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Terrifying Tales to Tell at Night: 10 Scary Stories to Give You Nightmares!

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For the fans of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, here comes a new illustrated children's horror anthology. You have been warned!

The stories in this book are scary. Real scary! After reading these horrible tales and staring at the creepy drawings, don’t complain that you couldn’t sleep or they started haunting your dreams—we warned you!
 
If you love ghosts and monsters and enjoy getting goosebumps, this spine-chilling book is for you! Inside, you will find a creature that lives in the dark and feeds on those who do not pay attention . . . a monster created by the descendant of Doctor Frankenstein . . . a haunted house at Halloween . . . a big cat that snacks on schoolteachers . . . a boy who is afraid of what will come down the chimney at Christmas . . . a school with very strange pupils . . . a decidedly odd zombie costume . . . a puzzle set by a ghost . . . a drawing that comes to life . . . and a babysitter who likes to play terrifying games . . . .

157 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 2, 2019

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899 people want to read

About the author

Stephen Jones

277 books344 followers
Stephen Jones is an eighteen-time winner of the British Fantasy Award.

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5 stars
249 (32%)
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223 (29%)
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213 (28%)
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59 (7%)
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11 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 80 reviews
Profile Image for Isaac Thorne.
Author 14 books249 followers
December 28, 2019
Obviously a play on the children's book series SCARY STORIES TO TELL IN THE DARK, Stephen Jones has collected some classic works of ghost and monster horror from well-known names (Stephen King and Neil Gaiman among them) and combined them with new works specifically for this collection. In addition, each story is effectively twice-illustrated by Randy Broecker.

Unlike the SCARY STORIES collection, these stories aren't really meant to be read aloud around a campfire. It would be difficult, for example, to read King's "Here There Be Tygers" (King readers might remember this one from one of his own 1980s short story collections) aloud with the same end-of-story jump-scare that many of the SCARY STORIES TO TELL IN THE DARK tales are intended to have. For that reason, this obvious adult homage to the SCARY STORIES series is badly titled.

That said, it's a great collection and a highly recommended read, especially for those who might not already be familiar with Gaiman, King, Ramsey Campbell, or Charles L. Grant.
Profile Image for Rachelle.
384 reviews95 followers
March 6, 2021
"Love is the only feeling worth a tin nickel but you've got to know that it comes from both sides of a man's character and the deeper it runs the darker the pools it draws from."

Great short read, stirs up nostalgia for good old scary stories and puts you very much in mind of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark.
Profile Image for Armand.
184 reviews31 followers
January 8, 2020
I enjoyed the Scary Stories trilogy by Schwartz, having re-read them just last year to more fully appreciate the movie that was released around the same time. I'm also familiar with Jones's metier as a horror anthologist, and though I don't always agree with his selections, he never fails to send a few choice gems my way. So when I heard about this book, I had no choice but to swoop on it.

First things first - the pieces here are not from the same mold as Scary Stories, which is actually a good thing. While the latter obviously has young children as its target audience, this book is attuned to an older though still juvenile palate. They're longer, for one, and less whimsical so there are no jump scares or tales with storytelling cues here.

This book would not have been as enjoyable without Broecker's art though. I just wish there were more of them, as each story only has one or two drawings.

The tales I liked the best here are:

Click-Clack the Rattlebag - eerie babysitting story that reads like an urban legend

Granny's Grinning - a shocker that turns the traditional wholesome family Christmas dinner trope on its head

The Man Who Drew Cats - there are  some injustices so searing and odious that they just can't be allowed to go on

I'm rating this 6.5/10 or 3 stars out of 5.
2 reviews1 follower
August 14, 2019
I was immediately reminded of The Gruesome Book edited by Ramsey Campbell way back in 1983. That book was aimed at the younger reader, which I loved even as I read it as an adult. I'm even older now but that didn't stop me reading another anthology designed to scare the wee ones. I'm not sure they will be scared -- kids are a tough bunch. Nevertheless, Stephen Jones' collection of ten "scary stories to give you nightmares" makes a great attempt, and will surely steer younger readers to search out more horror stories. At the very least the publishers need to commission volume two forthwith: there are so many other writers that deserve to be selected for our younger readers, writers such as Tanith Lee, Samantha Lee and Lisa Tuttle.
I'll highlight my favourite four: "Homemade Monsters" by R Chetwynd-Hayes, perhaps the UK's finest ghost story writer (I know, there are so many candidates to choose from but this is my review); "The Man Who Drew Cats" by Michael Marshall Smith; "The Sideways Lady" by Lynda E Rucker; and the weirdest one in the anthology, "Granny's Grinning" by Robert Shearman (weird in a really good way). But all the stories are worthy of inclusion. To top off the book we have loads of fine pen and ink illustrations by Randy Broecker. There really should be more books full of illustrated stories.
Profile Image for Winona.
Author 2 books28 followers
November 17, 2019
Checked this out out thinking I might share it with my son, who likes some scary things. I thought it might be similar to "Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark" which has stories that I still remember now from my childhood.

