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Classic Halloween books


Earthmerlin
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Hi there. We love Halloween around here & are finishing up a novel so I thought our next read aloud could be a classic novel that'll tie in with Halloween. I have a 7 year old & at this time of the year we typically read lots of Halloween picture books, The Raven, & listen to (Rabbit Ears') The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. I was thinking either Frankenstein or Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde but am not sure if they'll be too spooky for her. She does fine with certain 'scary' titles but flipped out over Bunnicula, for example. Any suggestions?

Edited by Earthmerlin
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Not exactly Halloween, but the Graveyard Book is well done.  It's not a classic, though, nor would be my other pick - The Witches.

 

ETA: thought of another.  The Canterville Ghost, by Oscar Wilde.  It's not overly scary, there's at least 3 versions of it as movies if you want to skim through it quickly, and it's easy for a child to understand.

 

 

Edited by HomeAgain
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Not exactly Halloween, but the Graveyard Book is well done. It's not a classic, though, nor would be my other pick - The Witches.

 

ETA: thought of another. The Canterville Ghost, by Oscar Wilde. It's not overly scary, there's at least 3 versions of it as movies if you want to skim through it quickly, and it's easy for a child to understand.

Funny you should mention Dahl's 'The Witches' b/c we've already gone through that (audio) book this season. I personally don't care for it & emphatically said 'Enough!!!' after the 20th time we'd heard it. Thanks for this suggestion & I'll into your others.

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Well, the over-the-top romanticism, and older language and complex sentence structure make reading the original Frankenstein to elementary ages a "no go" in my mind. Pages and pages and pages of flowery discourse by Victor Frankenstein... then the monster... then back to the monster... then back to Frankenstein... Dr. J & Mr. H. is not so extreme, but the Victorian vocabulary and complex sentence structure makes it a bit stiff going for reading aloud or solo for the average reader under age 12 or so... JMO!

 

If you do either Frankenstein or Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, I'd recommend a children's adaptation just so you don't get bogged down in the language. ;)

 

I really like these classic spooky tale collections:

Alfred Hitchcock's Haunted Houseful
Alfred Hitchcock's Ghostly Gallery
Alfred Hitchcock's Supernatural Tales

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark -- and sequel volumes

 
How about these older short story classics?
"The Monkey's Paw" (Jacobs)
"The Bottle Imp" (Stevenson)
"The Signal Man" (Dickens)
"Legend of Sleep Hollow" (Irving)
- Hound of the Baskervilles (Doyle) -- Sherlock Holmes novella
Edited by Lori D.
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Frankenstein I wouldn't recommend for7 year old. It is less scary and more intense than other stories you mentioned - there are several murders, but they are not creepy-scary they are angry-hateful.

 

Jekyll and Hyde is somewhat better, because the mystery of identity is center-stage, though it does consider deeply the good and bad of human nature.

 

Neither are really kid books, though I admit one of my kids was 7 when we read Jekyll. She's enjoyed it, but she's always been a macabre one.

 

In another forum I am on someone asked I similar question and I recommended classical scary music - Night on Bald Mountain, Witches Sabbath, Dance Macabre, Funeral March for a Marionette, and Die Erlkönig. You might also consider classical art with a spooky twist.

 

ETA I love both Frankenstein and Jekyll. My comments were about age-appropriateness.

Edited by Targhee
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Well, the over-the-top romanticism, and older language and complex sentence structure make reading the original Frankenstein to elementary ages a "no go" in my mind. Pages and pages and pages of flowery discourse by Victor Frankenstein... then the monster... then back to the monster... then back to Frankenstein... Dr. J & Mr. H. is not so extreme, but the Victorian vocabulary and complex sentence structure makes it a bit stiff going for reading aloud or solo for the average reader under age 12 or so... JMO!

 

If you do either Frankenstein or Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, I'd recommend a children's adaptation just so you don't get bogged down in the language. ;)

 

I really like these classic spooky tale collections:

Alfred Hitchcock's Haunted Houseful

Alfred Hitchcock's Ghostly Gallery

Alfred Hitchcock's Supernatural Tales

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark -- and sequel volumes

13 Scary Ghost Stories

Favorite Scary Stories of American Children

Tales of Mystery, Suspense and Supernatural

How about these older short story classics?

- "The Monkey's Paw" (Jacobs)

- "The Bottle Imp" (Stevenson)

- "The Signal Man" (Dickens)

- "Legend of Sleep Hollow" (Irving)

- Hound of the Baskervilles (Doyle) -- Sherlock Holmes novella

OMG! Why didn't I think of Hitchcock? Brilliant!

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OMG! Why didn't I think of Hitchcock? Brilliant!

Also, you're right in your recommendation of children's adaptations, should we decide to go that route. At this age, I'm happy with her being familiar with the story overall--she can pick up the originals later down the road.

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Frankenstein I wouldn't recommend for7 year old. It is less scary and more intense than other stories you mentioned - there are several murders, but they are not creepy-scary they are angry-hateful.

 

Jekyll and Hyde is somewhat better, because the mystery of identity is center-stage, though it does consider deeply the good and bad of human nature.

 

Neither are really kid books, though I admit one of my kids was 7 when we read Jekyll. She's enjoyed it, but she's always been a macabre one.

 

In another forum I am on someone asked I similar question and I recommended classical scary music - Night on Bald Mountain, Witches Sabbath, Dance Macabre, Funeral March for a Marionette, and Die Erlkönig. You might also consider classical art with a spooky twist.

