by Emily Temple. Posted Flavorpill - Thursday Sept 20, 2012
King Hamlet, Hamlet, William Shakespeare
Shakespeare wasn’t exactly a horror writer, but he was rather fond of using ghosts, and to our minds, King Hamlet is by far the creepiest, sneaking up on Hamlet with blood trickling from his ear, demanding revenge. Is he a “spirit of health or goblin damned”? Is he a figment of Hamlet’s twisted imagination? We’ll never truly know, but he always makes us shudder.
The Babysitter, et al, “The Specialist’s Hat,” Kelly Link
“When you’re Dead,” Samantha says, “you don’t have to brush your teeth.” “When you’re Dead,” Claire says, “you live in a box, and it’s always dark, but you’re not ever afraid.” In this perfectly disturbing, World Fantasy Award-winning, two identical twins counting the days since their mother’s death play in the attic with their new babysitter who, she tells them, used to live there. Needless to say, ghosts of many kinds abound — none of them popping out from behind corners or rattling chains, but all weaseling into your cold bones. Read it here.
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