The tales in this collection were nothing like that. Even my adult brain didn't comprehend what was happening in some of the stories, and others seem to end in the middle, unfinished.

I did finish reading them all myself, but decided not to share it with my child after all.
33 reviews
July 25, 2019
Review of TERRIFYING TALES TO TELL AT NIGHT edited by Stephen Jones and illustrated by Randy Broecker. Review by Trevor Kennedy for Phantasmagoria Magazine.

One of the great things about this book - Stephen Jones’ one-hundred and fifty-first - is the restraint shown. Yes, of course it is a collection aimed at children, so it is never going to be a full-blown gorefest or such, but its subtlety and lack of ‘over-the-top-ness’ is its real power. And power is exactly what it has. At least it does for this forty-two year old (big) kid. And the stories contained aren’t even childish either - the young readers are never condescended. Collectively they deal with some very grown up issues indeed, such as the difficulties of family dynamics, death, loss, domestic violence and how our childhood fears help shape who we become as adults, often carrying said worries with us throughout our entire lives, always buried deep within the darkest recesses of our psyches, making unwelcome cameos from time-to-time. For that reason alone I found it a much more mature read than so much of the ‘adult’ fiction out there today.
Perhaps I’m over-analysing, or even being a little bit pretentious about it all - maybe it really is just a fun horror anthology from the masters of the genre with the intention of creeping out the young ‘uns (from that fun, safe place we lovers of all things weird and wonderful know only too well). And it is that too, trust me, but I also found it to be quite a profound experience also. It’s spooky, creepy, multi-layered and intellectual. And that is what I believe most children really want when all is said and done - to be respected and taken seriously. Terrifying Tales to Tell at Night does that with aplomb, as well as being thoroughly enjoyable into the bargain.
Let’s take a look at each of the stories within:

CLICK-CLACK THE RATTLEBAG by Neil Gaiman. A young man is babysitting his girlfriend’s rather annoying little brother, who insists on being told a scary bedtime story before he hits the hay. However, it soon emerges that the boy himself has a tale of his own, one much darker and realistic than the babysitter could ever imagine…
Mr. Gaiman does it again with another beautifully observed and weaved short fiction. However, it did leave me somewhat frustrated at the end with my longing - almost screaming - for more. But that is, of course, a trick that only the true masters of their game, like Neil Gaiman, know how to play properly.

HOMEMADE MONSTER by R. Chetwynd-Hayes. A boy named Rodney takes refuge from a storm in a spooky old mansion - never a good idea! It soon turns out that the owner of the house just happens to be the great, great grandson of a certain Dr. Frankenstein, with a few similarly-themed - and well-intentioned (I think!) - experiments up his own rather dubious sleeve.
This is great fun. Very humorous, with more than a touch of pathos added into the mix - I really did feel sorry for the… well, you know what…

THE SIDEWAYS LADY by Lynda E. Rucker. Stevie is a young wannabe ghost hunter and fan of a Derek Acorah-style ‘real life hauntings’ television show. One Halloween she decides to take her younger brother on an investigative hunt to a nearby reportedly haunted house. But whilst there, they get a little bit more than they bargained for…
A classic ghost story for the twenty-first century internet age perhaps? Yes, the adult readers will of course recognise the selection of related motifs instantly, but that’s what makes it all the more pleasing, in a post-modernist sort of manner.

HERE THERE BE TYGERS by Stephen King. A teenage schoolboy’s classroom studies are interrupted by the fact that he needs to go to the toilet - really badly! When he arrives at the basement bogs something else is awaiting him and the other unpleasant people who soon arrive on the scene…
A dark delight from the ‘King’ of horror (yep, I went there). Brimming with the blackest of black humour the only complaint I would have about this one is that it didn’t go on for longer - once again I was left wanting for more!

THE CHIMNEY by Ramsey Campbell. Throughout his life a young lad has been plagued by unrealistic fears, seemingly inherited by his somewhat neurotic mother. His cold father doesn’t seem to help much either and quite frankly finds his sensitive son a bit of a disappointment. One of the boy’s deep worries is of a particular problem to him, however. It concerns a film he saw one Christmas and the old chimney in his bedroom. As the mounting tension reaches its climax, the ending is a genuinely unexpected one.
This is brilliant. On the surface it could be just read as a ‘monster lurking in the shadows’ sort of story (and it works very well at that too), but there is so much more going on here between the lines. This, for me anyway, is a commentary on family life and the difficulties therein, which every family will face in their own specific ways. Relationships with our parents can be tricky at the best of times, especially during our earliest years, and so is life in general. How much of our parents’ personality traits do we inherit anyway, for good and bad? Can this even be avoided, for all our best intentions?
A superbly dark coming of age tale.

