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Halloween Reads @ your library

Caught up in what Dr. Seuss’ Grinch calls “the trimmings and trappings” of Halloween (how is it there’s no Grinch Who Stole Halloween out there)? There are certainly lots of resources both on the shelf and online for recipes and party planning ideas, craft and decoration ideas, and costume ideas  (hello, Pinterest).  But Halloween is also a holiday for celebrating the things that go bump in the night, and there is plenty of both fiction and nonfiction for all ages that either take advantage of or explain its origins and mythologies. Looking for a good Halloween read as the holiday approaches? These certainly aren’t all of the ones available, and there are many excellent titles that aren’t listed below, but here are thirteen (plus one) titles that celebrate the Halloween season.

 

   The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury. This is a good choice for reading aloud with your school-aged children.

 

Hallowe’en Party by Agatha Christie. I know Agatha Christie’s books aren’t horror (mostly) but if you want to curl up with a mystery, you can’t go wrong with Hercule Poirot.

 

Halloween Man by Douglas Clegg. Douglas Clegg is a very talented horror novelist. I haven’t read his books, as his novels can be quite graphic, but this one has also been described as eerie and compelling.

 

The Legend of the Pumpkin Thief by Charles Day. This 2013 Bram Stoker nominee doesn’t appear to be easily available right now, so hopefully you already have it in your collection! It looks like a romance, but in actuality is more of a YA horror/mystery combination.Want a review? Find one here.

 

Hallowed by Bryant Delafosse. This is a YA paranormal/horror title, and I can’t claim to have read it, but I have heard good things about it. Yes, there are plenty of YA paranormal reads, but this one is set right around Halloween.

 

Halloween edited by Paula Guran. This anthology includes both reprints and original stories related to the holiday, including stories from such notables as Ray Bradbury, Peter Straub, H.P. Lovecraft, and Edgar Allan Poe. One reviewer on Amazon noted that the Bradbury story does not appear in the ebook version of this book, as Bradbury was very opposed to ebooks, although I know he did release a book in ebook format before his passing… so I don’t know if that is still the case. It is well worth looking up!

 

Halloween: Magic, Mystery, and the Macabre edited by Paula Guran. This is NOT the same anthology as the one I listed just above– it is more recently published. While the first one had stories by many of the giants of the genre, this one has a different collection of authors, who cover a wider breadth of the genre.  These include such excellent writers as Maria V. Snyder and Carrie Vaughan as well as authors more solidly identified with adult horror such as Chelsea Quinn Yarbro and John Shirley.

 

Black and Orange by Benjamin Kane Ethridge. Black and Orange is also the recipient of a Stoker Award. We reviewed it here, and it got a fantastic review!

 

Halloween by Melanie Jackson. Not every book about Halloween is a scary one. This one tells of the adventures of four ten year olds out trick or treating for Halloween. Set in the 1960’s, this is a book that might be enjoyed more for its nostalgia value (if you were a kid at that time) or for reading with an older child.
Mischief Night by Paul Melnizcek. This is a novella from Bad Moon Books’ series of Halloween novellas, now also available on Kindle. It’s a nice little haunted house story. You can check out our review here.

 

A Hallowe’en Anthology: Literary and Historical Writers Over the Centuries edited by Lisa Morton

Lisa Morton is a Halloween expert who has published both fiction and nonfiction, and this collects some of both, with sources documenting Halloween from its origins to the early 20th century. Certainly, this is a unique collection that will be of interest to anyone who prefers to learn about the historical holiday rather than today’s trimmings, trappings, and trick-or-treating. In the interests of saving space, because Lisa has written extensively on Halloween, I’m going to just list a few of her other titles worth looking into this holiday season: The Halloween Encyclopedia (nonfiction), Trick or Treat: A History of Halloween (nonfiction), and The Samhanach (fiction– and a top pick for 2011 at Monster Librarian, reviewed independently by three different reviewers here).

 

Horrorween (Orangefield Series) by Al Sarrantonio.  Orangefield is a town inhabited by Samhain, Lord of Death.  Other books in the series include Orangefield, Hallows’ Eve,  and Halloweenland. We’re awfully close to the end of October to power through all of them, but maybe you can make a resolution to try them out next year…

 

Gods of the Nowhere by James Tipper. The protagonist here is a disabled teenager, which is pretty interesting, as you don’t find many disabled protagonists in horror fiction. And he has a Latina friend, also an unusual find in horror fiction. It’s been described as a creepy and original take on Halloween. This is not a children’s book– maybe an older teen would appreciate it, though.

