Anonymous wrote:In addition to the shining and pet cemetery, IT scared the crap out of me. It happened to mesh well with some of my biggest phobias and i remember lying in bed at night wanting to get up to pee and too scared to get out of my bed for months afterwards…
Also his short story The Raft
Lovecraft dreams in the witch house
Anonymous wrote:Wait Till Helen Comes by Mary Downing Hahn and The Dollhouse Murders by Betty Ren Wright both terrified me as a child. I still get chills reading those books as an adult!
I reread The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson every October - it’s probably my favorite horror novel. I also like The Uninvited by Dorothy Macardle, The Turn of the Screw by Henry James, Some Must Watch by Ethel Lina White (also published as The Spiral Staircase), and The Woman in Black by Susan James.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Tell-Tale Heart, Hitchcock short story.
Flowers in the Attic, VC Andrews.
Poe, you ignorant slut.
lol. dp, who loves Poe and noted Premature Burial as one of my top scariest stories read.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Road
Blood Meridian is right up there too. I can’t believe it hasn’t been made into a movie.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was thinking of reading The Road.
It sounds rough. If I’ve read the Shining and The Atsnd without problems, do you think I could tolerate the Road?
It's different.
The Road is a 2006 novel by Cormac McCarthy, and it’s one of the bleakest, most stripped‑down post‑apocalyptic books ever written. Since you asked “what book is that,” here’s the clean, direct profile:
The Road — What it is
A father and his young son walk through a burned, ash‑covered America after an unspecified cataclysm. There’s almost no food, no animals, no plants, and almost no surviving humans — and the ones who remain are often dangerous.
It’s a survival story, but really it’s about:
parental love
moral choices when society is gone
the instinct to protect someone even when the world is ending
It’s written in McCarthy’s minimalist style: sparse punctuation, stark imagery, and emotional punches delivered in a single line.
How The Road compares to The Stand
Short version:
The Stand is bleak but expansive, dramatic, mythic, character-driven, and ultimately hopeful.
The Road is bleak but minimalist, intimate, stripped-down, and spiritually annihilating.
I just, before you posted, asked Co-Pilot to figure out if I would like ti based on my reading profile. It basically suggested that I never try reading it.
Hope this helps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember that when I was a kid I read The Amityville Horror and it scared me so badly that not only did I throw the book away, I didn't throw it in the trash in the kitchen, I took it into the alley and put it in our big garbage can there.
Yikes! 😱
I can only imagine……
Anonymous wrote:I remember that when I was a kid I read The Amityville Horror and it scared me so badly that not only did I throw the book away, I didn't throw it in the trash in the kitchen, I took it into the alley and put it in our big garbage can there.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if disturbing necessarily counts as scary, but American Psycho is probably the most disturbing book I've ever read.
Nightwatching by Tracy Sierra scared the crap out of me because home invasion is one of my biggest fears.
I love that someone mentioned Wait Til Helen Comes. My 4th grade teacher read that out loud to us and I remember being so scared!!
Anonymous wrote:Dracula. Had nightmares for weeks. Heart was racing at the end.