Nan McCarthy

author of Since You Went Away, Chat, Connect, Crash, & Live ’Til I Die

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My Favorite Scary Books

  • October 31, 2014
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Blog · Books

In celebration of Halloween, a list of my top ten favorite scary books.

Nan McCarthy

1. Let the Right One In, John Ajvide Lindqvist
2. Pet Sematary, Stephen King
3. People Who Eat Darkness (nonfiction), Richard Lloyd Parry
4. The Exorcist, William Peter Batty
5. In Cold Blood (nonfiction), Truman Capote
6. The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon, Stephen King
7. Helter Skelter (nonfiction), Vincent Bugliosi
8. Misery, Stephen King
9. Rosemary’s Baby, Ira Levin
10. The Witching Hour, Anne Rice

The first three books on the list are the ones that scared me the most. I read John Lindqvist’s Let the Right One In while traveling alone in Chicago. I had to wait until I got home to finish it because it was too scary to read alone in my hotel room at night. I read Stephen King’s Pet Sematary in 1983 when my husband and I were first married. He was away—I don’t remember where—on military travel. I was staying at my parents’ house. I finished reading the book around 2 a.m. and I was too scared to get out of bed to turn out the light. So I called out for my mom (I was 21 years old at the time), and she climbed into bed with me. One of the reasons People Who Eat Darkness is so damn scary is because it’s true crime—and we all know that truth is not only stranger than fiction, it’s a helluva lot scarier sometimes too.

I loved Anne Rice’s Vampire Chronicles but those books didn’t scare me as much as the ones in my top ten list. I also loved Stephen King’s The Shining but again, it didn’t scare me as much as the others.

Some scary books on my TBR list: Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Bird Box by Josh Malerman, and The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes.

What are your favorite scary books?

Nan's favorite scary books

copyright © 2014 Nan McCarthy

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Comments

  1. Kelly Mayer November 2, 2014 · Reply

    Morning, Nan

    I’m hanging on to your list in the hopes I may able to read something like these one of these days. I used to love scary books and movies; since having Bridget years ago, I haven‘t been able to last through one of them!

    FYI, I did read Shelley’s “Frankenstein” about 5 years ago. While I was glad I’d read it, I didn’t find it scary at all in the modern sense of wanting to leave the lights on. I did find it to be emotional, which surprised me. I’d be interested to talk about it if you choose to read it someday.

    Kelly

    LikeLiked by 1 person

  2. Nan McCarthy November 2, 2014 · Reply

    Kelly it’s funny you mention wanting to talk about Frankenstein because I’m planning to suggest it as the book I’d like to host for book club in 2015! I’ve always wanted to read it, and I think it would make for a great discussion.

    LikeLike

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