 

Halloween Spirits: 11 Tales for the Darkest Night edited by Lisa Morton. I know I said I would only mention Lisa Morton once, but this is an interesting collection of short stories that (mostly) tie in to Halloween,  and are intended to get you into the Halloween spirit.  These are not (mostly) stories about trick-or-treating, which is what we normally associate with the holiday, but, especially if you’re short on time, this book is a nice way to give yourself small doses of holiday excitement throughout the month of October.  The authors include Kealan Patrick Burke, Scott Nicholson, John Palisano, Jeremy Shipp, and Nate Kenyon, to name just a few. It’s also an inexpensive way to get into the spirit– available only as an ebook, it’s just $2.99 at Amazon right now.

So there you have it… a list of all kinds of Halloween reads, for all kinds or readers. Check them out and see if one of them is a match for you! And a Happy Halloween to you!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Witches on Trial @ your library

“Are you a good witch, or a bad witch”? That’s the first question Dorothy is asked when she arrives in Oz. Kind of a bewildering question even if you haven’t just had your house blown into a magical country by a tornado and recovered from a bang on the head. Of course, the answer to that question is decided pretty quickly, since her house has squashed the Wicked Witch of the East. But that’s the way decisions seem to be made when it comes to judging who’s a witch and who is not. Lucky Dorothy managed to gain the support of the people of Oz, but that pendulum usually seems to swing in the opposite direction. And in America, the most notorious example, although not the only one, happened in Salem, Massachusetts.

        

     

 

 Even children know the story of the Salem Witch Trials, and if they don’t, they really should. Any community can be shaken up by mass hysteria, the source of the horrific events that took place in this quiet New England town, and with the presence of social media in our midst, it can spread faster and further than ever before. Witch hunts are certainly no longer just the province of the superstitious. For a really excellent, accessible, and gorgeously illustrated historical account of the Salem Witch Trials, I recommend seeking out Rosalyn Schanzer’s  Witches! The Absolutely True Story of the Disaster in Salem. While the target audience is really older children and young adults, this is a great choice for general readers of any age. A great follow-up title is the Newbery winner The Witch of Blackbird Pond. That award is an award for excellence: don’t let the fact that it’s an award for children’s literature stop you from reading it (Kit, the protagonist, is sixteen). While it’s set in Connecticut in the early 1600’s, it does a great job of bringing home how personal and irrational these persecutions could be. It’s a memorable title you won’t be sorry you’ve read.

It’s hard to talk about Salem without bringing up Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. This is probably the first play I ever saw (my aunt was in it, in the dancing scene at the beginning). While it’s short, it surely makes an impact (it has been made into an opera, and may be the shortest opera I have ever seen). The  play brings to life the Salem Witch Trials and the hysteria that accompanied them. The Crucible, written in the 1950s during Senator Joseph McCarthy’s “Red Scare”, is, under its surface, a rather pointed allegory about the “witch hunts” against supposed Communists that occurred during that time. Miller demonstrated exactly what I wrote about above: that incitement to mass hysteria is no longer limited to the superstitious, and any of us can become a target at any time. There’s an excellent movie adaptation of The Crucible, with Daniel Day-Lewis and Winona Ryder, as well. It’s frequently used in American Literature classes to engage students’ interest in the play, which is generally required reading for those classes (Want to give required reading pizzazz? Daniel Day-Lewis and Winona Ryder can do that). I haven’t seen this next movie, but The Salem Witch Trials, originally a miniseries on CBS, and starring Kirstie Alley and several other notable actresses, is supposed to be a very good fictionalized version of the events of that time.

Authors have taken varied approaches to the events of the Salem Witch Trials and to witch hunts in general. One surprise is Robin Cook’s medical thriller Acceptable Risk, which involves a subplot with one of the main characters discovering she is related to a Salem witch. I don’t know that you can say that Robin Cook is actually a good writer, but he is a compelling and memorable one– books of his that I read in high school still stick with me. I constantly hear complaints from my dad that there are no good medical thrillers out there anymore, so why not take this chance to resurrect what is admittedly a rather elderly title?

