The 50 Best Horror Novels of All Time - Reaction
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 17. 06. 2024
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0:00 books 1-10
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23:06 books 20-30
27:20 books 30-40
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Happy reading, horror fans!
As a child, I was exposed to âJane Eyre,â it having been read aloud, and I thought it was a horror story - cruelty, the red room, a ghost, a crazy woman, arson, a voice calling across the moors. It really frightened me!
1. Ghost Story - Peter Straub 2. Carrion Comfort - Dan Simmons 3. The Monk - Monk Lewis 4. The Last Days of Jack Sparks - Jason Arnopp 5. Swan Song - Robert R. McCammon 6. The Exorcist - William Peter Blatty 7. Frankenstein - Mary Shelly 8. The Shining - Stephen King 9. The Haunting of Hill House - Shirley Jackson 10. Dracula - Bram Stoker 11. The Turn of the Screw - Henry James 12. The Damnation Game - Clive Barker 13. The Land of Laughs - Jonathan Carroll 14. The Ceremonies - T.E.D. Klein 15. By Reason of Insanity - Shane Stevens 16. Salem's Lot - Stephen King 17. Rosemary's Baby - Ira Levin 18. The House Next Door - Anne Rivers Siddons 19. Burnt Offerings - Robert Marasco 20. The Other - Thomas Tryon 21. Red Dragon/Silence of the Lambs - Thomas Harris 22. Let the Right One In - John Ajvide Lindqvist 23. Interview With the Vampire - Anne Rice 24. They Thirst - Robert R. McCammon 25. The Andromeda Strain - Michael Crichton
Thanks for this list. Well done.
Ghost Story and The Last Days of Jack sparks were two books I stopped reading. Lost interest
Great list!
A stimulating list, especially for including books like Burnt Offerings, They Thirst (which is much better than McGammon's padded & overly long Swan Song IMO) & The Ceremonies, by T.E.D. Klein, which I would have in the top 5.
Wonderful list! Ray Bradbury was my dads best friend when I was growing up and something wicked is my favorite. Ray was a wonderful person.
Wow! That is so cool, Donavan!! I'll bet you and your dad have so many amazing stories about Ray. I would have loved to have met him. He's a hero of mine!
Great and compelling video, Benjamin. I donât know if Iâve said this before, but you are definitely my favorite booktuber so far. Thank you for doing this kind of content possible. You are on fire! đ€
Aw, thank you, Axl. I appreciate this very much :) I'm happy there is such a lovely audience for this kind of content!
Hitchcock's version of Rebecca with Lawrence Olivier and Joan Fontaine is so much better than any of the modern versions ... Dame Judith Anderson's Mrs. Danvers is incomparable. You are right about The Innocents, it is superb.
Frankenstein to me was not scary just bleak and depressing. I thought the intro scene was fantastic, and the story was overall good, but half way into the book I had had too much of the gloom and put it down.
I'm totally with you on that. Heart-breaking book. Made me cry.
I loved this, you are extremely well spoken and I love hearing a more academic discussion about genre fiction books.
Thank you, Sydney :) I appreciate that!
You mention the 1960s film version of The Turn of the Screw called The Innocents, but only a couple of years after that was Robert Wiseâs film The Haunting (based on Jacksonâs novel), starring Claire Bloom, Julie Harris and Russ Tamblyn. Itâs really worth seeing!
I agree. That movie's a classic!
The Haunting of Hill House scared the heck out of me. The one with Julie Harris.
Iâve just come across your CZcams channel. I canât stop chain watching your videos! They are fantastic, Iâve just picked up Bleak House again after many many years with a new view to understanding it. Keep doing what youâre doing Benjamin, love the videos â€
Thank you so much for your kind words! I really appreciate that, Ruth :) I hope you enjoy Bleak House! One of Dickens' best works! â€ïžđ
I would absolutely argue that The Exorcist is great literature. Blatty's writing in that novel is just superb, and besides the horror, he captures the realism of the loss of faith so beautifully!