SCHOOL FOR THE UNSPEAKABLE by Manly Wade Wellman. One evening, a fifteen year old arrives alone by train to what will soon become his new school. Whilst there, he gets picked up by a strange young man who whisks him off into the night by horse-driven carriage to introduce him to his sinister new school and schoolmates…
Originally published in the 1930s, this is a very dark story brimming with gothic atmosphere and creepiness factor. A classic weird tale still as effective in technologically-obsessed 2019 as I’m sure it was back in 1937.

GRANNY'S GRINNING by Robert Shearman. A young girl named Sarah and her little brother Graham are really looking forward to Christmas and receiving their specialised monster outfits with a difference. Sarah’s hoping for a vampire costume, while Graham wants to be a werewolf. On top of all this, their not-very-pleasant granny, who has recently been bereaved, is also due to visit for Christmas dinner. When Christmas morning finally arrives Sarah soon discovers to her dismay that she has been given a zombie outfit instead of a vampire one, and that’s when things really do take a turn for the strange…
Wow! This one is really dark, really weird and really funny too. As a bit of a comedy snob, it can take quite a lot to get me to laugh out loud, but I did so with this story. It shocked me too - no mean feat. It goes to places you really would not expect it to and is very original in its take on its macabre subject matter. The kids reading it will love it, just as I did, and when the full realisation of what exactly is going on is revealed the story moves quickly into the darkest of dark Roald Dahl (or possibly Lucio Fulci!) territory. Bravo, Mr. Shearman!

THE CHEMISTRY OF GHOSTS by Lisa Morton. Young Benny has mysteriously vanished and April’s little brother, Matt, knows more than he’s letting on to the police and teachers. Armed with their trusty flashlights, wannabe scientist April and Matt take a jaunt to an old abandoned school where Benny might be, but there they must solve a series of chemistry-related puzzles set by the ghost of a stern old schoolmaster…
Fun spooky shenanigans and also rather educational too - and not just for the kids either - a chemistry lesson for yours truly as well. It was almost like being back at school for me, but with ghostly goings-on - something I always longed for back then anyway.

THE MAN WHO DREW CATS by Michael Marshall Smith. A strange, tall, extremely quiet man shows up in the small American town of Kingstown one day, settling there and soon becoming acquainted with the locals. Each day the man, named Tom, goes out to the town square and paints and draws the most wonderful, vivid pictures of cats and other animals. However, Tom soon finds himself entangled in the lives of a young boy called Billy and his abused mother.
This is one of the greatest short fictions I have ever read. Seriously. A beautifully dark take on the ‘stranger comes to town’ story, there is a Stephen King-esque quality to it also, along with being its very own entity. This tale came alive in my head whilst reading it in the strongest possible manner. It mesmerized me and pushed all my buttons emotionally. Classic storytelling at its very finest.

ARE YOU AFRAID OF THE DARK? by Charles L. Grant. Three badly behaved boys find themselves being babysat by the rather odd Bernadette whilst their parents decide what punishment should befit them for the breaking of a shop window. To make matters worse, it’s a dark and stormy night outside and the babysitter is insisting they play some games with her. When the games begin to go askew, Bernadette’s true intentions are soon revealed…
A fun-filled tale with a creepy warning for those youngsters who are a little bit more mischievous (or greedy, as is the case with one of the characters) than others.

The wonderfully macabre illustrations by Randy Broecker only serve to make this book all the more enjoyable, bringing me back to that great place in my own childhood when I was an avid connoisseur of this sort of material (and it certainly appears still am). There is just something so very special about black ink illustrations in a book like this. They add so, so much to the overall atmosphere and evoke in me warm, fuzzy feelings of magical enchantment and otherworldliness.
I implore you to buy this book for a child (or children) for three reasons - 1) They will be hugely entertained. 2) One day, many years from now, they may very well thank you for doing so. And that will feel good. 3) You will be encouraging them to read proper literature.
But before you hand it to them, take a few hours of your own time and have a gander at it for yourself. You won’t be disappointed.

Terrifying Tales to Tell at Night is published by Sky Pony Press and is available to purchase from Amazon and many other retailers throughout the world.
Profile Image for Harvey Hênio.
635 reviews2 followers
September 9, 2022
Na introdução dessa obra, editada com esmero pela editora “Pipoca&Nanquim” que tem lançado obras muito interessantes, diversificadas e bem editadas, o organizador, o britânico Stephen Jones, premiado escritor e respeitado editor de horror e fantasia sombria, afirmou com pompa e circunstância:

“Estou avisando. As histórias deste livro são assustadoras. ASSUSTADORAS MESMO! Então, não venha reclamar comigo se, depois de lê-las, você não conseguir dormir porque elas o deixaram perturbado. Problema seu. A pista está no título do livro.
Porém, se você gosta de sentir medo, se ama fantasmas, monstros ou velhas vovozinhas maldosas, então este livro é para você! Nas páginas a seguir, você vai encontrar todas essas coisas e muito mais...”