More recently, Alexandra Sokoloff produced Book of Shadows, a supernatural thriller/police procedural that involves a contemporary witch living in Salem, who gets involved in helping a police detective solve the mystery of the murder of a college student that appears to have Satanic overtones. While not directly tied to the original trials, I happen to enjoy Sokoloff’s books, and many readers who normally skip over witch-themed horror may find themselves drawn in to this.  And within just the past few months, the last book in Melissa de la Cruz’s trilogy Witches of East End, Winds of Salem, was released. While the image above is of the first book in the series, the second, Serpent’s Kiss, and the third, Winds of Salem, have a strong thread involving the Salem Witch Trials. With Witches of East End just coming out as a television series, including these books in a display on the Salem Witch Trials  is a great way to draw readers in to a witchy world as Halloween approaches. These books are more urban fantasy than horror, but paranormal lovers will get right into them.

Witch hunts haven’t been limited to Salem and its environs, though. Witch Hunts: A Graphic History of the Burning Times, a non-fiction graphic novel by Rocky Wood and Lisa Morton, with shocking and effective artwork by Greg Chapman, also details witch hunts in Europe, from the time of the Black Death through the Reformation and finally to the Enlightenment. With torture and burning witches alive being methods often used by witch hunters, you can imagine what the artwork must be like. The book, written by Lisa Morton and Rocky Wood, noted scholars in horror non-fiction, treats its topic respectfully and seriously, and won the 2013 Bram Stoker Award for Best Graphic Novel.

The movie Season of the Witch does not pretend to be a serious, non-fictional account of the Burning Times in Europe. It does take place in Europe, during the Middle Ages, at a time when accusations of witchcraft were very serious. Two former knights, played by Nicolas Cage and Ron Perlman, are assigned to escort a young woman to an abbey to face accusations of witchcraft. It’s not a great movie, but it’s entertaining, and keeps you guessing as to whether the woman the two men are escorting actually is a witch.

There are a lot of other books, movies, and other materials on witches out there, so maybe I’ll come back to the topic again, but I think this is a good collection to get those interested in Salem, witch hunts, and witchery in general, started on that TBR pile.

 

 

 

 

Guest Post: Ten Classics of Halloween Fiction by Lisa Morton

TEN CLASSICS OF HALLOWEEN FICTION

by Lisa Morton

Most horror fans probably think that Halloween-themed fiction has a lengthy and deep history, and glancing at lists of October releases every year would certainly lend credence to that belief. But the truth is that prior to the twentieth century, Halloween made surprisingly few appearances in fiction; the only stories to focus completely on the holiday were usually quaint tales of middle-class parties found in ladies’ magazines, and aimed at Victorian hostesses who were in search of themed parties to fill that gap between Independence Day and Christmas.

In the twentieth century, though, as Halloween celebrations spread throughout America, so did Halloween fiction. Interestingly, stories from the first half of the century still focused on parties; it wasn’t until the close of the 1900s that Halloween fiction became its own cottage industry, with stories now centering on everything from trick or treat to haunted attractions to urban legends to Halloween’s Celtic origins.

The list below includes only works of fiction (excluding, in other words, poetry, because this list would start with Robert Burns’s 1785 masterpiece “Hallowe’en” if that were the case), is arranged chronologically, and is notated to make these works easy to find.

“Clay” (1914) by James Joyce – Yes, this is the James Joyce primarily known for A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Ulysses, but the Irish author also wrote this poignant and subtly dreadful story of a lonely, impoverished woman who attends a Halloween party and plays fortune-telling games, with melancholy results. “Clay” appears in Joyce’s collection Dubliners, which is still in print and easily available.

“All Souls’” (1937) by Edith Wharton – Even though this story seems to confuse All Souls Day (November 2nd) and Halloween, there’s no question that it belongs to the latter holiday. This low-key, creepy and even mildly surreal gem is about a wealthy woman living in an isolated mansion who wakes up on Halloween to discover that all of her servants have vanished and she’s alone in the house. The story has an undercurrent of rich vs. poor and American vs. Old World tensions, and remains very effective. It can be found in the wonderful collection The Ghost Stories of Edith Wharton (still in print).

“The Cloak” (1939) by Robert Bloch – This wry little tale by the author of Psycho may be the first modern Halloween tale to feature costuming, and is one of the earliest examples of a definitive Halloween tale by a horror author. It’s about a man who rents a vampire costume to attend an upper-crust Halloween party, only to discover that he now has a desire to drink blood. Although the story has been reprinted dozens of times, it doesn’t seem to appear in any current books; the most recent is the 1994 collection Robert Bloch: The Early Fears (which is readily available for purchase at most online book sites).