Agreed! I'm reading it right now (40th anniversary edition w/ a few updates), and I have been surprised and impressed by how much more than just a "scary story" it is. Part murder mystery with the detective, part tragedy with the priest losing faith and living with regret over his mother, and as a parent myself, the whole fear and frustration of a situation where doctors can't figure out what's wrong with your child is a whole other level of horror. Added to the genuinely creepy and shocking scenes that give it its reputation, it's fantastically layered and dynamic read.
I've had the paperback but it got lost when we moved so I never read it. Then I bought the ebook-- still unread.
I tried to listen to audiobook but I was too spooked that I only made it to 50%.
Some of the terrifying literature has been in short story form rather than in the form of novels. It interests me that this should be the case, given that I've read Frankenstein, Dracula (which I love), etc. I remember reading The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman when very young and being too scared to open the book (a collection) ever again!
I love these types of top lists videos that u do.
Thank you! I love doing them, so we'll definitely have more on the way :)
I would agree with you on Dracula being high up on the list! I was named after Mina from the Francis Ford Coppola movie adaptation of the novel so it is special to me in that way! only read it a few months ago but it is one of my favorite books now- I really felt that Stokerâs writing while not perfect was still really eerie and descriptive and flowed nicely. Great video, I would be curious to hear more about your favorite books / rankings as well!
Also: I noticed how most of these horror and sci-fi genres have been made into movies and I think itâs really interesting to compare books and TV/ film and I would love to hear your favorite adaptations or your thoughts on the best/ worst ones!
I must say I immediately thought of Dracula when I first saw your name - such a great story behind it! Youâre right that Stoker definitely isnât a perfect writer, but he is a tremendous storyteller and so deeply resonant. As for my favourite books, Iâm currently working on ranking my own for a future video - itâs quite difficult as there are many in the top 10 that could easily take top spot, so at a certain point one needs to impose some arbitrary measures to help the decision :) I would be happy to talk film adaptation more too - I personally havenât found a good one of Frankenstein, and would love to see a faithful page-by-page adaptation that really captures the mood. Great comment, thank you, Mina!
The scariest book I've ever read is one where the fear comes filtering into the reader, begins to float freely inside like the vapor of a fine wine, until it takes over the imagination: Red Dragon by Thomas Harris.
I love Thomas Harris, and you're right that Red Dragon is very scary. I binged his books during lockdown, and ended up taking a ton of notes when it came to 'The Silence of the Lambs'. I loved how he built the suspense!
House of Leaves was one of the most unique reading experiences of my life and I am thoroughly glad that my book club had selected it. I ended up being the only one that enjoyed it, so it ended up being a fascinating discussion where I explained all of the aspects that just worked for me while they look on in bewilderment that I had been so invested. Reading is such a personal experience though and while I appreciated the unique nature of House of Leaves, I understood why others felt that it was distracting.
I agree. First one that came to mind when I read the title of this page...though I knew it would be Frankenstein.
I LOVE Angela Carter. I read the short story The Bloody Chamber for the first time late one night freshman year of college, my friend Liza reading it at the same time, both of us sprawled on my dorm room bed in the glow of desk lamps, one or the other of us coming first to a scary part and gasping and the other yelling, âWait! Donât tell me. Wait âtil I get there!â ... I recommend it! Re: The Exorcist--I liked the book better than the movie because I thought the book was, at its core, a story about Father Karras's loss of faith ... and the ending with regards to this was beautiful. This didn't feel as prevalent in the movie. Anyway, I've just discovered your channel and your enthusiasm and energy and brilliance are such a treat.
Truman Capoteâs nonfiction novel âIn Cold Bloodâ continues to haunt me.
Nicely done. There are issues that bother me about Lovecraft, extensively covered elsewhere, but at his best he is impressive. My favorite is "The Dunwich Horror," which my father, mother, and I read aloud, by turns, near the fire in our isolated cabin on San Juan Island, WA, one, windy Hallowe'en night, when I was eleven, accompanied by the frequent nocturnal thumpings of the island's uncountable rabbits. A great memory.
