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Scariest Book You Have Read
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Kathy
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Jul 23, 2015 06:25PM



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I can´t remember if I´ve read the book. The movie, however, I have never been able to finish, because every time it comes on, I´m alone. Once her head starts spinning, that´s it. I´m done.

Then you don't want to read the book alone. I didn't find the movie scary at all. but the book made me afraid to walk around my house alone at night.

had to close the book and take a deep breath in quite a few instances.

I haven't quite built up the guts to read this yet. I managed to check it out from the library once, but all it did was sit on my nightstand for a few weeks before I had to take it back. Maybe someday.

Books used to frighten me when I was younger; sometimes to the point of having to sleep with the lights on. These days......not so much. The best I can hope for is a few creepy moments or feelings of dread and unease while reading.
Has anyone else experienced this unwelcome side effect of the aging process?

Books used to frighten me when I was younger; sometimes to the point of having to sleep with the lights on. These days......not so much. The ..."
Yep! What scares you when you're younger is not the same as what scares you when you're older. It's the same for me, and feels logical. When you're older, you know that there's no such thing as vampires and werewolves. When you're younger, you're not as frightened at the possibility of your own death as you are when older, because it seems so far off and far away. And you don't have any responsibility when you're younger, others are responsible for you. When you're older, if you're lucky, you have family and other significants that you worry about as much as yourself.
I posed that question to Stephen King for a GR interview with some group, but the moderator didn't choose it.
That's why The Shining is still kinda sorta scary for me.

Books used to frighten me when I was younger; sometimes to the point of having to sleep with the lights on. These days......not ..."
Completely agree. It's the domestic and family themes that have the potential to scare me now, more than ghosts, monsters, etc. The thought of losing a child is much scarier to me than just about anything else, which is why some parts of Pet Sematary were nearly unreadable for me after becoming a parent.

LOL I know, that freaked me out pretty good too!


Was that in the Enquirer, by any chance? (or whatever it's calling itself these days) :D
Moving hedges and ghosts aside, the basic premise of The Shining (a family snowed in in an isolated place, a recovering alcoholic goes off the wagon and tries to axe his whole family)--not too far off, sadly, from stuff that happens on a regular basis.
I find creepy kids to be children of the corn scary.
How about those two girls that stabbed their 12 year old friend because of the Slender Man?
The girls told investigators they hoped killing Payton (their friend) would please Slender Man, a character they had read about in online horror stories. The tales describe Slender Man as an unnaturally thin, faceless creature who preys on children.
Police captured the girls on the outskirts of the city that same day. They told investigators they planned to walk 300 miles to the Nicolet National Forest, where they hoped to live as Slender Man's servants in his mansion.
How about those two girls that stabbed their 12 year old friend because of the Slender Man?
The girls told investigators they hoped killing Payton (their friend) would please Slender Man, a character they had read about in online horror stories. The tales describe Slender Man as an unnaturally thin, faceless creature who preys on children.
Police captured the girls on the outskirts of the city that same day. They told investigators they planned to walk 300 miles to the Nicolet National Forest, where they hoped to live as Slender Man's servants in his mansion.

How about those two girls that stabbed their 12 year old friend because of the Slender Man?
The girls told investigators they hoped killing P..."
Wasn't there someone posing as Slender Man online chatting with them? (ie, false profile?)

Your comment made me go look up something, and I found articles from Discovery and some other science journal quoting the Discovery article, by a journalist who investigated these communities. Yes, there are people who believe they need to feed off others-either blood or their energy (so King's latest would be an exaggeration of that, with "the steam"), but they don't believe in violence, but rather having willing donors.....news to me...

How about those two girls that stabbed their 12 year old friend because of the Slender Man?
The girls told investigators they ..."
I think there was and the guy said it was all in fun. Now the girls are being tried as adults.


How about those two girls that stabbed their 12 year old friend because of the Slender Man?
The girls told investigators they hoped killing P..."
Now THAT is pretty creepy... ugh. *shudders*



and

All nonfiction! Horror fiction just can't do it at all, and I believe I have read all the usual recommendations.

The Manhattan Hunt Club

Kathy wrote: "This book, is so real that I'll bet it actually happens, or came from a true story.
The Manhattan Hunt Club
"
thanks, I just put this book in my ToRead pile
The Manhattan Hunt Club

thanks, I just put this book in my ToRead pile





and just within the last two months I read this book and it was really scary:

Books mentioned in this topic
Black Creek Crossing (other topics)The Demonic (other topics)
The Haunted (other topics)
Haunted: Dark Delicacies III (other topics)
999: Twenty-Nine Original Tales of Horror and Suspense (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
John Saul (other topics)Ed Warren (other topics)
Lee Mountford (other topics)