” can be heard on the Nightlight Podcast.

I shared a table of contents with her for what is likely the last release of her new original work, Blerdrotica II: Couple’s Therapy, which was released in December 2022, half a year after she joined the ancestors. I still recall speaking on Facebook with Valjeanne, Quinton, and another friend James Goodridge about how excited we all were to have been accepted into it. The fact the anthology came out after her death has given me many moments to reflect anew on her loss.
In my heart, I keep forgetting that she isn’t going to be at the book release event or conventions, that I couldn’t ask her for an updated bio for Black Women in Horror Month, that despite the many online panels we were on together I would now never be meeting her in person. Valjeanne was one of those people who always showed up, who could be relied on, whose presence brightened the spaces in which she participated, and the presence of her absence still breaks my heart.
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100+ Black Women in Horror

100+ Black Women in Horror
February is African American History Month here in the United States. It is also Women in Horror Month (WiHM). In 2013, as an Ambassador for Women in Horror Month, the original book 60 Black Women in Horror was born during the intersection of the two. . Over the past five years, the world women writing horror from the African Diaspora has nearly doubled. 100+ Black Women in Horror is a 2018 update, containing 109 biographies. The booklet also includes interviews with seventeen of the women.and an essay on LA Banks and Octavia Butler.
Buy Links
Get Exclusive Discounts on paperbacks books when you buy directly from Lulu.com, the world’s largest independent on-demand printing service:
Standard Paperback $6.03It is also available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, iTunes Store, Kobo, and bookstores everywhere for the standard price of 99 cents for the eBook, $15 for the Paperback, and $33 for Hardcover.
Free eBook available on Goodreads
The Interviews
The Lists (with Bios)
Twenty Women in Black Horror Writing (List One) (2013)
Twenty One More Women in Black Horror Writing (List Two) (2013)
19 More Black Women in Horror Fiction (List Three) (2013)
20 More Black Women in Horror Fiction (List Four) (2017)
10 Black Women in Horror 2018 List 1 (List Five) (2018)
10 Black Women in Horror 2018 List 2 (List Six) (2018)
10 Black Women in Horror 2018 List 3 (List Seven) (2018)
The Full List (Alphabetical)
Listing with webpage links
- Linda D. Addison
- Pheare Alexander
- Angela C. Allen
- Paula D. Ashe
- Miracle Austin
- Tiffany Austin
- Kamika Aziza
- L.A. Banks
- Tracey Baptiste
- Darlene Black
- Regina N. Bradley
- Kinitra Brooks, PhD
- Chesya Burke
- Claudia Mair Burney
- Octavia Butler
- Patricia E. Canterbury
- Pearl Cleage
- Crystal Connor
- Vicy Cross
- Arielle Crowell
- Joy M. Copeland
- L.M. Davis
- Lexi Davis
- Dahlia DeWinters
- Amber Doe
- Tananarive Due
- Janiera Eldridge
- Ann Fields
- Dormaine G
- V.H. Galloway
- Robin Green
- Tyhitia Green
- Dicey Grenor
- Jewelle Gomez
- Virginia Hamilton
- Chanel Harry
- Donna Hill
- Allison Hobbs
- Lawana Holland-Moore
- Akua Lezli Hope
- Pauline E. Hopkins
- Nalo Hopkinson
- Zora Neale Hurston
- Alledria Hurt
- Monica Jackson
- Tish Jackson
- Tiara Jante
- Valjeanne Jeffers
- Jemiah Jefferson
- N.K. Jemisin
- Delizhia D. Jenkins
- Alaya Dawn Johnson
- Tenea Johnson
- R. J. Joseph
- A.D. Koboah
- Nicole Givens Kurtz
- Alexandra Lane
- Kai Leakes
- J. Locke
- Kyoko M
- D.K. Mason
- Faye McCray
- Carole McDonnell
- Dana T. McKnight
- Violette L. Meier
- Melinda Michelle
- Donna Monday
- Tonya R. Moore
- Toni Morrison
- Kenya Moss-Dyme
- Pam Noles
- Nnedi Okorafor
- Nuzo Onoh
- Helen Oyeyemi
- Ama Patterson
- A.L. Peck
- L. Penelope
- Ann Lane Petry
- Mina Polina
- Rasheedah Prioleau
- Dia Reeves
- Evie Rhodes
- Jewell Parker Rhodes
- Jill Robinson
- Zin E. Rocklyn
- Leone Ross
- Eden Royce
- Kiini Ibura Salaam
- Anna Sanders
- Andrea Vocab Sanderson
- Cinsearae Santiago
- Sumiko Saulson
- Nicole D. Sconiers
- Nisi Shawl
- RaShell R. Smith-Spears
- CC. Spivey
- Cherene Sherrard-Johnson
- Tabitha Thompson
- Sheree R. Thomas
- Lori Titus
- Tlotlo Tsamaase
- Tanesha Nicole Tyler
- Deborah Elizabeth Whaley
- Kenesha Williams
- L. Marie Wood
- K. Ceres Wright
- Zane
- Deana Zhollis
- Ibi Zoboi
