Scary stories 3 More tales to chill your bones

Alvin Schwartz, 1927-

Book - 1991

More traditional and modern-day stories of ghosts, haunts, superstitions, monsters, and horrible scary things.

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j398.25/Schwartz
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Subjects
Published
New York, N.Y. : HarperCollins c1991.
Language
English
Main Author
Alvin Schwartz, 1927- (-)
Other Authors
Stephen Gammell (illustrator)
Physical Description
115 p. : ill
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780833582140
9780060217952
9781442005808
  • Boo men
  • When death arrives : The appointment
  • The bus stop
  • Faster and faster
  • Just delicious
  • hello, Kate!
  • The black dog
  • Footsteps
  • Like cats' eyes
  • On the edge : Bess
  • Harold
  • The dead hand
  • Such things happen
  • Running wild : The wold girl
  • Five nightmares : The dream
  • Sam's new pet
  • Maybe you will remember
  • The red spot
  • No, thanks
  • What is going on here? : The trouble
  • Whoooooooo? : Strangers
  • The hog
  • Is something wrong
  • It's him
  • T-H-U-P-P-P-P-P-P-P!
  • You may be the next.
Review by Horn Book Review

Some of these short tales are spooky enough or grisly enough to chill the bones; others are silly and are sure to elicit a chuckle or a groan. Powerful dreams and odd visitations of death abound, eerily depicted in Gammell's grotesque sketches. Notes on each story identify sources and variants. Bib. From HORN BOOK 1991, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A poltergeist that specializes in unscrewing bottle-caps...a couple who bring home a strange-looking little dog from Mexico, only to be told that it's a sewer rat...suddenly vanishing friends, relatives, and animals...a Texas girl raised by wolves- -yes, it's a new collection of horribilia: chillers, ghost stories, and urban legends, retold in an appropriately matter-of- fact way and illustrated by a master of the macabre. Schwartz gives most of the tales a modern setting, provides hints for storytellers, discusses variants, and--as in two previous collections--appends careful source notes and a good-sized bibliography. Gammell supplies a characteristic array of leering faces, slimy bones, and scrofulous, unidentifiable creatures. Perfect for reading alone or aloud in a dimly lit room. You first. (Folklore. 10-14)

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