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Help a Reader Out: The Babysitter

A mystery keyword searcher is looking for… a scary book about a babysitter telling a couple of kids a scary story.

Gosh, babysitters figure in so many scary stories, but usually (oddly, considering that they’re the ones supposedly in charge) they’re victims. I don’t know if our mystery searcher has a specific book in mind or is just looking for any story that fits these criteria. If it’s something specific, I don’t know that I have an answer, but there is one extremely creepy short story I know of where a babysitter tells her charges a very creepy story. That story is “The Specialist’s Hat”, and it appears in the short story collection Pretty Monsters, by Kelly Link. If anyone out there has knowledge of a BOOK with this theme, please post it in the comments below.

Thanks!

ETA:  It looks like we have a winner! If you haven’t checked out the comments below, Jericho suggested  “When Nobody’s Home: Fifteen Baby-Sitting Tales of Terror” by Judith Gorog.  If you’re interested in finding out more about her or her books, I did respond in the comments, but I’ll copy it below, too. Here’s what I said:

I am not personally familiar with Judith Gorog’s books, but it looks like she was responsible for a lot of scary books and short story collections for children and young teens, mostly written in the 1980′s and 1990′s (this particular title was published in 1998). Since we get a lot of requests for the scary stuff for kids in these age groups, I’ll list some of the titles I found at the Pennsylvania Center for the Book (for the entire article click here). One review I saw for “In a Messy, Messy, Room”(at the lower end of the age range) recommended setting the book out with Alvin Schwartz’s “In a Dark, Dark, Room” and “Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark”, so if you can find them, they look like they’re worth checking out!

A Taste for Quiet and Other Disquieting Tales. New York: Philomel, 1982.
When Flesh Begins to Creep. London: Gollancz, 1986.
Caught in the Turtle. New York: Philomel, 1983.
No Swimming in Dark Pond and Other Chilling Tales. New York: Philomel, 1987.
Three Dreams and a Nightmare and Other Tales of the Dark. New York: Philomel, 1988.
In a Messy, Messy Room, and Other Strange Stories. New York: Philomel, 1990.
Winning Scheherazade. New York: Atheneum 1991.
On Meeting Witches at Wells. New York: Philomel, 1991.
Please Do Not Touch. New York: Scholastic (Point Horror), 1995.
When Nobody’s Home: Thirteen Tales for Tonight. New York: Scholastic, 1994.
Zilla Sasparilla and the Mud Baby. Cambridge: Candlewick, 1995.
In a Creepy, Creepy Place and Other Scary Stories. New York: HarperCollins, 1996.

Help a Reader Out: Vampire Ballerina

A mystery keyword searcher is looking for… a short scary story about a ballet teacher who uses her students’ blood to stay young.

Well, it’s not a short story, and it doesn’t have a ballet teacher, but there’s a short YA novel that comes to mind immediately, and that is Dead is the New Black by Marlene Perez. The plot includes a substitute gym teacher and cheerleading coach who sucks away the cheerleaders’ lives to stay young. Maybe that’s what you’re looking for?

If anyone has knowledge of a short story that fits the description above, please leave an answer in the comments. But I’m pretty sure our mystery searcher is looking for Dead is the New Black.

Girls Gone Missing? Halloween and Monster Movies for Kids

Margot Magowan runs the blog Reel Girl , which focuses on gender equality in the media (mostly on the representation, or lack thereof,  of girls) does a regular feature called “Girls Gone Missing”. With Halloween just around the corner, she did a Halloween edition of this feature and shared her impressions of the three Halloween/monster movies for children out this fall, ParaNorman, Hotel Transylvania, and Frankenweenie. noting that in all three movies there is a major skew toward male leads and secondary characters, with almost no female characters in any of them. Margot and the Reel Girl community see this as a major problem, not just for these movies but for children’s movies in general, because there’s no reason that some of these male characters couldn’t be girls without the story changing at all. To paraphrase one of her commenters, does the story in ParaNorman change that much if Norman becomes Norma?

There are so many girls who love Halloween and monsters and movies about them, who grow up to be women who love Halloween and monsters and movies about them. So why should they be left out of the story, or a token character? But it’s one thing to identify the movies girls are missing from and another to offer options that show strong girls taking the lead. So, I asked Margot:

 

What do you recommend as far as monster movies intended for kids, then? As the editor for MonsterLibrarian.com and the mother of a monster-loving boy with a sister willing to go along for the ride I’d be interested in what you DO think are good choices. We held Monster Movie Month in July, which, while mostly at choices for adults, was inspired by my son’s love of the classic movies, and the three of us picked some movie choices parents could share with their kids, but I’d love to know what you think. Halloween is our busiest month of the year and our children’s section is one of the most popular parts of our site and that’s something I would love to share there.

Margot asked the Reel Girl community for suggestions, and here are some of the titles they came up with.

Coraline
Scooby Doo (the animated series)
The Corpse Bride
A Series of Unfortunate Events
Hocus Pocus
Kiki’s Delivery Service
My Neighbor Totoro
Monsters vs Aliens
The Addams Family

As a Halloween title, I’ll toss in the Charlie Brown Halloween special.

The general portrayal of women in horror movies also came up in the discussion, but that’s kind of irrelevant to my question (although it’s something I would be happy to start an individual post for if you want). For those of you reading this, do you agree with their choices for Halloween and monster movies that have gender equality (or at least strong female characters who haven’t been sexualized)? Do you have additional suggestions? I would love to hear what you think!