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Top 5 Spooky Halloween Reads chosen by Sam Pope

Posted By Jacob Hope, 31 October 2021

Happy Halloween!  To mark the date, we are delighted to welcome Sam Pope to the blog to give her run-down on her top five spooky books for children, the second of two blogs. Sam is the brilliant author of The Haunting of Lindy Pennyworth, a brooding psychological horror published by UCLan publishing.

 

Sam's Top 5 Spooky books YA /children’s version

I love a good, scary read. It’s hard to pick just five of my favourites, but here are some (in no particular order) that really get my pulse racing!

 

1. Anya’s Ghost, by Vera Brosgol

For me, graphic novels work so well in the Gothic genre. In Vera Brosgol’s debut, Anya could be any teenager – she feels unconfident, unhappy in her body, embarrassed by her family and lacks a friendship group at school. She thinks she’s solved the final problem on this list when she discovers a new best friend … at the bottom of a well who’s over a hundred years old. This is a really sensitive portrayal of the trials of the teenage years, but it packs a scary punch that keeps you on the edge of your seat.

 

2. The Lockwood & Co series, by Jonathan Stroud

This is an amazing series which I recommend to both children and adults. It’s really tricky to write a scary and funny ghost story but Stroud does this brilliantly in the five books of this series. The premise is this: the UK has been overrun with ghastly ghosts that threaten the lives of the living once the sun sets. Only children can see, and therefore hunt down, the ghosts so Lucy, our feisty narrator, moves to London to find a ghost-hunting agency she can work with. She encounters the charismatic Lockwood – who reminds me somewhat of Sherlock Holmes in his brilliance – and his partner George. There is plenty of tea-drinking, rapier-wielding and genuine scares in these stories.

 

3. Uncle Montague’s Tales of Terror, by Chris Priestly

To be honest, most books I’ve read by Chris Priestly scare the pants off me. He has a talent for inducing real fear and this book is a perfect example. In this book, Uncle Montague entertains (or should I say terrifies?) his nephew with a series of spooky tales by the fireside. Each one is terrifying in itself … but it gets even worse. For these stories aren’t make-believe; they are Uncle Montague’s dreadful memories of what has happened in his past. There are some very scary moments in this book – be warned!

 

4. Breathe, by Cliff McNish

In this story, our hero, Jack, is always in danger of his next asthma attack. You might think this is his biggest fear but, when he moves into his new house, he finds a bigger threat to him and his mother: the spirits of the dead. The trouble is, only he can hear their screaming and see their presence. I think this is one of the scariest books I’ve ever read, and that includes books written to frighten adults, so you will need to be careful if you pick this up – it’s not for the fainthearted.

 

 

5. Thornhill, by Pam Smy

Graphic novels are the perfect medium to relate spooky tales and author and illustrator Pam Smy does this brilliantly in Thornhill. Using monochromatic illustrations, she tells the story of Ella, a lonely child who has just moved into a new home overlooking what appears to be a derelict house… or is it? Smy combines illustrations and words so cleverly – in effect she is telling two stories and both are equally chilling.

 

 

 

 

Tags:  HAlloween  Reading  Reading for Pleasure  Spooky Tales 

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S M Pope's Top Five Spooky Reads for Adults

Posted By Jacob Hope, 30 October 2021

In the run-up to Halloween, we are delighted to welcome Sam Pope to the blog to give her run-down on her top five spooky books for adults.  We will be joined by Sam again tomorrow for the lowdown on her top choices for young people. Sam is the brilliant author of The Haunting of Lindy Pennyworth, a brooding psychological horror.

 

Sam's Top 5 Spooky books 

I love a good, scary read. It’s hard to pick just five of my favourites, but here are some that really get my pulse racing!

 

1. Dark Matter, by Michelle Paver

Twenty-eight-year-old Jack joins a scientific expedition to Gruhuken, in the Arctic but, after initial high spirits (pardon the pun) things soon start going very wrong. Not only will they soon be plunged into continuous polar night for several months, but Jack’s companions start dropping like flies, leaving our hero entirely on his own. Or is he? I’ve read this multiple times and listened to it as an audiobook and it still utterly chills me to the bone.

 

2. The Woman in Black, by Susan Hill

A well-known story, this one, having been adapted into a play and a movie, and studied as a secondary-school text – this story frightened me so much that I had to sleep with the light on after I’d finished reading the book. Junior solicitor Arthur Kipps is sent to sort out the papers of recluse Alice Drablow but soon discovers a horrifying world of haunting where bad things happen every time the woman in black is seen.

 

3. The Haunting of Hill House, by Shirley Jackson

Shirley Jackson has a reputation for creating stories that disturb you into a sense of unease and dread. For me, this is her best book because it absolutely nails the haunted house genre perfectly. The story focuses on Eleanor, who has been invited to spend a summer in a reputedly haunted house as part of a social experiment, along with two other guests, all of whom have also been hand-picked by Dr Montague. While the others become scared of the obvious hauntings occurring around them, Eleanor becomes entranced – perhaps to the point of no return.

 

4. The Complete Ghost Stories of MR James

No one does ghost stories like MR James does. No one. He is the master, my muse. It is said that he redefined ghost stories by moving away from Gothic cliches and setting his tales of fear in real and modern places, not dark castles. This atmosphere of familiarity is, perhaps, what makes his stories more frightening – you don’t need to be in a crumbly castle for something bad to happen. Often the scariest events are just around the corner.

 

5. The Silent Companions, by Laura Purcell

Laura Purcell has garnered herself a reputation for being a master (or mistress?) of historical spookiness. Her debut novel, The Silent Companions, remains, for me, one of her scariest stories. Elsie is our heroine, recently widowed and pregnant with her first child. She leaves London to live in her late husband’s country estate but is met with hostility by the servants and the local villagers. Lonely and mainly alone, she finds a locked room that contains a diary and a painted wooden figure – a Silent Companion – that looks like Elsie herself and whose discovery brings with it terror and doubt.

 

 

 

Tags:  Halloween  Reading  Reading for Pleasure  Spooky 

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