My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Find your new favourite book or recommend one on our Book forum.

What we're reading

What's the scariest book you've read?

159 replies

imaginative · 23/01/2015 09:51

My two are 'the woman in Black' by Susan Hill - sooo creepy, and much more recently, and probably frightened me a bit more - 'What Laura Saw' by Sarah King. This one has a couple of really great twists and a very sympathetic lead character.

So which books scared you the most? I am looking for another one to read alongside 'The State We're In'. I like to have a couple of books on the go depending on my mood. Thanks

OP posts:
Report
tb · 25/03/2015 14:23

Serment des Limbes by Jean Christophe Grangé - it's available in English, but I read it in French.

It's all about negative near death experiences, and some nights, I was reading until 2am so that I could find a place to put it down.

Report
JP32 · 18/03/2015 17:41

Another vote for 'House of Leaves'. Bought it used on Amazon and don't think it was too pricey as I never spend more than about £3 on used books. But yes, utterly creepy. What I really loved about it, though, was that it had an unexpectedly hopeful and uplifting ending...I thought it was a very grown-up book which made me think a lot about things like parenthood and marriage, when I wasn't being entirely creeped out. I am tempted to re-read it now....

Report
butterfly2015 · 14/03/2015 16:02

It's such a cleverly written book, you really do think she's just got major mh issues until the book progresses. I will definitely read it again .....It's the things like the cutlery drawer and the laundry basket, it just sent chills down my spine, so creepy and the friends all thinking she's just nuts. If they made it into a film I'm not sure I could watch it.

Report
quirkychick · 14/03/2015 15:46

Into the darkest corner. Yes, truly terrifying. No one really believes her...

Report
quirkychick · 14/03/2015 15:45

Lots of these were on the Halloween thread.

House of Leaves! nothing quite like it, there seems to be no "rules" to the supernatural happenings.

Turn of the Screw.

The Lost by Jonathan Aycliffe. Vampires but utterly terrifying.

I have The Road to read. Yikes!

Don't Look Now, omg. Classic scary film.

Alias Grace is creepy. But a lot of Margaret Atwood is.

Report
butterfly2015 · 14/03/2015 15:30

Into the darkest corner by Elizabeth Haynes.

It's about a woman who has escaped dv and it was truly terrifying.

Report
LunacyPays · 14/03/2015 15:27

Also, I found the book of The Woman in Black not at all scary, but the film scared the bejesus out of me!

Report
LunacyPays · 14/03/2015 15:26

I loved Dark Matter! I have been watching the series of Fortitude on the telly and it really bought Dark Matter to mind - the combination of snow and the dark is wonderfully atmospheric and spooky.

The Road left me feeling literally sick. I have had a fascination with anything apocalyptic since all those 80's teen books based on nuclear war (Children of the Dust, Z for Zachariah etc).

The Orphanage is definitely the darkest, spookiest film I have ever watched. Devastatingly sad too. Pan's Labyrinth, by the same director I think, was pretty bleak too.

Report
gaggiagirl · 07/03/2015 18:30

Ritual by graham masterton is just horrific.
Anything by him is chilling,sexy and gorey. Love him.

Report
LeBearPolar · 07/03/2015 16:35

I remember being frightened by Dracula the first time I read it but no longer.

Do people really find The Woman in Black scary? Maybe I've taught it too many times but I don't remember ever being remotely frightened by it.

Report
toldmywrath · 07/03/2015 16:29
Grin
Report
DuchessofMalfi · 07/03/2015 16:17

He's fine now :) and I think I'm forgiven for spooking him. He did say it was a good book, which he finished in daylight :o

Report
Effnjeff · 07/03/2015 14:31

Ash by James Herbert

Report
toldmywrath · 07/03/2015 14:00

Your poor dad Duchess, but you were just trying to be thoughtful. It shows the power of a good book on an active mind though. I hope your dad's hospital stay was otherwise uneventful. Smile

Report
DuchessofMalfi · 01/03/2015 19:54

re Dark Matter. I did a very silly thing. I included it in a bag of books I gave to my 84 year old DF when he was going into hospital for a longish stay. He started reading it late one night on the ward, alone, facing a dark uncurtained window. He told me the next day it really freaked him out and he had to hide it in the drawer Blush

Report
AliceLidl · 01/03/2015 18:44

sanquhar I was just going to recommend those two Adam Nevill books.

The forest one is Ritual and the cult one is Last Days (I think) and both had some very creepy moments in them. I preferred Ritual because I just like the idea of being stalked through the woods (although not really, I mean from the safety of the pages of the book).