Entusiasta colecionador de coletâneas de terror e horror que sou, senti-me muito interessado pela obra que adquiri e li com avidez.
No entanto, ao final da leitura, senti-me algo decepcionado, pois esperava histórias mais “encorpadas” com terror gótico e, ou fantasias macabras daquelas que dão um frio na espinha e encontrei histórias bem contadas e bem estruturadas, é preciso admitir, mas com uma levada bem “pop” e com um clima de “contação de causos”, de autoria de muitos autores que não conhecia, que mais despertam a curiosidade do que assustam.
Até a história de autoria do “mestre moderno do terror e do suspense” Stephen King – a algo alegórica “Aqui há tigres” - não desperta os tais “calafrios na espinha” embora seja interessante como tudo o que ele faz.
Há apenas uma exceção na levada mais leve que predomina no livro. A excelente “O homem que desenhava gatos”, fantasia com toques macabros e com menções à questão da violência doméstica escrita em 1990 por Michael Marshall Smith. Curiosamente destaca-se nessa história a clara influência de Stephen King.
Boa diversão se você gosta de histórias de terror “mais levinhas”.
Profile Image for Lance Greenfield.
Author 42 books254 followers
December 26, 2020
I really enjoyed all ten of these entertaining, spooky stories.

There are contributions from Ramsey Campbell, R. Chetwynd-Hayes, Lynda E. Rucker, Stephen King, Ramsey Campbell, Manly Wade Wellman, Robert Shearman, Lisa Morton, Michael Marshall Smith and Charles L. Grant.

My favourite story was The Man Who Drew Cats by Michael Marshall Smith. Although it is a bit predictable, it is heart-warming and you can’t help feeling fulfilled by the outcome.

What makes this little book even better, elevating it from good to great, is a series of excellent illustrations by Randy Broecker.
25 reviews
August 18, 2019
There were a few good stories, but most of them were pretty drab.

I was irritated about the positioning of the illustrations in the text. In a few cases, the illustration was actually a spoiler; it revealed the "punch line" before I got to the actual text that it was describing. I wish they would have put the illustrations a page or two after the "reveal" so that you can properly enjoy the stories without spoilers.
Profile Image for alittlelifeofmel.
934 reviews403 followers
June 30, 2025
Closer to a 2.5 if I'm being honest. Very few of the stories were good and most felt like they ended mid-story.

They also really lost me at incest sexual relationship vibes between a grandmother and a 12yo girl......
Profile Image for E. Mercy.
20 reviews1 follower
April 18, 2025
I have very mixed opinions on this book.

The drawings were quite creepy and made things more interesting, granted.

I definitely had my favorites of the 10 stories.
Here are my brief thoughts on each one:

"Click-clack the Rattlebag" by Neil Gaiman was your typical "kid knows something creepy and exposes the older person to it" trope. The story seemed to just stop like a Hitchcock movie. Didn't feel like a proper ending to me, but that's just how I felt. Went by fast.

"Homemade Monster" by R. Chetwynd Hayes was one of my favorites. It had a frankenstein vibe to it and was pretty fun.
Not terrible.

"The Sideways Lady" by Lynda E. Rucker was another common ghost story. Not great, but not the worst.

"Here There Be Tygers" by Stephen King was certainly typical Stephen King.. a simple, dragged-out, snarky, perverted, unnecessary letdown. It also suffered from Hitchcock Syndrome where it felt like it didn't properly end, it just stopped. To this day, I still don't know why or how he got so popular and became (arguably) one of the most successful/well-known authors of all time. Each story of his I read leaves me unimpressed and wondering what kind of pre-pubescent beginner actually wrote them.

"The Chimney" by Ramsey Campbell was not bad at all. I actually enjoyed it quite a bit.
Its ending seemed a little silly, but that was okay. The rest of it was worth a read.

"School for the Unspeakable" by Manly Wade Wellman gave a good glimpse into how those "unenlightened" behave and treat others, exposing their own hypocrisy. But it did get too fantasy-driven by the end. However, the principle of the whole thing was pretty cool.

"Granny's Grinning" by Robert Shearman... at first, reminded me of the old episode of "Amazing Stories" called "Grandpa's Ghost", which was done properly and with just the right amount of sadness and effect.
However, THIS story made me wanna puke. It was the most disgusting P.O.S by the last couple of pages. I think the writer has got some issues that needn't be perpetuated in the future. Just sayin'..
It was beyond sick and didn't need to be in a book targeted towards "8-12" like it says on the back cover.

"The Chemistry of Ghosts" by Lisa Morton, was a good palette-cleanser from the last story.
It provided a few educational bits of information and made for a pretty good ghost story.

