lol. dp, who loves Poe and noted Premature Burial as one of my top scariest stories read. |
Agreed. The structure alone is perfect. I read In Cold Blood and Fatal Vision back to back many years ago, and while the latter was compelling, it doesn’t hold a candle to the former. |
| The backstory of how Capote got to know the perpetrators and their back stories was riveting as well. |
| agree with in cold blood and I also found Under the Banner of Heaven to be pretty scary as well. |
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My teenager has read these, including House of Leaves and Truman Capote.
I read Stephen King at her age but have left all horror behind. My brain can't take it. I remember reading books with short ghost stories and "MURDER" was so terrifying. Now murder is every day in the news. |
Yes. I read it in middle or HS and still remember the descriptions vividly. |
Bradbury is completely underrated as an author IMO, probably because he wrote science fiction. He wove so much social commentary into his novels too. Love his books. |
What did you expect from someone that would put VC Andrews into the same category as Poe?
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| Dracula. Had nightmares for weeks. Heart was racing at the end. |
The Road is vastly more disturbing than anything Stephen King has written. It’s not scary per se imo, but it is as bleak and depressing as it gets. |
| Pet Semetary. Stephen King is, in my opinion, in general not actually that scary, although The Shining certainly has its moments and some of his short stories are bangers. Pet Semetary is uniquely horrifying in King’s work. |
Yes indeed. Terrifying. |
Yes. I recommend the movie Infamous with Toby Jones, Catherine Keener and Daniel Craig on the subject. It's about him and Harper Lee going to Kansas to investigate and write the book. Craig plays one of the killers. Capote is a similar movie but I think Infamous is better. |
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Let's Go Play At The Adams' is the darkest, bleakest, most horrifying novel I have ever read. It will wreck you and leave you walking around feeling like you've been kicked hard in the gut, for weeks. It's not only scary in a suspense-building, sometimes disgusting way, it offers the darkest presentation of childhood and human nature I have ever encountered.
It's about college girl who takes a babysitting job at a home where the parents are supposed to be gone for two weeks. There is at least two very young children, and then some older teens, including the neighbor kids they invite over. As a game, the kids chloroform the babysitter (I think when she was sleeping), and tie her spread-eagle to her bed. When she wakes up, they don't really know what to do, but they gradually start bullying her and testing out their power, and things escalate over the coming days into outright torture. The kind of torture the littlest kids think up, ranging to the kind of torture the teen boy thinks up, and the kids rotate as keeping watch on the girl, which means the individual bits of torture happen with no one watching but the kid or kids inflicting each bit. It ends in the worst possible way. I've read The Road, which others have done a good job of describing here, and I also find it powerfully dark and disturbing, but...it presents a small note of optimism in the way that there are still (a few) people who remain good when all rules and constraints of society, and society itself, fall away. Let's Go Play At The Adams' suggests that evil is not so far below the surface in everyone, even in happy, pampered children who live in a nice home with wealthy, kind parents. |