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Shirley Jackson’s novels are eerie literary fiction. She left the best for the last
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| 10/29/2017
| Nicholas Rixon
Posted on 11/10/2017 7:23:03 PM PST by simpson96
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To: Tax-chick
:) ... Shaken AND stirred!
To: JennysCool
Ive always liked the one about a nosy neighbor who lives next to a coven of witches. Think its called Strangers in Town or something like that.
22
posted on
11/10/2017 8:27:31 PM PST
by
sam_whiskey
(Peace through Strength.)
To: Tax-chick
Concise, atmospheric, just enough but never too much horror. I'm sure that a movie would be just awful.I have often described "We Have Always Lived..." as unfilmable. What makes it so frightening is not the plot, but the first-person narration-- reading the book like being in telepathic contact with a lunatic.
I have not read "The Haunting of Hill House."
Then buy it or download it now. If you like Jackson at all, you need to read "Haunting." The first paragraph will haunt your sleep.
To: simpson96
Literary fiction, the two most depressing words in the English language...Interesting. That's the only genre I've ever read.
Had no idea that simpletons thought it depressing.
24
posted on
11/10/2017 8:34:25 PM PST
by
Flycatcher
(God speaks to us, through the supernal lightness of birds, in a special type of poetry.)
To: sam_whiskey
To: simpson96
That movie is part of my annual Halloween Line-up.
26
posted on
11/10/2017 8:57:44 PM PST
by
Army Air Corps
(Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
The Haunting of Hill House is also a classic - they made it into a movie and it was...BLECH! It sure scared the living you-know-what out of me, when I watched it late at night on a black-and-white TV back when I was in high school.
Scariest movie I ever saw. Spielberg's Something Evil was number two.
27
posted on
11/10/2017 9:10:07 PM PST
by
Steely Tom
([Seth Rich] == [the Democrat's John Dean])
To: simpson96
‘The Lottery’ was in my HS literature book way back when. Very unexpected for 11th grade reading.
28
posted on
11/10/2017 9:33:31 PM PST
by
Will88
To: Tax-chick
I watched the Haunting of Hill House as a child when it first came on tv. We had a black and white tv at the time too. So scary. I think I watch it at least once a year. Several years ago, the local Playhouse did a live Halloween show with it. The place was packed, and everyone in the audience new all the lines! It was a fun experience!
We always lived in a castle? I can’t believe I never heard of it! Yahoo! Getting it on Amazon maybe tonight!
29
posted on
11/10/2017 9:48:11 PM PST
by
Dogbert41
(Jerusalem is the city of The Great King!)
To: Will88
We read The Lottery in, I think, tenth grade. Im not a fan of being scared (too high strung all the time) and that story left me unsettled for days.
To: simpson96
31
posted on
11/10/2017 9:56:29 PM PST
by
EliRoom8
To: simpson96
Read it. There is no better ghost story.
I read Russ Tamblyn did not really want to do it. I guess he felt he was more for lighter fare. Turned out to be his favorite movie he did.
32
posted on
11/10/2017 10:38:53 PM PST
by
Beowulf9
To: Beowulf9
I read that too. He was very good in it.
To: simpson96
No live organism can continue for long to exist sanely under conditions of absolute reality; even larks and katydids are supposed, by some, to dream. Hill House, not sane, stood by itself against its hills, holding darkness within; it had stood so for eighty years and might stand for eighty more. Within, walls continued upright, bricks met neatly, floors were firm, and doors were sensibly shut; silence lay steadily against the wood and stone of Hill House, and whatever walked there, walked alone. -- the first paragraph of
The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson (1959)

34
posted on
11/10/2017 11:59:20 PM PST
by
henbane
To: sam_whiskey
Ive always liked the one about a nosy neighbor who lives next to a coven of witches. Think its called Strangers in Town or something like that.I think you're being unkind to Mrs. Cravitz. She usually "stumbled" into Samantha's antics - not like she was "out" to unmask them.
Regards,
35
posted on
11/11/2017 12:59:32 AM PST
by
alexander_busek
(Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
To: simpson96
That movie always freaks me out.
36
posted on
11/11/2017 1:33:48 AM PST
by
Jimmy Valentine
(DemocRATS - when they speak, they lie; when they are silent, they are stealing the American Dream)
To: simpson96
37
posted on
11/11/2017 1:49:11 AM PST
by
bonfire
To: henbane
Is this a different book and film than “House on Haunted Hill” which was always considered one of the scariest films when I was young.
38
posted on
11/11/2017 4:04:50 AM PST
by
Williams
(Stop tolerating the intolerant.)
To: Williams
Completely different. “House On Haunted Hill” is delightful, over-the-top camp (well, watching it as an adult, anyway). “The Haunting” scared the crap out of me when I was little, curled up around a black and white TV in the basement in the middle of the night - and still unsettles me as an adult, even though I know every word of it. :-)
39
posted on
11/11/2017 4:22:24 AM PST
by
Pravious
To: windcliff
40
posted on
11/11/2017 4:56:09 AM PST
by
stylecouncilor
("The future ain't what it used to be." Yogi Berra)
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