I was also a Bradbury fanatic in my younger days. Read everything by him and loved it all. I call Lovecraft purple prose of the highest order, with an uncanny sense of abiding, inhuman evil. / I recommend Algernon Blackwood (1930s) for two extraordinary tales of horror, The Willows and, especially, The Wendigo. The latter is one of the most haunting things I've ever come across. It may keep you up at night (it did me when I read it last about 2 years ago). Jack Finney's The Body Snatchers is another great one.
Frankenstein was the first classic I ever read and remains my favourite to this day. I wasn't expecting the monster to be so articulate and themes so thought provoking. An absolute masterpiece.
34:49 I love the short story âHouse Taken Overâ by Julio CortĂĄzar. Itâs perhaps more magical realism but it shares a mood with Fall of the House of Usher. All of CortĂĄzarâs work is mysteriously unsettling but not exactly horror.
I am a huge Gothic Lit fan. I was intrigued by what you said about horror literature nailing the fear of the period.
Drawing Blood is one of the stories I read over and over again growing up until my mass market paperback fell to pieces. Along with Jane Eyre, lost souls, Brave New World, and Dune, these are the novels and stories that I read in my formative years that made me into the type of reader I am today. I'm so glad Poppy made the list.
First, let me thank you for your channel. I am among the small but rebounding group of people who hopes to rekindle a love of literature among the younger generation. While it has been a while since I read Frankenstein, I never once thought there was any question that the "monster" of the book was the doctor - being a monster isn't based on what you are, it's based on what you DO. I'm glad to see a number of entries by Edgar Allan Poe, and an entry by HP Lovecraft; no list of horror stories would be complete without them.
I admit to being somewhat surprised at the inclusion of graphic novels and/or manga. I know there are many (I among them) who would argue that the inclusion of so much illustration defeats the intent of literature, which is to allow the reader to create an internal world based on the author's words.
Kafkaâs âIn the Penal Colonyâ is both horrifying and absurdly funny. Algernon Blackwoodâs âThe Wendigoâ spooked the hell out of me. His stories are of varying quality, but this one is wonderful.
Thank you Benjamin for your voice and your interpretations thank you for sharing your knowledge with us I'm just obsessed with soliciting to you everyday now
I read The Exorcist 2 years ago, for the Halloween season. I really loved Blatty's economical style of characterization. He doesn't labor through excess of detail but evokes a tangible image through Gestalt. I would love to learn how to emulate this style.
The audio book is also very impressive
Legion by Blatty would have been a classic, If he would have used less Christian apologetics . His Jewish Detective is constantly contemplatin arguments for creationism the existence of Jesus and Catholic theology . Now i don't mind , because the rest of the story is just very good,
Great video! I realized about halfway through that the books here seem to be chronologically ordered. So that explains why The Road isn't ranked higher. Although it isn't traditional horror, I would probably rank it in my top 10 (or at least top 15) just due to how... horrifying it is.
Wonderful list Benjamin, always happy to see horror getting some love!
Thank you, my friend! :)
I didnât read The Bad Seed but the movie is chilling. I thought the opening paragraph of the Haunting of Hill House is one of my favorite openings ever! I didn't read much Dean Koontz but I loved his Life Expectancy and I would put it on a list good for Halloween.
Thank you for mentioning Frankenstein- it made me feel very emotional reading it..
You and me both, Kasia! Heartbreaking novel.
One would love to see philosophical & psychological novels
Thank for an interesting video and good comments! I have a lot of books by Poe, Clive Barker, Lovecraft, King and others. The pages are worn, sometimes there are highlighted sections or notes in my handwriting. I know I have read these books but I have no memory of it. I donât recall what theyâre about. I love horror but to be honest this litterature-amnesia is the most frightening to me. I sometimes wonder if the memories and experiences are still somewhere in my mind or truly lost leaving only the waste of time. I wonder if other people have the same problem? In the end I stopped reading because of this, so your videos evoke both a lost urge and the fear that stops it.
I know this video is a year old and I recently became a fan of yours. A bit of advice when it comes to mister M.R. James. Christopher Lee did a series in which he re created and filmed what James himself did. Heâs in a room surrounded by candles and âstudentsâ I mean Iâm pretty sure that they were actors but I donât know, and he would read and preform the stories.
