![]() ![]() ![]() Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark worked for me, if only because the stories themselves were just lame urban legends, while the art by Stephen Gammell was synthesized, purified nightmare fuel, perfect for sleepovers. I remember distinctly picking up some rando Alfred Hitchcock story collection for kids and reading the warning that it would be the scariest thing I ever encountered, only to return it to the library without going any further. I wanted to be scared, but in the safest way imaginable. They were written by folks like Betty Ren Wright and Willo Davis Roberts and Mary Down Hahn, and I loved them dearly. ![]() The Apple paperbacks had titles like Ghost Cat, and Wait Till Helen Comes, and The Dollhouse Murders. But it was also long after John Bellairs made it his business to truck in the middle grade supernatural. This was long before Bob Stine decided to slap an “R.L.” in front of his last name and stake a claim in the world of G-rated horror fare. Only one thing that could make my little heart go pitter-pat, and that was the comforting presence of ghost stories. There was only one thing in the entire world I ever wanted to read, at that point. In fourth grade I sold my soul to the Scholastic Book Club’s Apple paperbacks. Putnam & Sons (an imprint of Penguin Young Reader’s Group) ![]()
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