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Top 10 scariest books of all time
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Hayley
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Aug 19, 2008 12:35AM

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Yes, we have slated The Stand for October! We are going to read the expanded edition, so that you know when you get your copy.

Logan, if you are afriad of things that "go bump in the deep" than I have to tell you to never ever read 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea..... NEVER!!!! You might die of fright from some of the things they come across, and have to survive.

Did you read the classics kids version of that book, Logan? I cant picture a 7 year old reading the original adult version of that novel. I had trouble with some of the words, and Im ...well... a-hem... Older.. hee hee


The movies never bothered me- but that book was scary. Maybe because it was represented as true- but I was reading The Stand around the same time which didn't bother me.

Okay, I admit it, I refuse to read the book in bed b/c ever since I was a child I've been creeped out by having scary books in my room when I turn out the lights (and, yes, I'm almost 30 now and it still haunts me!). As if the words will suddenly come to life and scare the bejeezus out of me while asleep!


Julianne, Lovecraft is very creepy. And I think the way he writes just adds to the ambience.

I may have to add Lovecraft to my TBR, I love a good scare.

My list as follows...
The Shining
The Exorcist
Silence of the Lambs
Haunted Lily-Nightmare Ball
Ghost Story
Rosemary's Baby
Nice list Audrey. I haven't read Haunted Lily, but the others are among my favorite scary novels.


"Anyway, yes, I do agree about the sock puppet thing, If you look at the accounts of those three "reviewers" (John, Audrey, and Tabitha) it does appear they were created solely for the purpose of raving about this one book in as many different discussion groups as possible. None of them show real pix of real people. Each has just a few common books on the shelves. And then they each post 4 to 6 of these drive by reviews on the same book. Shoot, they even "read and like" each other's reviews!
Things that make you go hmmm...
And oh, yeah, I find it amusing that one of "Audrey's" quotes has to do with reality."

I'm calling it...those are fake accounts created solely to promote that book. Check out the author's "Comments" section on her author page. Everyone signing their name and some kind of fair-thee-well. And all of the "reviewers" places of residence are where the author has lived (according to her bio). And it's simply "AMAZING" that all the author's little followers seem to have read the exact same books she has. Who'da thunk it??
I hate these kind of shenanigans! Take it to Amazon people...


my favorite author horrors are a thriade:
EDGAR ALLAN POE,H.P LOVECRAFT and CLIVE BARKER

and about hp lovecraft beinh a racist shall I say sort of in is defence that it was way normal and aceptable back then...

LOL!! I used to do the same thing. Face down, with a couple other books or something heavy over top. It was terrible in college, since people would look at you funny if you set your books right outside your door overnight!
Jesse, I agree. Lovecraft's style of writing is so suspenseful. And, b/c he wrote in the early 20th century, I'm reading very closely, hanging on and absorbing every word he says. Like that person who leans in to the TV just before the axe murderer leaps out of the darkness.

Somewhat differant than the movie. The mayor is evan more of a scumbag in the book than in the movie. The character of the chief is better developed in the book esp in his feelings of insecurity & exclusion in the community & in his family. He is an "outsider' & a cop so the community is not relaxed toward him & he does not know or respect their small-town ways. He feels insecure in his relationship with his & offended by her membership in the insider "island" clique & their attitudes towards outsiders like him. His sons are considered insiders beacause their mother is a born islander but the chief is an outsider, evan in his family. The relationship between the chief & his wife is well-done in both but her character is maybe more developed in the book. The relationship between the chief & the scientist is much less congenial in the book, Jaws ain't the only dangerous beast in the book!

According to my sister Enfdless Night by agatha Christie is scary. She refused to read it during the evening before going to bed.

10. The Wolfen by Whitley Strieber
9. Nightmare House by Douglas Clegg
8. Ghost Road Blues by Jonathan Maberry
7. Books of Blood by Clive Barker
6. The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty
5. Misery by Stephen King
4. John Dies at the End by David Wong
3. Memnoch the Devil by Anne Rice
2. The Amulet by Michael McDowell
1. Infected by Scott Sigler

I had to go back pretty far to remember reading something that scared me at all. Most are Stephen King and Edgar Allan Poe. The stories that jump out at me are:
It - King (the made-for-tv movie did nothing for me)
The Shining - King
Misery - King
Carrie - King (both book and movie scare me!)
The Pit and the Pendulum - Poe
The Fall of the House of Usher - Poe
I have found that the books that scared me the most, are ones that are about real-life murders/serial killers (I have several). The stories that actually happened are the most scary!


Plus, I love E.A. Poe. :)

It by Stephen King
Amityville Horror

Liesl-I'd forgotten Amityville Horror! That book scared me too! I had a hard time sleeping after that one.


Helter-Skelter by Vince Bugliosi gave me the willies - decades after the murders
Magic by William Goldman - more of a psychological terror than horror

The Talented Mr. Ripley (P. Highsmith)
Harvest Home (T. Tryon)

IT & Salem's Lot by Stephen King

Has anyone mentioned House of Leaves yet?? It took me a while to get into it, but by the end I was IN it. I'm pretty sure it nearly stole my soul. It just screws with your mind.

-Thanks

I don't think it's King's accident that accounts for his drop in quality; I think it's his quitting the booze. I call this Aerosmith Syndrome, when someone quits drugs and simultaneously quits being awesome.
This is going to sound stupid, but: I recently read a scene in Anna Karenina and distinctly thought, "This is as scary as anything I've ever read." It was honestly horrifying.
(If you're curious, MILD SPOILER FOR PART III: it's the day after she confesses her indiscretion to Alexei.)



Salem's Lot is definitely the scariest book I've ever read, followed closely by The Shining. Love Stephen King!
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