Favorite Scary Books That Take Place Around Halloween

10/13/2022 | Categories: | Tagged: Fiction

From classics to contemporaries, these are some of the most commonly recommended reads for Halloween thrills when the chill of October sets upon the air.

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1. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving

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Ichabod Crane, a schoolteacher, came to Tarry Town in the glen of Sleepy Hollow to ply his trade in educating young minds. He was a gullible and excitable fellow, often so terrified by locals’ stories of ghosts that he would hurry through the woods on his way home, singing to keep from hysterics. Among these stories was the legend of the Galloping Hessian, the headless horseman of Sleepy Hollow.

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Every year around Halloween, I listen to a reading of Washington Irving’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. It’s a great old-world way of getting into the spirit and appreciating this work of art. When I was a little boy, my family would listen to a reading of this on the radio one particular night in late October when the station traditionally read it. Get comfortable on your couch, lower the lights, and give it a listen!

@Building_Snowmen

Every October I look for something scary to read that will make me afraid to be home alone without a light on. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving got me good and scared last year and it is a beautiful piece of literature too.

@wtfplane

2. Harvest Home: A Novel by Thomas Tryon

Harvest Home by Thomas Tryon

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After watching his asthmatic daughter suffer in the foul city air, Theodore Constantine decides to get back to the land. When he and his wife search New England for the perfect nineteenth-century home, they find no township more charming, no countryside more idyllic than the farming village of Cornwall Coombe. Here they begin a new life: simple, pure, close to nature—and ultimately more terrifying than Manhattan’s darkest alley.

When the Constantines win the friendship of the town matriarch, the mysterious Widow Fortune, they are invited to join the ancient festival of Harvest Home, a ceremony whose quaintness disguises dark intentions. In this bucolic hamlet, where bootleggers work by moonlight and all of the villagers seem to share the same last name, the past is more present than outsiders can fathom—and something far more sinister than the annual harvest is about to rise out of the earth.

Credited as the inspiration for Stephen King’s Children of the Corn, Thomas Tryon’s chilling novel was ahead of its time when first published, and continues to provoke abject terror in readers.

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What people are saying

I read Harvest Home by Thomas Tyron 30 years ago and it still sticks in my mind for its eerieness.

@drewfarndale

Strong recommendation for Harvest Home by Thomas Tryon. Slow burn and a great payoff. Don’t move from the city to that precious small town!!

@Imraith-Nimphais

3. Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury

Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury

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Few American novels written this century have endured in th heart and mind as has this one-Ray Bradbury’s incomparable masterwork of the dark fantastic. A carnival rolls in sometime after the midnight hour on a chill Midwestern October eve, ushering in Halloween a week before its time. A calliope’s shrill siren song beckons to all with a seductive promise of dreams and youth regained. In this season of dying, Cooger & Dark’s Pandemonium Shadow Show has come to Green Town, Illinois, to destroy every life touched by its strange and sinister mystery. And two inquisitive boys standing precariously on the brink of adulthood will soon discover the secret of the satanic raree-show’s smoke, mazes, and mirrors, as they learn all too well the heavy cost of wishes — and the stuff of nightmare.

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What people are saying

It’s been recommended in every Halloween thread out there, but I’ll still give it a plug here; Something Wicked This Way Comes by Bradbury. It’s the definition of cozy for me. Hell, even thinking of rereading it come fall gives me a fuzzy, warm feeling inside. I love everything about that book, but most of all the prose. Bradbury was a goddamned magician with words.

@Trickyk1d

Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury. It’s not a cozy book at all, but it is more October than any other book I can think of.

@cannot_care

4. Dark Harvest by Norman Partridge

Dark Harvest by Norman Partridge

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Halloween, 1963. They call him the October Boy, or Ol’ Hacksaw Face, or Sawtooth Jack. Whatever the name, everybody in this small Midwestern town knows who he is. How he rises from the cornfields every Halloween, a butcher knife in his hand, and makes his way toward town, where gangs of teenage boys eagerly await their chance to confront the legendary nightmare. Both the hunter and the hunted, the October Boy is the prize in an annual rite of life and death.

Pete McCormick knows that killing the October Boy is his one chance to escape a dead-end future in this one-horse town. He’s willing to risk everything, including his life, to be a winner for once. But before the night is over, Pete will look into the saw-toothed face of horror―and discover the terrifying true secret of the October Boy.

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What people are saying

Dark Harvest is very fitting for this time of year and you definitely realize something that makes the horror intensify.

@fluorescentpopsicle

Dark Harvest by Norman Partridge.

It’s a short book – around 175 pages. It’s all about the old-school Halloween vibes of the 1960s-1970s small-town America. It’s creepy. Funny. Bloody. And pretty awesome.

@llihcruhcnosaj

5. Hallowe'en Party: A Hercule Poirot Mystery by Agatha Christie

Hallowe'en Party A Hercule Poirot Mystery by Agatha Christie

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At a Halloween party, Joyce—a hostile thirteen-year-old—boasts that she once witnessed a murder. When no one believes her, she storms off home. But within hours her body is found, still in the house, drowned in an apple-bobbing tub.

That night, Hercule Poirot is called in to find the `evil presence’. But first he must establish whether he is looking for a murderer or a double-murderer…

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Is Agatha Christie cozy? If you consider her to be cozy (and BritBox does, so there’s that), a great Hercule Poirot mystery is Hallowe’en Party. There’s an actual Halloween party and lots of murders and some pagan undercurrents. Also, it’s dedicated to PG Wodehouse, so extra credit for that!

@StMaryMead235

My first Christie was Hallowe’en Party and it freaked me out!

