As with my other reading lists, this one's not meant to be comprehensive, though if you can think of a book that matches the criteria feel free to leave it in the comments.
Flowers in the Attic – V.C. Andrews
Thief of Always – Clive Barker
Peter Pan – J. M. Barrie
Something Wicked This Way Comes – Ray Bradbury
Child Thief – Brom
Ender's Game – Orson Scott Card
Lost Boys – Orson Scott Card
Neverland – Douglas Clegg
The Gates – John Connolly
Coraline – Neil Gaiman
The Devouring – Simon Holt
The Reach – Nate Kenyon
The Shining – Stephen King (and a lot of other books by King)
Let the Right One In – John Lindqvist
Another Faust – Daniel Nayeri
Wishing Game – Patrick Redmond
Forest of Hands and Teeth – Carrie Ryan
Push – Sapphire
Shadows – John Saul (all John Saul books)
Cirque du Freak – Darren Shan
Unwind – Neal Shusterman
Talisman – Peter Straub & Stephen King
3 comments:
How about the harry potter series!
Also The Turquoise mask by phyllis A Whitney.
Peter pan seems a little tame when compared to the lost boys etc. i guess i never really thot of those pirates as bad, just annoying peter and his friends. Sort of like jeta, on clifford the big dog- she's annoying but not evil.
- karin
I considered putting Harry Potter up but wanted things with a more horror slant. Still, it fits. Never heard of The Turquoise Mask before. I looked it up and it's out of print. Sounds interesting though, and definitely fits the theme. As for Peter Pan, the book's a lot darker than the movies, and it goes with Brom's Child Thief, so I threw it in. I was considering Pinocchio, but I've not read that so I wasn't sure if it fit. I've heard it's pretty dark. Then again, he's not a 'real boy'...
Thanks for reading my blog!
whitney writes/ wrote romantic thrillers. the TM was the one that really scared me! Didn't read more of her stuff for a long time afterwards.
guess i'll hae to reread peter pan again.
-karin
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