Has anyone suggested FG Cottam yet? I liked The Waiting Room best I think, and Dark Echo. There's something old fashioned about the creepiness of his books in places. House of Lost Souls was also good.

I saw someone suggest Bird Box and I read it recently, it was very good. Apart from one bit that was so ridiculous it annoyed me, but the idea of having to walk about outside with closed eyes or blindfolds gave me the creeps right from the start.

Report
mytartanscarf · 28/02/2015 15:17

Do you mind if I sub? Love scary books - am looking for some to download and there are some great suggestions.

Dean Koontz books used to TERRIFY me; don't know why I read them really! Grin

Report
aeon456 · 26/02/2015 02:48

'The Exorcist' by William Peter Blatty - far scarier than the film. I was in my teens at the time though so probably far more susceptible to being scared. I remember lying in bed rigid with fear after reading it. I think it's based on a true story and it's the sense of realism that makes it so scary.

Report
mamadoc · 24/02/2015 00:02

Another vote for Dark Matter.

But be warned you will not sleep. You will be too scared to turn the lights off.

I had to give this book away to my sister after I had read it. It was so dark and scary that I couldn't keep it in the house.

Report
Tootingbec · 23/02/2015 22:25

Loving this thread. For me:

Woman in Black
Don't Look Now

Read both of these in my late teens and they scared the shit out of me like nothing has since. Literally couldn't turn the page for last page of Don't Look Now. Also agree with When the Wind Blows - but then I was a child of the 70's so I spent the 80's in a permanent state of terror thinking nuclear war was going to break out. WTWB disturbed me so much when I first read it and continues to do so 30 years on...

Can't wait to try Dark Matter based on these recommendations and also the one about the abusive boyfriend! Never read any Sarah Walters but you have all peeked my interest in trying some of them out....

Report
twostepsister · 20/02/2015 10:34

When I was in my teens I read Herbert Van Thal Pan books of horror, Amityville horror, Pet cemetery and more recently Into the darkest corner - Elizabeth Haynes which scared me.

Report
SilkStalkings · 19/02/2015 09:40

The Chalice by Phil Rickman. Great writer. I stayed up til 4am reading it because I was too scared to put it down without some closure.

Report

Newsletters you might like

Discover Exclusive Savings!

Sign up to our Money Saver newsletter now and receive exclusive deals and hot tips on where to find the biggest online bargains, tailored just for Mumsnetters.

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Parent-Approved Gems Await!

Subscribe to our weekly Swears By newsletter and receive handpicked recommendations for parents, by parents, every Sunday.

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

CandyApocalypse · 18/02/2015 13:08

My tastes go toward the creepy supernatural novels so I agree with a lot of the recommendations on this thread so far. Dark Matter, Naomi's Room, The Shining and House of Leaves left me with a creeping sort of dread.

Heart Shaped Box by Joe Hill is great. The Great God Pan by Arthur Machen and The Willows by Algernon Blackwood are also good.

John Connolly is wonderful. I love his Charlie Parker series, but I'd probably recommend Nocturnes as a starting point. As an aside, The Book of Lost things is a wonderful, creepy adult fairy tale.

Lovecraft is good, though for creepy reads I recommend The Haunter of the Dark and Pickman's Model. Also worth checking out the Welcome to Nightvale podcast as that has echoes of Lovecraft.

If you like the sound of M.R James then my favourites of his were Lost Hearts, Whistle and I'll Come to You and The Mezzotint.

I saw someone recommend a Dean Koontz book. The only book of his that has ever scared me was the first half of The Taking. I wasn't a big fan of the end, but I had to put the book down for a while.

Richard Matheson writes some really good stuff too.

Film wise, I tend to prefer foreign horror these days. My recommendations are Shutter (the original, not American remake), Rec and the De Toro films (Orphanage, Devil's Backbone etc).

If anyone likes podcasts then Knifepoint Horror is quite good.

Wow this is long. Sorry. Can't you tell I love scary stuff?

Report
imaginative · 11/02/2015 16:21

I'm going to look up that one!

OP posts:
Report
popcornpaws · 11/02/2015 13:12

Eleven terrible months, can't remember the author at the moment, very creepy, sort of like a diary from different family members giving their account of living in a "haunted" house.
My sister borrowed it when i had read it and was freaked out by it, she then gave it away as she didn't want it in her house as she felt uncomfortable having it in her possession, always a good sign when a book gets under your skin i think!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.