Half-minute horrors

Book - 2009

An anthology of very short, scary stories by an assortment of authors and illustrators including Chris Raschka, Joyce Carol Oates, Neil Gaiman, Jack Gantos, and Lane Smith.

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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jFICTION/Half Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Horror fiction
Short stories
Published
New York : Harper [2009]
Language
English
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
141 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 10 up.
Awards
A Junior Library Guild selection
ISBN
9780061833793
9780007339846
  • Something you ought to know / Lemony Snicket
  • The chicken or the egg / Jerry Spinelli
  • In hiding / Kenneth Oppel
  • The old man in the picture / Richard Sala
  • The babysitter / Erin Hunter
  • Grand entrance / James Patterson
  • Halloween mask / Sonya Sones
  • Tenton / Tom Genrich & Michele Perry
  • Nanny / Angela Johnson
  • The legend of Alexandra & Rose / Jon Klassen
  • What's coming / Arthur Slade
  • An easy gig / M.T. Anderson
  • Mr. Black / Yvonne Prinz
  • The foot dragger / M.E. Kerr
  • Trick / Adam Rex
  • Hank / Dean Lorey
  • One of a kind / Sarah Weeks
  • A walk too far / Gloria Whelan
  • A very short story / Holly Black
  • Deep six / Faye Kellerman
  • The turn of the screw by Henry James, A novel as told by Lisa Brown in fewer than 30 seconds / Lisa Brown
  • The attack of the flying mustaches / Pseudonymous Bosch
  • Takowanda / Nadia Aguiar
  • Heart stopper / Sienna Mercer
  • Up to my elbow / Jack Gantos
  • Four gleams in the moonlight / Stephen Marche
  • The goblin book / Brad Meltzer
  • Worms / Lane Smith
  • The dare / Carol Gorman
  • The ballad of John Grepsy / David Rich
  • Soup / Jenny Nimmo
  • The creeping hand / Margaret Atwood
  • Wet sand, little teeth / Mariko Tamaki
  • A thousand faces / Brian Selznick
  • Chocolate cake / Francine Prose
  • At the water's edge / Ayelet Waldman
  • My worst nightmare / R.L. Stine
  • The beast outside / Adele Griffin
  • Unannounced / Aliza Kellerman
  • Kruger's Sausage Haus / Mark Crilley
  • There's something under the bed / Allan Stratton
  • Cat's paw / Sarah L. Thomson
  • Horrorku / Katherine Applegate
  • The itch / Avi
  • The new me: a pantoum / Gail Carson Levine
  • Always eleven / David Stahler Jr
  • Aloft / Carson Ellis
  • Skittering / Tui T. Sutherland
  • Stuck in the middle / Abi Slone
  • All finger and thumbs / Joseph Delaney
  • Don't wet the bed / Alan Grats
  • The final word / Josh Greenhut
  • The shadow / Neil Gaiman
  • A day at the lake / Lesley Livingston
  • Whispered / Jon Scieszka
  • A disturbing limerick / Vladimir Radunsky
  • Through the veil / Alison McGhee
  • The rash / Daniel Ehrenhaft
  • Where nightmares walk / Melissa Marr
  • On a Tuesday during that time of year / Chris Raschka
  • Death rides a pink bicycle / Stacey Godenir
  • I'm not afraid / Dan Gutman
  • The doll / Alice Kuipers
  • Easy over / Frank Viva
  • Them / Libba Bray
  • Tiger kitty / Joyce Carol Oates
  • Inventory / Jonathan Lethem
  • Shortcut / Michael Connelly
  • Strawberry bubbles / Lauren Myracle
  • We think you do / Barry Yourgrau
  • The prisoner of Eternia / Aaron Renier
  • In conclusion / Gregory Maguire.
Review by Booklist Review

A volume full of mostly one- or two-page horror stories from over 70 authors it may sound like a gimmick, but it plays like the worst night of sleep you've ever had. Horror is the genre most suited for this stab-and-run format, and the authors seem to revel in the campfire-story quickness. At least four monster-in-my-bedroom tales exploit fears that will cut all too close to the target audience, and several babysitting-gone-wrong stories should not repeat: not be read while babysitting. The best are true examplars of narrative economy: Sarah Weeks' One of a Kind has the gut punch of a good urban legend; Daniel Ehrenhaft's The Rash is as gruesome as it sounds; and Chris Raschka's On a Tuesday during That Time of Year has no apparent point but to upset the reader well done! Heavyweights Lemony Snicket, Neil Gaiman, M. T. Anderson, and more weigh in, but it's Arthur Slade's one-paragraph cautionary tale What's Coming that will haunt the most nightmares. The scattered art-based stories hit a few awkward notes, but this one's a creepy keeper.--Kraus, Daniel Copyright 2009 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Featuring a who's who of authors and artists (Margaret Atwood, Avi, Neil Gaiman, Jonathan Lethem, Lauren Myracle, James Patterson, Brian Selznick and many more), this collection of more than 70 chilling snippets is ideal for campfires and car trips. The stories-some a couple sentences, some a few pages-range from darkly humorous (Jerry Spinelli's murderous twist on the age-old "chicken or egg" question) to outright creepy (Josh Greenhut and Brett Helquist's illustrated story about terrifying revelations from a Ouija board). These are inherently quick reads, but with enough plot and detail to encourage further imagining. Ages 10-up. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-8-This thrilling addition to the shiver-inducing arsenal will appeal to even the most reluctant of readers. The book contains dozens of short (most are one to three pages long) tales that range from silly (Adam Rex's one-page graphic comic) to grotesque (M. T. Anderson's "An Easy Gig") to morbid (Faye Kellerman's "Deep Six"). Unlike many short-story collections, this anthology forms a cohesive unit based on its purpose-scaring children silly. It possesses that delicious campfire quality of urban legends and lame jokes told late at night when everyone wants to be entertained. Youngsters may choose to read it straight through or to browse the stories, folktales, poems, and illustrations that make up this eclectic yet unified volume. Chock-full of selections by notable contributors such as Lane Smith, Neil Gaiman, Kenneth Oppel, Jack Gantos, James Patterson, and R. L. Stine, Half-Minute Horrors is the perfect choice for that smirking child who disdains fiction starring happy puppies or home-run heroes.-Caitlin Augusta, Stratford Library Association, CT (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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

It's a party game: write a scary story that will take less than thirty seconds to read. With a party of seventy-five that includes such guests as Neil Gaiman, Sonya Sones, Jon Scieszka, and Margaret Atwood, the results are bound to be pretty good. This is not the stuff of cozy campfires but a collection of micro-narratives that are eerie, grotesque, gnomic (Joyce Carol Oates is particularly inscrutable), or darkly funny. Participants worked in prose, strip cartoon, single drawing, illustrated story, and a variety of verse forms from pantoum to "horrorku." A subject index reminds us of the trappings of horror -- basements; beasts; blood; and beds, under and around. The most cleverly constructed stories manage to delay their effects until a few seconds after you've finished reading. Jon Klassen's "The Legend of Alexandra Rose," a one-page drawing with labels, has this delicious aftershock effect. What any reader finds truly scary is a kind of Rorschach test, but do not read M. T. Anderson's babysitter story if you ever intend to eat lasagna again. From HORN BOOK, (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.