When you hear them it changes everything, especially from a man with such presence. I would highly recommend them. I think he did three or four of the stories, you can find them on CZcams most of the time. Anyway, thanks for helping me get back into literature! I was into in high school but let it slip and now thanks to you and Better Than Food Iâm back in it!
All the best!
Your bringing up serialization of literature with James really caught my eye, not just in the context of horror, but that whole period. Your mention of it suddenly brought up all of Dickens serial publications. The concept of having to read his novels over a period of months...talk about horror! I'm too modern with the urge to "know" what comes next. I would go mad having to wait instead of being able to start the next chapter instantly. (Irony...now I realize how all those Harry Potter fans felt; but at least they got an entire novel after each wait.)
I would recommend Blackwater by Michael McDowell. First published about 40 years ago, it was originally serialized in 6 paperback instalments. Now you can get the whole thing in a single hardcover edition. Back in the day this book scared the daylights out of me! It's Southern Gothic horror with various eccentric characters and a vaguely Lovecraftian premise. In 1919 Alabama an inhuman creature crawls out of the river, assumes female form, and marries the richest guy in town! Hilarious but also quite unsettling. It reminded me of Shirley Jackson's fiction.
I can confirm that 30 Days of Night is a fantastic read and beautifully illustrated to depict the constant fear of being hunted in unending night.
Nice one :) Thanks, Daniela! This one piqued my curiosity, so I'll check it out!
@@BenjaminMcEvoy hope you enjoy it as much as I did! Another spooky graphic novel Iâd recommend is Wytches by Scott Snyder, also beautifully creepy in a dark claustrophobic forest.
@@danielaayers3449 I enjoyed his American Vampire!
Hey Ben, great video as usual but, on an unrelated note, would you ever consider giving us a tour of your vinyl collection? .Would love to see if your taste in jazz is as good as your taste in books haha
Thank you, John. I would love to do that - jazz is one of my favourite things in life. I'm currently preparing to move house, but when I've moved I'll have a nice vinyl area set-up and would be happy to do a tour :)
@@BenjaminMcEvoy Sounds great man, really looking forward to it. Good luck with the move!
@@johnbarry748 thank you!
@@BenjaminMcEvoyI just love the fact that youâre also a Brubeck fan. My husband and I are huge fans and weird - but Take 5 is âour songâ. đ
Dracula is terribly overrated. The first 60 pages were amazing and promised a lot, but the following 340pp that led to an underwhelming rushed conclusion was staggeringly redundant. Bram Stoker is unfortunately too unimaginative to keep his characters from sounding exactly the same. So while a story about a vampire told through the letters of its characters sounds very appealing, it fails miserably because the author fails to distinguish the various voices speaking throughout his story. It's incredibly frustrating. This wouldn't have been a problem if his characters showed an ounce of intelligence and that way help make the narrative feel like it's headed in a compelling direction, but they're not. If Dracula wasn't so weak and so limited, there would have been no way for these characters to stop him.
As far as the plot goes, Dracula's mission isn't entirely clear from the beginning, and the reader quickly finds out that Dracula's abilities are so limited that one is left thinking that he is nothing more than a local nuisance akin to a fungal outbreak in a vegetable garden rather than the global terror that you might expect from a villain as old and grand as Dracula. The 1992 film made Dracula even worse by oversexualizing his lust for blood. I thought Coppola completely destroyed any remaining cultural interest in vampires so you can imagine how surprised I was for vampires to reach an all-time low when Twilight was released. The best film that I've seen that has any hope of restoring vampires to a respected cultural icon has been Dracula Untold (2014).
Frankenstein on the other hand is fantastic!
A very fair, well-thought out analysis! I love them both, but totally see where you're coming from :)
Iâm not sure if you would consider Flannery OâConner as horror, but if you do she should definitely be on here. Wise Blood is just incredible.
Flannery OâConnor is my favorite author. Her novella/long story THE DISPLACED PERSON is suspenseful and terrifying. I also love WISE BLOOD.