“The October Game” (1948) by Ray Bradbury – Bradbury is the king of Halloween fiction and this could be his crowning achievement. This unnerving little tale focuses on a children’s Halloween party at which the kids are being entertained by the classic game of passing squishy things around in the dark and being told they’re body parts. The story is justifiably famous for its last line, and has been anthologized dozens of times, although as with The Cloak it’s been missing from most recent volumes. A cheap used copy of the Bradbury book Long After Midnight is probably the way to go.

It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (1967) by Charles M. Schulz – Yes, I know it’s more widely known as a beloved television special, and yes, I know it’s a kid’s book…but this is arguably the single most important work on this list. Prior to It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, children’s Halloween books were amazingly scarce; probably the best known one prior to this was Robert Bright’s 1958 Georgie’s Halloween, about a lonely little ghost who fits right in on October 31st. The success of It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, though, paved the way for an explosion of children’s Halloween books, and may even have spilled over into the adult realm as well. The book hasn’t gone out of print since 1967.

The Halloween Tree (1972) by Ray Bradbury – This fantasy novel, about an enigmatic character named Carapace Clavicle Moundshroud who takes a group of boys on a tour of Halloween’s history, is easily the most beloved Halloween novel of all time. It features Bradbury’s rich style and looks at related holidays like Dia de los Muertos and the Egyptian Feast of the Dead. The book also spawned an animated film and has been continuously in print since its original publication.

“Gone” (2000) by Jack Ketchum – This Bram Stoker Award-winning short story originally appeared in the seminal anthology October Dreams, which paved the way for the Halloween fiction of the 21st century. The story is a bleak recounting of a frightening encounter between some trick or treaters and a woman grieving over the loss of her own child. October Dreams was reprinted in a trade paperback edition in 2002, and although it’s now out of print it can be easily acquired used.

“Mr. Dark’s Carnival” (2000) by Glen Hirshberg – This long story mixes up Halloween decorating, folklore, and urban legends to tell a deeply unsettling story about a professor who discovers the dreadful truth behind his small town’s obsession with Halloween. The story is also a commentary on America’s violent history, and features fiction’s most unusual take on a Halloween haunted house. The story appears in Hirshberg’s collection The Two Sams, which can be easily found at used book sites.

“Hornets” (2001) by Al Sarrantonio – This novella first appeared in the anthology Trick or Treat: A Collection of Halloween Novellas, and began Sarrantonio’s popular “Orangefield Cycle”, a series of interlinked novels and stories that celebrate Halloween in the fictitious small town of Orangefield. In “Hornets”, a successful author wrestles with an insect infestation during Halloween season as he creates a children’s book centered on the character “Sam Hain”. “Hornets” was reprinted in the mass market collection Horrorween, which is readily available used.

Dark Harvest (2006) by Norman Partridge – This fast-paced novella is set in a mythical town in 1963 where Halloween is celebrated with a hunt and a sacrifice, all centering on a character called “the October Boy”. The story is a potent commentary on the myth of the small American town, and in addition to receiving multiple awards it was named one of Publisher’s Weekly’s 100 Best Books of 2006. The book is still in print.

In 2012, Halloween fiction is alive and well, with many small press publishers (including Bad Moon Books, Dark Regions, and Earthling) releasing new Halloween-themed books for October. Among the best of the Halloween releases in the last few years: The anthology Halloween, edited by Paula Guran and published by Prime Books; Earthling Publication’s Halloween series, which has included such critically-acclaimed books as David Herter’s October Dark, Peter Crowther’s By Wizard Oak, and Glen Hirshberg’s Motherless Child; the novellas of Paul Melniczek, which usually feature lonely protagonists encountering Halloween threats in archetypal towns; and here at MonsterLibrarian.com, my own novella The Samhanach was featured as one of the top picks of 2011, and Rhonda Wilson reviews my 2012 offering Hell Manor elsewhere on the site.

 

LISA MORTON BIO: Lisa Morton is a screenwriter, an award-winning fiction author, and one of the world’s leading Halloween experts. Her work was described in the American Library Association’s Readers’ Advisory Guide to Horror as “consistently dark, unsettling, and frightening”, and her latest non-fiction book, Trick or Treat: A History of Halloween (Reaktion Books) recently reached the #1 spot on Amazon’s list of Holiday bestsellers. She lives in North Hollywood, California, and online at www.lisamorton.com