"The Man Who Drew Cats" by Michael Marshall Smith was perhaps my favorite story out of the entire collection. Aside from one paragraph that seemed to perpetuate another harmful mentality, it was mostly decent. With the author being from the U.K, I found it odd that the narrative sounded like a backwoods bumpkin. It didn't necessarily take anything away from the story, It was just strange.
I really liked the ending of this one. Some say it was predictable (and it pretty much was), but I still appreciated it.

Alright... the last one. Oh man..
"Are You Afraid of the Dark?" by Charles L. Grant.
As I mentioned above, this book was intended for a younger audience, and while I am well-past the age bracket listed, I still like to read these sorts of stories because I assume they are free of all the filthy crutches that smugly saturates the market with a bacteria-laden iron grip.
This one seemed to slip through the cracks and I don't like it.
Not only did it include a couple utterances of one of my least favorite words/terms, but it also had its fair share of not-so-thinly-veiled, um.... what do they say these days?.. Hmm.. oh yeah, "Spice"
and that spice was certainly expired. Between the language used and the things said in the narrative, I can't believe this was allowed in a children's book. Now I understand that kids these days are more corrupted than generations past and no one sees any problem with it, but even I don't want to read that garbage and I'm a grown-ass man! I didn't see Fabio on the cover, so it doesn't need any derpy gimmicks casually thrown in to make misguided youth giggle like well, a derp! It's just gross. Made me feel nauseated. I honestly don't know what's nastier, "Bog Butter" or the idiotic perving of the babysitter. Oh and I almost forgot, one of the main characters was called by a different name for an entire paragraph, and then went back to their original name. Just thought I'd point that out.


So there, 3/5.
It's worth a read-through, but some of the stories could've been swapped out for better material.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Stan James.
227 reviews6 followers
January 13, 2020
Another uneven horror collection, but this is pretty much the standard, so overall I found it perfectly fine and would recommend it as a quick read if you can grab it at a lower price.

Ostensibly aimed at kids (the acknowledgements section notes that some stories have been edited for content), some of these tales are pretty dark, so Stephen Jones' warning about these causing nightmares may be apt for younger readers.

A brief take on each of the ten stories:

Click-Clack the Rattlebag (Neil Gaiman) is a typical Gaiman story, with a droll sort of delivery, the promise of spooky shenanigans, then it abruptly ends, so it certainly fits the "short" part of "short story." It was fine.

Homemade Monster (R. Chetwynd-Hayes) is a light, modern take on the Frankenstein monster, featuring an easily distracted mad scientist, a yearning-to-be-sophisticated helper and exploding parts. It's fun, if slight.

The Sideways Lady (Lynda E. Rucker) features a sister and brother out ghost-hunting in an abandoned house across town said to be haunted by an entity called The Sideways Lady. On Halloween they wrap up their trick or treating then go explore the house, joining up with a few older, skeptical kids along the way. The allegedly empty house has a strange occupant--and maybe others, as well. The kids felt authentic, but the actual haunting part seemed a bit confused, as if the author went in several directions, couldn't decide, and tried to make both work.

Here There Be Tygers (Stephen King). Taken from King's first collection, Night Shift, this is a curiously delightful tale about a boy at school who needs to use the washroom very badly, the possible presence of tigers in said washroom and what might happen to the frumpy, rude old teacher he has to endure when all elements are combined. The light, almost absurdist tone here stands out from the bulk of King's work.

The Chimney (Ramsey Campbell) starts out as a simple story about a boy who is frightened of Santa and of the huge fireplace in the bedroom of the very old house he lives in. It gets progressively darker, turning from a child's tale to something downright grim. I liked it, but this is one of those that could very well give younger kids bad dreams.

School for the Unspeakable (Manly Wade Wellman). First, Manly Wade Wellman is a great author name. This story, about a boy sent to a private school, is terrifically weird and unsettling. When Bart Setwick arrives at the school--at night, of course,--it's strangely dark and the boys he meets are just strange. Things escalate quickly from there before the (mild) twist is revealed. This reads like a classic spooky story told 'round the campfire.

Granny's Grinning (Robert Shearman). Told in a deliberately twee style, with giant paragraphs stuffed with dialogue from multiple characters, this is the one story I didn't finish. I just didn't care enough about the story or characters to push past the writing style. Grandma was probably a zombie or something.

The Chemistry of Ghosts (Lisa Morton). This feels like a YA story, in which a brother and sister attempt to find the brother's missing friend, who the brother fears has disappeared in the closed wing of a college said to be haunted by a former chemistry professor. It is not a spoiler to say this is correct and the ghostly instructor challenges the kids to a series of puzzles to get their friend back--and avoid being trapped in the wing forever with him. Light, almost breezy, with plenty of opportunity for kids to try to figure things out and brag about how smart they are.