A Good Man is Hard to Find is one of the most chilling things I've read. A total shock to my system. Don't read it on a full stomach.
When you said "I didn't think much of the film version of Rebecca when it came out" I was thinking "Wait, how old are you?" because the only film adaption I was aware of and have seen is the Hitchcock adaption from 1940, which was pretty good. I then looked it up and realized there was a new adaptation in 2020 that I had not heard about and I'm assuming that's what you were referring to. I would recommend giving the 1940 version a try if you haven't already seen it.
I'm glad a don't pass for a man in his nineties, Sebastian ;) Thank you for the recommendation. I love Hitchcock, so I'll look forward to this one!
The older one is greatly superior. I really didn't like the remake.
I've had Dracula on my shelf for a while. Might finally have to get around to reading it! Really good video, I'm enjoying these list reviews a lot.
Thank you, Frank! I'd love to know what you think of Dracula!
I've just read Dracula and it was excellent. I'd say my favourite Edgar Allen Poe story is the absolutely terrifying The Pit and the Pendulum. Also Lois the Witch by Elizabeth Gaskell was very good.
I love Dracula so much - one of the first horror novels I fell in love with. 'The Pit and the Pendulum' would be up there as one of my favourite Poe stories. I reread it again last night alongside 'The Tell-Tale Heart' - great way to spend All Hallows' Eve!
@@BenjaminMcEvoy The Pit and the Pendulum is so claustrophobic, I find myself holding my breath when I read it. If pressed, right now I might say that Dracula is my favourite book however I have many favourites.
Oh and Ray Bradbury is excellent, yes I'm still watching the video.
Poe is amazing, my favorite gothic writer, also House on haunting hill is one of the best horror novels, the tv adaptation is also really great.
I'll have to check out the TV adaptation - I loved the book. Read it three times :)
Hi :) if it's OK I would like to ask for a favor, would you please give any advise on how to read Ulysses?
Your tips on how to read Frankenstein open all new doors to the novel I had already love and adore.
Wonderful video ...thank you so much for this....I have read just two from the list....Frankenstein and Beloved...I remember Mary Shelly blowing my mind with her sublime tale .... Beloved is such a profound and deep text ...not an easy read ...but I don't understand how it can be termed as a horror novel??????? I hope to read Dracula some day ...
Would you consider making a similar video about sci-fi books? Lots of King fans out there and plenty of channels are dedicated to fantasy or classics. In comparison, science-fiction does seem underrepresented. I do have a feeling that the stigma surrounding this genre is still - to a degree - present. Hell, I was prejudiced towards s-f for a long, long time. Now I can proudly say that Phil. K Dick is my favorite writer. I have a whole shelf dedicated to him and his picture on the wall. No joke. Still, one can always use new recommendations and I would love to hear your take on the matter. Cheers!
One of the things that struck me about Blatty's "The Exorcist" as compared to the film was the sense of humor in the book. Blatty really is a comedic writer at heart. The sequel, "Legion," really captures that satirical tone in the vain of "Breakfast of Champions" or something by Douglas Adams. Blatty took control of the director's chair for the film version of "Legion," which is the "Exorcist III," and so we see that comedic element apparent much more than the first film. However, I would argue that Exorcist III is much scarier at times than the original. It's an underappreciated gem of a film. I do appreciate horror that also knows how to laugh at itself, as I think they go hand in hand. Laughter is a much needed release to the horror, but also there is an inherent tragic comedy to the metaphysical irrationality of fearing the inevitable outcome of the cycle of life.
The book that has frightened me the most has to be 1984.
It made me grimace with horror as I read it, and it also made me feel sensibly uncomfortable after I had put it down. Just read this quote: "If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face-for ever", now tell me that is not horror!
Mary Shelly's (and Thomas Hardy's) connection to, and ability to paint the land intimately and majestically, is one dimension which sets them apart, and imbues Frankenstein, for example, with depthful verisimilitude.
I enjoyed reading The Lottery while attending online classes during the pandemic. I loved it and the ending hit me like a ton of bricks. My instructor had me rewrite a scene from the story with full creative license. I decided to rewrite the ending. It was a lot of fun and when he evaluated it, he asked me, "What is wrong with you? How do you take an ending like that and make it infinitely worse?"
