intertribal (
intertribal) wrote2009-10-29 09:44 pm
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a couple creepy recs
The Washington Post asked some horror writers for scary story recs, and I read a couple that were online (I'd already read - and agreed with - Elizabeth Hand's recommendation, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-Paper", and Charlaine Harris' recommendation, The Haunting of Hill House - oh yeah, and Dracula, of course). They were both really, really interesting, so here they are:
- "The Monkey's Paw" by W. W. Jacobs (1902). Jonathan Carroll's recommendation. Apparently this is a famous story, but I had never read it (I am freakishly uneducated in this regard), and now I'm glad I have!
- "The Specialist's Hat" by Kelly Link (1998). Joe Hill's recommendation. I've never read Kelly Link either (I know, shame) but whoa. WHOA THAR. I'm going to have to read this one a few more times.
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And that's two types of locked-up, because we also have the ghost daughter being locked up in the attic, and when you have two of something, you start looking for similarities, and I couldn't quite find them. I could see that the crazy poet might lock his daughter up so she wouldn't bother him while he was doing his black magic.... or maybe he had other sinister ideas in mind? But I just keep coming back to wondering why Groundskeeper Willie, there, needed to be locked up.
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Anyway: I have no clue. It says that he can't stay in the house at night. Babysitter confirms this. And it doesn't explicitly say that he sends her either: "Then their father couldn't find Mr. Coeslak, but the babysitter showed up precisely at seven o'clock." So did the babysitter lock him in the tool room? Does he become a ghost at night and automatically get locked up at night, and that's why he can't come in the house? WHO KNOWS.
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One little detail I liked in this story was how people seemed more ghostly inside the house (especially the *mothers* on the tours).