The Man Who Drew Cats (Michael Marshall Smith). A quiet stranger moves into a small town and begins to paint and draw in the town square, sharing (some) small talk with the locals at a nearby pub in the evenings. This is one of those stories that telegraphs what will happen in huge neon letters, but knows it, and makes the journey to its inevitable destination as entertaining as possible. In this case, an abusive husband gets his comeuppance when the stranger turns his drawing skills to certain beasts. In a way, this is a great companion to "Here There Be Tygers."

Are You Afraid of the Dark? (Charles L. Grant). Basically, a story about a very bad babysitter. It's weird, a bit gruesome and maybe should have been the second-to-last story in the collection.
Profile Image for z. imama.
370 reviews12 followers
December 8, 2023
Not bad for a collection of short stories. The stories inside are mostly already published in a much, much earlier time, and if I remember correctly, there is something from the 70s, as well as an original story written just for this anthology.

Now we're talking about my favorites.

Click-Clack the Rattlebag (Neil Gaiman) is interesting. It starts as abruptly as it ends, it has no setup whatsoever and so the readers are compelled to deduce things from the scattered information. I kinda like it. The looming danger feels real.

Granny's Grinning: Short Story (Robert Shearman) is disturbing and leaning to the sad side at the same time. A mourning grandma who lost the love of her life and weirdly feeling happy when her older grandchild cosplays as a zombie during Christmas. Nothing explicitly explained here, but I think maybe because grandpa was a zombie (idk) or he died very old that his physical appearance resembles very much one.

The Man Who Drew Cats is simply marvelous. It's not scary; it is MAGICAL. A heartbroken, tall, thin man who pours his emotions into chalk drawings and (possibly) gives them the power to do... things, including doing justice to a violent man who beats his wife and kids was not a tale I expected in a horror anthology. I dig this. It's beautiful and meaningful. I want to meet this Tom person.
Profile Image for Rachel.
157 reviews
July 16, 2022
A fun collection of horror stories for kids. I grew up with Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark and this book gave me the same vibes. These stories actually felt more adult than the stories in Scary Stories so I was pleasantly surprised by that. I think that this is a collection that both adults and kids can enjoy. My favorite story was The Man Who Drew Cats!
Profile Image for Ellie Midwood.
Author 43 books1,164 followers
January 6, 2020
Even though it’s aimed mostly at the YA audience, I actually found this collection of stories very enjoyable! Some are outright spooky, some are more serious than the others and have much deeper subjects hidden under the facade of an ordinary scary tale, but all of them without exception are very well-written and hard to put down. I would definitely recommend this anthology to all fans of the genre, regardless of age.
Profile Image for David Veith.
565 reviews3 followers
January 7, 2021
Overall this was a 3.25. Just like all short story books there are some ups and downs. There were a couple that were more fun though. Grannys Grinning was just fun to think of having costums like they do (they change you into the monster itself). The Man Who Drew Cats was a real good one as well, very well written.
Profile Image for Susan Vrabel-Williams.
104 reviews2 followers
August 17, 2023
Pretty Good

I like short story collections. Especially when it's a collection of different writers. I did like all of the stories in this book, but I didn't really think they were all that scary, but they were enjoyable.
Profile Image for Clarissa.
Author 1 book44 followers
November 30, 2019
Not very scary, nor good. Neil Gaiman and Stephen King’s stories are the shortest (and worst). So if you’re thinking of buying this for them...DON’T.
Profile Image for Brad.
832 reviews
November 13, 2019
This anthology of 10 short stories, was a good read.
I'll give a quick overview of each story:
1. Neil Gaiman's "Click-Clack The Rattlebag". A story of a monster who takes the least expected form.
2. R. Chetwynd-Hayes "Homemade Monster". A great descendant of Baron Frankenstein is up to new tricks.
3. Lynda Rucker "The Sideways Lady". Kids exploring a haunted house on Halloween.. what could go wrong...
4.Stephen King "Here There Be Tygers". Previously published in "Skeleton Crew". A scary trip to the bathroom.
5. Ramsey Campbell "The Chimney". What if Santa was not the only thing coming down the chimney at Christmas...
6. Manly Wade Wellman "School for the Unspeakable". A ye olde tale of a school gone bad.
7. Robert Shearman "Granny's Grinning". A strange tale of dress up, and what we do for love.
8. Lisa Morton "The Chemistry of Ghosts". The Ghost of a chemistry teacher is testing students.
9. Michael Marshall Smith "The Man Who Drew Cats". A street artist with the most unusual skills.
10. Charles L Grant "Are You Afraid of the Dark?". A babysitter who really scares the kids.