Great video sir!
In view of your comments regarding looking towards the genres of fantasy and horror for the next potential great works of literature, have you read The Book Of The New Sun by Gene Wolfe? Nothing else in science fiction or fantasy compares to it, the language is wonderful and it is labyrinthine in proportions and scope, demanding multiple readings. Would enjoy hearing your thoughts. Thanks.
Thanks Mr. McEvoy đđ»
Like to ask about Koji Suzukiâs Ring. Is it series of 3 books ?
Can I just buy the Ring or must read all of them ?
Thank you Sir ăïž
Aw I really have to read more Bradbury. I have only read Fahrenheit 451 years ago. I keep hearing so many people say how they dont like it Iâm wondering maybe my opinion will change and see it differently now that Iâm older and wiser- because I consider it an all time favorite. Iâve been hesitating a re read for fear of ruining my idea of it. Lol great video! I always add new books to my TBR after watching your videos
I did read House of Leaves -finally this year. Iâve posted my opinions a bit of a book talk in my recent âspooky reading blogâ video. But eh idk I liked a lot of it but also maybe excessively long. I was relieved to have finished it but glad I did complete it with over arching message and unsettling feelings it leaves you with.
My top 50 would include Richard Laymon's "Night in the Lonesome October" and "The Glory Bus".
Have you done a discussion of âLincoln in the Bardo?â I thought Iâve seen it among your videos but canât find it now.
I've mentioned it a lot in passing, but it's very high on my list of books that I want to do a specific deep dive discussion into hopefully in the near future :) Absolute masterpiece!
My favorite horror-story of all time is Man-size in Marble by E. Nesbit. It's an incredibly eerie short story.
If you like Turn of The Screw, you should really watch The Innocents, a brilliant and eerie 1960s adaptation of the novella.
Edit: watched more of the video and found out you watched it already!
Great movie :)
@@BenjaminMcEvoy There is a curious 1971 film called 'The Nightcomers', directed by Michael Winner to a screenplay by Michael Hastings, that is a prequel to "The Turn of the Screw", depicting the dark doings at Bly while Peter Quint and Miss Jessel still lived. Marlon Brando played Quint, while a young Stephanie Beacham played Miss Jessel.
Iâm a private English tutor (54) who went to Cambridge and love your videos. Hereâs a funny thing: I once got into heaps of trouble with a mother for showing an 11-year-old boy The Veldt by Ray Bradbury. I thought I was trying to get a discussion going about technology superseding the family, but all she saw were kids murdering parents. Also, there was a film of Something Wicked This Way Comes made in 1983 starring Jonathan Pryce. The director, Jack Clayton, directed The Innocents 22 years earlier, and was treated pretty badly by its producer, Disney, since they thought it was far too dark for children. It was a huge flop.
The X-Minus One radio episode of The Veldt is a great listen. Look it up.
Many books and stories I would add: The Monk, The Sandman, any novel by Anne Radcliffe, The Willows, The Great God Pan, The House on the Borderland, ...
The Haunting (1963) by Robert Wise is one of the great horror films and genuinely unsettling. I think hecstuck very closely to Shirley Jackson's book.
Worth watching on a dark night.
Starting at the top really grabbed my attention. Desert first!
On the subject of M.R.James I would recommend 'A Warning To the Curious' if you haven't read it. I believe it's a late story and one of my favourites. The Haunted Dolls House is also kinda fun and a bit less well known. Ooh, and The Mezzotint! the Mezzotint is brilliant, that's probably my favourite.
"IT" by Stephen King, The "Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allen Poe, and for a short story i loved, "The Statement of Randolph Carter" by H.P. Lovecraft. and to get a woman in there, "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson. and yes there are many more
It is ad that Poe did not have have a proper funeral and other writers did not bother to attend.
Barker's books of blood was once separated into 3 collections against the wishes of the author and may or may not contain The Hellbound Heart, which is where Hellraiser film came from and is infinitely scary. Multiple differences between book and film.