@heidstress207

6. Ghost Road Blues (A Pine Deep Novel) by Jonathan Maberry

Ghost Road Blues (A Pine Deep Novel) by Jonathan Maberry

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Thirty years ago, a blues musician called the Bone Man killed the devil at the crossroads, only to be beaten and hung like a scarecrow in a cornfield–or so the story goes. Today, the people of Pine Deep celebrate their town’s grisly past by luring tourists to the famous haunted hayride, full of chills and scares. But this year, “The Spookiest Town in America” will learn the true meaning of fear. Its residents will see the real face of evil lurking behind the masks of ordinary people. They will feel it–in their hearts, in their bones, in their nightmares. Because evil never dies. It only grows stronger…

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Jonathan Maberry wrote the Pine Deep novels which takes place at Halloween. There are three: Ghost Road Blues, Dead Man’s Song, Bad moon Rising. The story ties together and covers demons, vampires, and werewolves. Perfect Halloween fare.

@motherdude

Jonathan Mayberry fan in India here. Immediately after finishing Ghost Road Blues, I bought the 2 sequels and finished them in 2½ days. The crazy thing was I took 2 days of leave (Thursday & Friday) to finish the books. My office approved leave for only one day and the other was LOP. But I didn’t mind. I love all 3 books. No other supernatural horror trilogy has come close to what the Pine Deep Trilogy achieved. It was fast-paced & atmospheric. And I loved the characters.

@Unsaintific

7. A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny

A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny

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A Night in the Lonesome October is Roger Zelazny’s homage to gothic horror and early horror movies. It is at once delightful, humorous, poetic, and gleefully dark. Whenever a full moon falls on All Hallow’s Eve the conditions are such that a gate may be opened to allow the Elder Gods to return from the Nether Regions to which they have been banished. Snuff, a preternatural guard dog, and his owner Jack the Ripper, are closers—that is, they and others of their persuasion arrive in the time and place where the gate might open, in order to prevent the Elder God’s return. Each chapter encompasses a single day in the month of October. Many of Zelazny’s fans read a single chapter each night every October. Wonderfully illustrated with 32 Gahan Wilson Illustrations this cult classic is a delightful and macabre fast-paced romp. Without a doubt one of Zelazny’s best.

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What people are saying

I suggest A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny. Very moody and mysterious book. Read it in a single night Love it.

@aceh40

A Night In The Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny is not horror per se but is definitely based in the Lovecraftian universe. It’s also a tremendously good read from an author at the peak of his powers.

@UncleArthur

8. The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury

The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury

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Join the shadowy Carapace Clavicle Moundshroud as he takes eight trick-or-treaters on an unforgettable journey to find their missing friend, Pip. Travel through space and time, from the tombs of ancient Egypt to the gargoyles of Notre-Dame Cathedral, all the way to the cemeteries of Mexico on el Día de Los Muertos, the Day of the Dead. Is Pip still alive? And if so, can his friends save him from a ghastly fate before it’s too late?

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The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury. I read it every year the days leading up to Halloween.

@roguefiftyone

I love, love, LOVE Ray Bradbury! He is/was perhaps my favorite author of all time. I remember reading The Halloween Tree as a little girl- about 10/11 years old- and I was hooked. His writing style/voice is so melodic. Like poetry, almost. The way he could describe an autumn night or day… the way he could capture the dark magic of Halloween. To call his writing beautiful is an understatement. While I appreciate many of the classic writers, there are few that resonate with me the way Bradbury does. I think I have just about every book/short story he ever wrote.

@Halloweenie85

9. The Night Country : A Novel by Stewart O'Nan

he Night Country - A Novel by Stewart O'Nan

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At Midnight on Halloween in a cloistered New England suburb, a car carrying five teenagers leaves a winding road and slams into a tree, killing three of them. One escapes unharmed, another suffers severe brain damage. A year later, summoned by the memories of those closest to them, the three that died come back on a last chilling mission among the living.

A strange and unsettling ghost story in the tradition of Ray Bradbury and Shirley Jackson, The Night Country creeps through the leaf-strewn streets and quiet cul-de-sacs of one bedroom community, reaching into the desperately connected yet isolated lives of three people changed forever by the accident: Tim, who survived yet lost everything; Brooks, the cop whose guilty secret has destroyed his life; and Kyle’s mom, trying to love the new son the doctors returned to her. As the day wanes and darkness falls, one of them puts a terrible plan into effect, and they find themselves caught in a collision of need and desire, watched over by the knowing ghosts.

Macabre and moving, The Night Country elevates every small town’s bad high school crash into myth, finding the deeper human truth beneath a shared and very American tragedy. As in his highly-prized Snow Angels and A Prayer for the Dying, once again Stewart O’Nan gives us an intimate look at people trying to hold on to hope, and the consequences when they fail.

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What people are saying

More people should read Stewart O’Nan. The Night Country, from the POV of three teenagers who died in a car crash on Halloween, is good for spooky season.

@KatJen76

The Night Country by Stewart O‘Nan. Very different, but rather sad honestly. But an amazing book, really worth a read. Beautiful prose and a wonderful story.

@myrimbaud

10. Halloween Fiend by C.V. Hunt

Halloween Fiend by C.V. Hunt

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Strang isn’t the small, quaint town it appears to be. It’s haunted every night by a creature the townsfolk refer to as Halloween. Once the sun sets each day, Halloween emerges to collect its treats: a small, live offering from each household. The residents comply because no one wants to be the target of Halloween’s tricks. But the nightmare of residing in Strang is nothing compared to the yearly ritual Halloween demands of the citizens on All Hallows’ Eve.

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Halloween Fiend is a fun, Shirley Jackson-style, Halloween version of The Lottery.

@fluorescentpopsicle

Halloween Fiend is spooky and atmospheric. If you want to feel like it’s October, read that one.

@level 1 visitdorkwood