 

ETA I love both Frankenstein and Jekyll. My comments were about age-appropriateness.

Yes, thanks for this synopsis. It's been ages since I've read either & I've not looked at them through a parental lens, for sure. I'll consider your alternate suggestions. I especially like the reminder of Halloween-ish music! Besides The Scream (which is all that immediately comes to mind), what are you thinking in terms of art?

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...Besides The Scream (which is all that immediately comes to mind), what are you thinking in terms of art?

 

Here are a few classic works of art that might fit into a Halloween theme:

1494 = Death and the Miser -- Hieronymus Bosch

1533 = The Ambassadors -- Holbein the Younger -- with an anamorphic skull

1781 = The Nightmare -- Henry Fuseli

1885 = Skull of a Skeleton with a Burning Cigarette -- Vincent Van Gogh

1892 = All is Vanity -- Charles Allan Gilbert

1940 = The Face of War -- Salvadore Dali

1940 = Picture of Dorian Gray -- Ivan Albright

 

 

If your child is up for it, you might enjoy watching a few OLD classic horror movies or "creature features":

1931 = Frankenstein

1931 = Dracula

1932 = The Mummy

1933 = The Invisible Man

1941 = The Wolf Man

1954 = Creature From the Black Lagoon

Edited by Lori D.
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I really like these classic spooky tale collections:

Alfred Hitchcock's Haunted Houseful

Alfred Hitchcock's Ghostly Gallery

Alfred Hitchcock's Supernatural Tales

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark -- and sequel volumes

 

 

 

I adored the Alfred Hitchcock collections when I was about 12. You should pre-read the stories before reading them to a seven year old. I remember one that was about a parent chopping up his 5 or 6 year old daughter. Probably not a good choice for before bedtime.

Edited by knitgrl
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I adored the Alfred Hitchcock collections when I was about 12. You should pre-read the stories before reading them to a seven year old. I remember one that was about a parent chopping up his 5 or 6 year old daughter. Probably not a good choice for before bedtime.

 

:ohmy:  :eek:  Thanks for that reminder!! I don't remember my Alfred Hitchcock collection having any gruesome tales like that, but I certainly could be blanking that out. It's always wise to preview!

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The Witch Family by Eleanor Estes isn't a quite a classic, but the author is a Newbery winner (for Ginger Pye), so you can be sure she's a quality writer. My girls love this book and we try to read it every other Halloween or so. It would be perfect for a 7-year-old. 

 

Great recommendation!

 

That reminds me of Glenda (Udry), and the Araminta Spookie series (Sage) -- witches, but fun rather than spooky.

 

A couple of other out-of-print but worth looking for books are from the fairytale/folktale series by Ruth Manning Sanders and illustrated by Robin Jacques. Each book has 12-15 tales, all based around the title creature. The Halloween-y titles include:

A Book of Witches

A Book of Ghosts and Goblins

A Book of Demons and Devils

A Book of Spooks and Spectres

A Book of Monsters

 

A few more ideas, esp. good for a 7yo:

Why Am I Grown So Cold  (Livingston) -- collection of atmospheric poems

Grimm's Fairy Tales -- the grim versions! ;)

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  • 11 months later...

Not exactly Halloween, but the Graveyard Book is well done. It's not a classic, though, nor would be my other pick - The Witches.

 

ETA: thought of another. The Canterville Ghost, by Oscar Wilde. It's not overly scary, there's at least 3 versions of it as movies if you want to skim through it quickly, and it's easy for a child to understand.

I am going to look into this this year. She later confessed 'Headless Horseman' was too intense but yet had no issue with (a retelling of) Dracula. Interesting....

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It isn't Halloween per se but in light of all the other great recs above, another we liked was The Pied Piper of Hamelin. We found a lovely illustrated version in verse. My kids found it creepy :)

 

The Halloween Tree by Bradbury was already mentioned but he also did Something Wicked this Way Come which may be too old for small kids but good for a teen later.

 

Another not really Halloween book but another one about a traveling salesmen who sells wishes that go wrong is "The Wish Giver"

 

We LOVE Halloween in our house too and have gotten creative trying to find unique, creepy but not too creepy books for our crew.

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I picked up the Word Cloud Classics volume Classic Horror Tales from Costco last week. I had no idea Edith Wharton wrote horror/suspense short stories! And there are a couple of non-Sherlock Conan-Doyle tales, several of Poe, HP Love raft, RS Stevenson's The Body-Snatcher, a Franz Kafka (In the Penal Colony), Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown, Stoker's side story "Dracula's Guest," and many others. We have been enjoying it at our house.

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The Little Broomstick is a very cute chapter book that a 7 year old girl would love

 

ETA - ok, I just looked and it’s very expensive! The copy I have is going for $80 on eBay. But if you can borrow it or find it at the library, it’s a great classic chapter book about a little witch.

Edited by mytwomonkeys
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  • 2 weeks later...

Not exactly Halloween, but the Graveyard Book is well done. It's not a classic, though, nor would be my other pick - The Witches.

 

ETA: thought of another. The Canterville Ghost, by Oscar Wilde. It's not overly scary, there's at least 3 versions of it as movies if you want to skim through it quickly, and it's easy for a child to understand.

I just got a CD of The Canterville Ghost (& other spooky stories) by Jim Weiss & I totally love it! How have I missed this all these years? Good stuff! Thanks!

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