Most happy to hear Silence of the Lambs on the list and I have read the collection.
I also recommend American Psycho, but keep in mind that it gets very gruesome but says so much about American society.
I read The Wasp Factory when I was 12 and it has haunted me ever since. I had a feeling it would be on here!
For MR James I would suggest 'A man dwelt by a churchyard', and 'A school story', if you don't already know them... V. creepy. And I think you're a bit harsh on Poe in his work not reaching the heights of great literature. For me, he is the greatest master of psychological obsession and mania. This list was a great one, very stimulating.
Thank you for the great recommendations, Jack! My thoughts on Poe have changed a little bit since filming this video. I'm actually planning to do a podcast on his short stories in the near future where I'll be kinder to him :)
Just finished 'Piranesi' and this should probably be on the list as a modern gothic classic!
Very nice :) I'll check it out!
City of Masks by Daniel Hecht. So good! But It by the master made me jump out of the tub and jump in the car drive to a parking lot in broad day light just be around other people because I looked at my sink and thought blood would start flowing over the rim.
Hi there! I just came across your article on insomnia. I was wondering if there was any way I could contact you regarding this? I've tried about a million things and nothing seems to work and I'm pretty desperate.
The castle in the Carpathians by Jule Verne, the fIgure of Baron Rodolphe de Gortz, the Character of the book is considered a predecessor of Dracula. there are also a lot of Rumanian beliefs of ghosts.
Very cool - I'll have to explore this one!
There was a film adaptation of this work, made in Czechoslovakia in 1981, called 'TajemstvĂ hradu v Karpatech' (''The Mysterious Castle in the Carpathians'), directed by OldĆich LipskĂœ, who co-wrote the screenplay with JiĆĂ BrdeÄka. I've not seen it myself, but from description it is presented as a fanciful comedy.
I would like to know which are your favorite italien authors.
Thank you for your videos
Ivana
Glad you mentioned Sheridan Le Fanu. In my opinion, his vampires were far scarier than Bram Stokers....I read through the glass darkly and had nightmares for awhile
I love your channel. Is there any literature you have not read?
Off-season and offspring by Jack Ketchum are 2 of my favorites, along with Howling Trilogy and Those across the river. Oh, I can't forget about Flesheaters.
Mathesonâs âHell Houseâ scared me to death when I read it as a teenager.
One of the most terrifying horror stories I have read is James Hoggâs âConfessions Of A Justified Sinnerâ. Set in the 17th Century, itâs theme is of psychic dualism.
Sounds right up my street! I'll check it out this evening. Thanks for the great recommendation, Gerardine :)
Parasite Eve was adapted into a Resident Evil style video game that was pretty good. I always wanted read the book.
Try reading Picnic At Hanging Rock (Joan Lindsay) , The Blood Of The Vampire (Florence Marrryat) and The Drivers Seat (Muriel Spark) for Chic Lit thatâs quite spooky !
Also anything by Tanith Lee. Vivia is a good place to start . Her stuff is more Horror fantasy than out and out horror but sheâs better than Angela Carter and Anne Rice put together !
Definitely read _Picnic at Hanging Rock._ As good as the movie was, the horror of what happened in the gymnasium wasn't really captured.
very high on my list is 'The Loney' by Andrew Michael Hurley - love to know what you make of that one.
The Oath by Frank Peretti, I found completely terrifying. Couple of small glitches in the writing, but other than those, masterful suspense and very scary.
Something I feel compelled to mention any time someone brings up The Woman In Black is the ITV tv movie that was first broadcast in 1989 and languished in cult status until it was finally released on DVD and Blu Ray only a few years ago. While I do enjoy the 2012 Radcliffe film, there is something less commercial about the 1989 film, there is a palpable sense of drab despair all throughout the picture, expressed in a uniquely british way, and I'd argue that it is one of the greatest capital B British horror films ever made.
I watched that 1989 version all alone in a Brighton flat while rain and wind lashed the windows. That moment when the solicitor things he's safe at the inn where he's taken refuge, and suddenly, surging up from the bottom of the bed, SHE'S THERE, her face a contorted mask of gleeful malevolence...holy crap I nearly lost it! Brilliant adaptation, but one to watch with the lights on and a stiff drink to hand.
