In blogs of days past, I’ve talked about ghosts on film,
Christmas ghosts, and various weird tales. A few times, I’ve promised to write
up a blog about my favourite spooky stories, but never really got round to it.
Until now… (Dun… dun… DUUUNNN!)
It’s December. It’s my favourite time of the year, and I’m
reading loads of short horror fiction. I’ve even done a stint at the UK Ghost Story Festival, where the following question was put to various panellists several
times: What are your favourite ghost stories?
(Note: I’m looking primarily at stories about ghosts and malevolent
presences here, not more broadly at horror and weird tales. That’s for another
day…)
I’ve found it really hard to put together a top 5, and to
be honest if you ask me on another day, you might get a different list. But as
of now, here are the stories I would recommend to anyone wanting to scare
themselves silly on a cold winter’s night.
The Woman in Black
Susan Hill
A modern classic, which has been turned into a stage play
and two decent movies (one of which spawned a mediocre sequel), The Woman in
Black is the quintessential ghost story. It’s told in the style of the masters
(notably M R James), and follows many of James’s rules of the ghost story. It’s
a short novella, so it just about qualifies for my list of short fiction, and
it’s brilliant.
More by this
author: Susan Hill has written a series of ghost stories now, some more
successful than others. If you liked this, you’ll also (probably) like The Small Hand, and The Man in the Picture. (Maybe steer clear of Dolly and Printers’ Devil’s
Court though. Even a writer of Hill’s quality can hit a dud.)
Image from the 1966 film adaptation of Whistle and I'll Come to You, directed by Jonathan Miller who sadly passed away this year. |
Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad
M R James
Regular readers will be aware that I love M R James
stories. It’s unhealthy. I re-read a bunch of them every year, re-watch the
excellent BBC Ghost Stories for Christmas, as well as the dramatic readings by
Nunkie Theatre (do check those out if you have chance). His most famous story
is Oh, Whistle, and with good reason.
An all-time classic, cautionary tale, that’s perhaps rather too obvious for a
top 5 list…
More by this
author: There’s very little by James that wouldn’t make recommended
reading, to be honest. I could well have picked The Tractate Middoth, the Stalls
of Barchester Cathedral, Number 13,
or the Treasure of Abbot Thomas in
place of Oh, Whistle. Just grab one
of the many collected editions (except that 150th anniversary edition
I previously reviewed, with its shlonky editing) – you won’t be disappointed.
Walter de la Mare
Walter de la Mare takes some getting into if you aren’t
used to the vernacular, because his prose is poetic and florid (probably
because he was mainly a poet…), and his stories are almost all ambiguous to a
fault. All Hallows is no exception. I’ve
read this story dozens of times, and there’s no ‘true’ reading of it. Are there
any ghosts in it at all? I think so, but it’s hard to tell. What you have here,
then, is a masterpiece of atmosphere and sustained tension. The titular
cathedral certainly leaves an impression, even if the spooks lie low.
More by this
author: Another de la Mare story that doesn’t technically feature a ghost
(but I which the characters are certainly haunted), Seaton’s Aunt is rightly regarded as one of the finest, most
unsettling short stories ever written.
Dark Matter
Michelle Paver
Swiftly becoming regarded as another modern classic, and
without my favourite ghost story of the last decade, this has all the elements
of a really great unsettling story: incredible location, brooding atmosphere,
isolation, tension between a closed circle of protagonists, and a really
terrifying ghost! This tale of arctic exploration gone wrong is novella-length,
but never drags, and includes some real heart-in-mouth scenes rendered vividly.
Highly recommended.
More by this
author: Michelle Paver is also responsible for Thin Air – a ghost story of a similar length, swapping the desolate
Arctic Circle for a mountaineering expedition. For me, it’s a tad too similar
to Dark Matter, and I found myself comparing the two a bit too often. I have no
such qualms abour recommending Michelle’s recent full-length novel, Wakenhyrst, however. A ‘proper’ Gothic
novel, with brooding locales, family secrets and malevolent forces at work – a real
gem.
The Upper Berth
F Marion Crawford
The only thing I like better than polar exploration
settings is seafaring stories. I’m an absolute sucker for them. The Upper Berth is one of the very best
(and even recommended by M R James, which is how I originally came to read it).
Sure, the scares might seem thin on the ground by today’s standards, but the
pacing is fantastic, the setting wonderfully rendered, and the narration about
as evocative as it comes.
More by this
author: F Marion Crawford wrote several great ghost stories, most of which
can be found in the usual anthologies of great Victorian stories. Of these, a
special shout out to Man Overboard!,
which was one of the stories that inspired The Lazarus Gate (in a roundabout sort of way), and The Dead Smile, whose resolution seems ridiculously clichéd today,
but features some incredible lyrical prose.
Honourable Mentions
Just because I can never get my lists down short enough,
here are the stories that almost made the top 5, and probably would on a
different day!
·
The
Signalman, Charles Dickens (what a denouement!)
·
The Inner
Room, Robert Aickmann (none more ambiguous)
·
The Gateway
of the Monster, William Hope Hodgson (one of Carnacki’s best cases)
·
The Haunting
of Hill House, Shirley Jackson (I mean, come on, it’s amazing)
·
Florrie,
Adam Nevill (a genuinely original take on the ghost story).
(Wow, ten writers, and I didn’t even mention D K Broster or Henry James…)
And, naturally, if you find yourself in agreement with my
choices, you might rather like my own novelette, The Ghost Writer, as well as the stories in the anthology Phantoms (including my own modern ghost
story, One New Follower).
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