All were good stories, some better than others, and some were very, very short.
A good read for Halloween.
Profile Image for Robyn.
290 reviews5 followers
December 27, 2019
It’s not that I didn’t enjoy this anthology, because I did. It’s just that it didn’t scare me. For scary stories aimed at adults, I just didn’t find them scary. There were a few things that made them not so child friendly, but scare factor isn’t one of them. They’re creepy and eerie, just a bit supernatural, but not really scary. Actually, the more I think about it, they’re the kind of just slightly scary stories that are nice to read as you’re gearing up for Halloween. They’re actually kind of pleasant to read, which truly scary writing is not. So, yes, this is a four star book for me.
Profile Image for Erika Reise.
10 reviews2 followers
October 8, 2019
I was really looking forward to this one, but it ended up mostly disappointing me. The draw was two of the stories are written by Neil Gaiman and Stephen King, but neither of theirs really blew me away. The last two stories - The Man Who Drew Cats” and “Are You Afraid of the Dark?” were probably my favorites. Several stories were inexplicably Christmas-themed, but the holidays can be terrifying.
Profile Image for Pamela.
237 reviews
August 9, 2019
These are milder stories aimed for younger readers. I think some of them would be a little too confusing for the eight year old demographic. If you want scary, check out Alvin Schwartz. These were nice to read as a lark, though.
Profile Image for erin.
109 reviews
August 12, 2019
I know this was meant for younger readers, but I expected more out of it. It read like a poor man’s imitation of “Scary Stories to Tell In the Dark”, down to the “really scary” illustrations that weren’t scary at all. Only a few of the stories were even worth reading. Don’t waste your money.
Profile Image for Bryan Ball.
236 reviews15 followers
January 3, 2021
I enjoyed this a lot. First picked up around Halloween for some seasonal vibes, the stories in here are by and large very good to excellent. Gaiman’s “Click Clack the Rattlebag” and “The Sideways Lady” were standouts.
Profile Image for Asura.
86 reviews29 followers
May 16, 2025
Most of the stories in this book did not seem AT ALL appropriate for kids. Some of them also seemed very half-assed and were hard to understand what even was going on. I will say, though, I really enjoyed “The man who drew cats” and “ The sideways lady” was alright.
Profile Image for Sarah.
321 reviews1 follower
November 3, 2022
This book was a very hit or miss situation for me. Two I loved. One I liked. One I absolutely hated. The rest were just ok.

1. Click-clack the Rattlebag by Neil Gaiman: I loved this one. I might be biased because I love all Gaiman’s works, but this one was really good and spooky and clever and I didn’t see the twist at the end coming. It was very short but told you everything you need to know. It felt like reading a creepy pasta.

2. Homemade Monster by R. Chetwynd-Hayes: just ok. Well written, but it was mostly a riff on Frankenstein.

3. The Sideways Lady by Lynda E Rucker: this one was pretty good. I liked it a good bit. I am a fan of the creepy haunted house ghost lady vibe.

4. Here there be Tygers by Stephen King: as a fan of King, this one was disappointing. I feel like I was missing something huge. Why is there a tiger in the bathroom? Why do they call the bathroom the basement? Maybe it’s just me. This one didn’t hit quite right.

5. The Chimney by Ramsey Campbell: this one was ok. It had a good premise but the story itself was very drawn out, and the ending wasn’t that great. There was a lot of nothing in between and the ending felt lackluster because of it.

6. School for the Unspeakable by Manly Wade: another just ok one. A boy goes to a boarding school and accidentally follows some vampire satan worshippers back to the old abandoned building. There’s some weird God magic in the end. Felt corny.

7. Granny’s Grinning by Robert Shearman: I fucking hated this one. Repulsive. What the actual fuck is that ending. The guy that wrote this has problem. This was terrible in a way you DONT want horror to be. 0 stars.

8. The Chemistry of Ghosts by Lisa Morton: this one was just fine. Some kids go into a haunted school to save their friend and the ghost of the professor makes them solve a test of puzzles to reveal his location. The notoriously hardass professors test? A bunch of easy riddles that basically involved being able to read the periodic table. Idk I just feel like if you’re going to write a story about difficult chemistry and a strict teacher, the chemistry they make you do should actually be something hard. That’s just me though.

9. The Man Who Drew Cats by Michael Marshall: I loved this one. It was so well written and had such a bittersweet ending. Very good. About an artist that makes himself comfortable in a small town and saves a woman and her child from an abusive asshole.

10. Are you Afraid of the Dark? By Charles L. Grant: another just ok one. Not the best way to end the compilation. This one wasn’t bad, and was better than the other just ok stories, but I would say I liked it. The characters kind of sucked, and they never really explain enough for me to care what’s going on.
Profile Image for Dope Ghost Library .
431 reviews3 followers
March 6, 2025
Another compilation of horror stories, ten in total, collected by editor Stephen Jones. Some of the stories are good, maybe one of them great, but some of them (one really) also stink. So it's a mixed bag.

