People Shared The Most Terrifying Books They've Ever Read, And Just The Summaries Are Enough To Give Me Goosebumps
Whether it's a skin-crawling selection from the bibliography of a master of horror like Stephen King, or a nonfiction account of just how bad things are (and how much worse they can get), a good book has the power to leave you haunted long after you turn the last page.
Nickelodeon / Via giphy.com
So there were plenty of frightening suggestions when u/ledepression asked the fine folks of r/books, "What is the most terrifying book (fiction or nonfiction) you have ever read?" Here are 29 literary works that range from "pretty spooky" to "I still haven't stopped hyperventilating."
Submissions have been edited for length and clarity.
1."Johnny Got His Gun by Dalton Trumbo was so disturbing I couldn't finish it. The premise is that a young soldier wakes up to discover he has lost his sight, hearing, power of speech, and all four of his limbs in a landmine explosion. He is completely alone with his thoughts, unable to interact with the world around him, and yet Trumbo weaves such an intense and claustrophobic narrative around it. What's really dreadful is that it was based off a real case during World War I."
"Johnny Got His Gun is the book I opened this thread to find. Absolutely horrifying in such an insidious way. If you didn’t finish it, I won’t spoil the ending, but it gets worse."
2."Lots of people list The Mist by Stephen King, but his The Long Walk (written as Richard Bachman) is obscenely brutal. It's a Hunger Games-like marathon walk. But less world-building and more deep dives into the psyches of the contestants. Fantastic book."
"I think The Long Walk is Stephen King's best story. It's amazing how quickly and deeply you care about the characters. And such a great concept."
3."Kindred by Octavia E. Butler. I have tried multiple times to read it, and I keep having to put it down. It is ruthless and holds no punches. It is about a Black woman who keeps getting warped back to US slave era, randomly and without any control over when or how it happens."
4."Okay, I've read all 240 answers, and I can't believe no one has said Jaws. I read that book when it first came out (so a long time ago), and I still think about it anytime I'm near the ocean."
5."The Hot Zone. I've seen since reading it that the author exaggerated some Ebola details, but still..."
"This. I read it in Spring 2020, and while the book focuses primarily on Ebola, it also covered what viral traits to expect of the next big global pandemic and how horrifically unprepared we were for it, and it was eerily accurate."
6."I read Hiroshima in high school, and I still often think about it 20 years later."
"There’s a few scenes from that book that, unfortunately, live rent free in my head."
7."House of Leaves. I wouldn't even call it a horror story personally. But it's the only book I've ever read that instilled feelings of not just fear, but genuine dread that persisted long after putting it down."
"The idea that you aren't truly safe and that you can never be absolutely sure what's directly behind you at any moment. You think there's nothing there, but what if there is? What if there's some horrible creature stalking toward you, just outside your field of vision, ready to pounce at any moment? What if it's waiting for the moment you get the courage to turn your head and look?"
8."Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, written or collected and rewritten by Alvin Schwartz, with illustrations by Stephen Gammell. Found it in my elementary school library and had nightmares for a while afterwards. Still wouldn't want to re-read it as an adult. The illustrations are haunting and terrifying and no doubt a big part of what disturbed me so much reading it as a kid."
9."I remember the growing dread as I read Pet Sematary for the first (and only) time. I was literally begging a character not to do what I knew he was about to."
"I don’t know if I’d describe Pet Semetary as the most terrifying book I’ve read (though it’s definitely a terrifying book), but there is no question it is the most upsetting thing I’ve ever read. The way you get inside the dad’s head and it just feels like you’re living his grief makes me feel physically ill. Dread is 100% the way to describe it."
10."On the Beach by Nevil Shute. It’s about a group of people in Australia waiting for a radiation cloud to come and kill them; the government has issued suicide pills."
"This was my first thought, too. It’s also beautifully written and illustrates the way so many different types of people handle the end of the world. It’s terrifying in its banality."
11."Swan Song. The depiction of nuclear war and the survivors scraping by and killing each other over what is left during seven years of nuclear winter put me genuinely on edge. And with everything happening now, it hits a little harder."
12."The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin, if you like science fiction. It paints a chillingly dark and frighteningly probable future for humanity and the prospect of alien life."
13."I always find nonfiction books to be the scariest because humans have done some truly horrifying things throughout history. Night by Elie Wiesel disturbed me so much when I read it at 14 that I couldn't stop thinking about it for months afterward, and it pretty much shattered my childhood innocence."
"I read it at 14, too. I’m 31, and I still have graphic memories of reading that book. It’s necessary literature, and I am glad I read it. But I really wish it didn’t have to exist."
14."The Ocean at the End of the Lane. Not particularly scary, but it reaches down inside you and pulls that chord labeled 'feeling of powerlessness that was the worst part of childhood' and yanks it hard. If you were ever the kid who tried to convince the adults that something was wrong and they did not listen, this book may not be a good choice."
15."This is a left-field one but The Great Post Office Scandal. It’s so relatable and scary to think that perfectly honest and diligent people could be thrown in jail by the hundreds because a few bureaucratic fuckwits couldn’t admit their computer system wasn’t perfect."
16."The Devil All the Time by Donald Ray Pollock. There’s an ever-present evil lurking in rural Appalachia, cloaked in religion and superstition and sickening lust."
"It was hard to read, almost made me feel unclean. Every character in that book was twisted; a new character would be introduced, and I'd think, 'How is this person going to be horrible?' I finished it and sold the book pretty quickly afterward."