M R James was also Provost of Eton College - is it more likely he read his stories to schoolboys rather than undergraduates? I was read his stories at prep school in atmospheric candlelight by enthusiastic teachers. Scared me to death - hide to bury my head under the pillows...
Ray was a cool dude. I got to know him well when i drove a cab in LA many moons ago. He did not drive; never got a license. He would ring up the cab company & I got to drive Mr. Bradbury all over the place. He loved to discuss books and writers. Just a decent man. There was a short story of his that takes place during the Civil War that knocked the wind out of me. Wish I could think of the title. Anyway, for those who dig raw, hard-hitting horror, I suggest you give Lustmord: Anatomy of a Serial Butcher a try. Not for the weak of belly.
I would be interested in what you think of M. R. James tale, "Canon Alberic's Scrapbook." At only 10 pages long or so (though I think it should be read slowly), you won't be investing much time to give it a go.
Would love your thoughts on Top x Noir/Crime NovelsâŠ.
King's Salems lot is a classic of the genre
Hey I wrote a paper on dodgy doctors and why we fear them in college! I feel smarter now you mentioned them
That's such a cool topic for a paper! Nice one :)
I think you mentioned Maupassant. Le Horla is a really good story about an invisible vampire. Or a madman. Who knows ?
I've had the same thought about Frankenstein. It's not really frightening because the creature is not a real monster. Whereas Dracula is more seductive and vicious.
I just finished Gerald's game by King but it was a little bit disappointing. He has great ideas but I'm not always convinced by his style. Same for Anne Rice.
Have you tried Maxime Chattam ? Same vibe as Stephen King. His mind seems so tortured to create such horrific novels.
I love âLe Horlaâ - one of Maupassantâs best! Seductive and vicious is the perfect way to describe Dracula. I see maliciousness in Frankenstein, but itâs born out of scorn and my heart breaks every time I read the cottagers recoiling from him. I wasnât too fussed about Geraldâs Game either, but did enjoy a recent reread of The Dead Zone. I havenât tried Chattam, but thank you so much for the recommendation, MĂ©lissa - I will enjoy investigating :)
Scott Smith's The Ruins definitely deserves top 50, one of the creepiest I've ever read. I'd also have to beat the dead King horse & add Pet Sematary. Honorable mentions: Nick Cutter's The Troop, Hye-Young Pyun's The Hole & Chang Yu-Ko's Whisper.
OMG ! I too thought, "Frankenstein" ... That shadowy book ... I have not read that book as an adult ...
Anyone else impressed that he's read almost every single one of those books??
First of all - great video!
I would just like to point out for you (not sure if you got it by the end) that the list is in chronological order (year of publishing) and not "ranked" so if you have the time - please rank this list or create a ranked list of your picks for us - I, for one, would be very gratefull
where can I find this list? what's the website?
Probably niche, but I keenly enjoy the short stories by Fredric Brown, many of which have a lot to do with horror! ;) I'd recommend Nightmares and Geezenstacks, along with Honeymoon in Hell :)
Just finished readingâŠDonât Play Games With The BuilderâŠ.. what a refreshing change to read such a well written horror story.
One of the scariest books I ever read was Nonfiction - Helter Skelter by Vincent Bugliosi. Chilling because it is true. Where was Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde?
The Fall of the House of Usher is terrifying. The hideous house.
Good presentation. But where is Robert Aickman for his short fiction like "Ringing the Changes"?
Ray Russell is under appreciated and his novel was groundbreaking!
I've not personally read this one, but it seems I have it in my possession - I'll have to dip into it this evening!
I realize the reluctance to have many books by one author in a short list, but I simply could not exclude âSalems Lot by King. It gave me the creeps when I read it. It is a great addition to the vampire legend. I would certainly replace Carrie on the list with âSalems Lot, except for perhaps the formerâs influence. One of the TV adaptations of âSalems Lot was excellent; I donât remember the details, except that it would have been around 1980.