"Click-Clack The Rattlebag" by Neil Gaiman kick-starts the collection. It's okay; not anything special really. Comes off like a creepy fairy tale but with no push or pull.
"Homemade Monster" by R. Chetwynd-Hayes is another decent tale. It's a Frankenstein-esque story and has a Goosebumps flavoring to it I appreciated. It's just written pretty juvenile and the story itself is predictable.
"The Sideways Lady" by Lynda E. Rucker is one of the good ones. A Halloween set scary story about a haunted house and the monstrous ghost woman who inhabits it scaring the Hell out of some kids. Great for an October night time read.
"Here There Be Tygers" by Stephen King is a story I've read a dozen times or more taken from his 1985 anthology, Skeleton Crew. Ironically, it's one of my least liked stories from that book and here it's just a decent reread but again, nothing special.
"The Chimney" by Ramsey Campbell is another good one. It's a Christmas set tale about premonitions of the future, spirits in the night, and bumps in the wall-all that spooky stuff. Fun overall.
"School For The Unspeakable" by Manly Wade Wellman has a premise I saw a mile away. Very predictable but another decent, just okay story.
"Granny's Grinning" by Robert Shearman flat out sucks balls. I hate to badmouth someone's work, but this story did not work for me at all. It's confusing, lame, predictable, and kind of stupid to be frank. I didn't find anything about it scary whatsoever.
"The Chemistry Of Ghosts" by Lisa Morton is my favorite story. It's a great one that feels entirely like R.L. Stine's brand of pre-teen terror, giving me nostalgic vibes from the get-go. I really dug this entry.
"The Man Who Drew Cats" by Michael Marshall Smith is a close second favorite. It details a quiet elder man who enjoys painting, drawing, and doing chalk art. He helps a kid and his mom suffering from an abusive home life and I don't want to spoil how.
"Are You Afraid Of The Dark?" by Charles L. Grant caps off the book. It's decent. Nothing to write home about.

I enjoy the artwork provided by Randy Broecker, his illustrations bring to mind the work of Stephen Gammel on the Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark series. Unfortunately, his art is pretty scarce here. Overall, a book worthy of reading for enthusiasts of horror anthologies.
Profile Image for Adrian.
1,463 reviews41 followers
September 15, 2023
All they tried to teach here
Now goes untaught.
Ready, steady, each here,
Knowledge we sought.
What they called disaster
Killed us not, O master!
Rule us, we beseech here,
Eye, hand, and thought.


I picked up this horror anthology in a local shop as it contained one of my favourite Neil Gaiman stories, Click-Clack the Rattlebag.

Also included is a Stephen King, Here There Be Tygers, and a number of stories by authors I didn't previously know.

The standout tales are the above two, along with The Man Who Drew Cats by Michael Marshall Smith, which was a powerful and moving tale.

Enjoyable but could have been better, 3 1/2 stars.
Profile Image for Doc Ezra.
198 reviews3 followers
October 26, 2023
There’s definitely a dose of nostalgia bumping this up from merely OK to three stars. The collection is fun enough, but the tone is pretty uneven in terms of “children’s horror”…there’s stuff here that’s definitely nightmare fuel for most kids, and others that are just kind of fun silly ghost stories. Some of that is an artifact of having a collection of stories assembled from across nearly a century. “Kid-friendly” ghost stories of 1937 are not exactly the same as what’s considered appropriate to the writers from this millennium.

Gaiman’s “Click Clack the Rattelbag” is great, and I also really enjoyed Michael Marshall Smith’s “The Man Who Drew Cats.” I’d read King’s “Here There Be Tygers” before, but it was fun to run into it again here. I confess I got a little squicked out by the implications of “Granny’s Grinning,” in which a family turns their young daughter into a simulacrum of her own dead grandfather, so that she can then sleep with her grandmother? Deeply fucked up, bluntly, and while I guess that qualifies as a solid horror story, it’s weird to me that someone decided to include, in a relatively light-hearted book of kid’s ghost stories, one that hinges on some pseudo sexual abuse of the protagonist by two generations of her family.
493 reviews1 follower
September 24, 2025
I wasn’t sure how to rate this (I am giving this a hesitant 4 stars); I bought it because it was obviously an homage to “Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark,” and as it claims on the back that it is intended for 8-12 year olds, I thought that it might be a fun read for my youngest daughter. THIS BOOK IS NOT APPROPRIATE for 8 year olds, and I would argue that it really isn’t appropriate for 12 year olds either. Around 80 percent of this would be fine for older tweens, albeit tweens that can handle some mature themes (including spouse and child abuse, satanism, infidelity, mild swearing, some ogling of the anatomy of older female babysitters, and some PG13 horror and violence), but stories like “The Chimney” and especially “Granny’s Grinning” are not. The latter ended with something that disturbed me (and, I am a horror fanatic with a fairly strong stomach)…it was…just wrong. Truly, horrifically terrifying in a way that shocked me. I will say that I actually enjoyed several of these stories, but I just can’t see this book being something most parents would approve of for their kids.
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