ESSENTIAL FALL READING REC POST

sashayed:

sashayed:

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IT’S THAT TIME AGAIN: Hadestown is on my speakers, my fav pumpkin beer is in my paw, my fav pumpkin bread is fragrant and warm from the oven, and the only thing that matters is the urge to curl up in a cozy burrow, light a bunch of candles and SPOOK MY OWN SELF OUT. Here are some of the books that, for me, have that chilly magical dreaminess about them: perennial fall re-reads that I would recommend to anyone.

  • The Haunting of Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley Jackson
    When it comes to the fall spooks I have no interest in gore, but i L O V E creeping, overwhelming, suffocating dread. SHIRLEY is the hands-down world-beater when it comes to that sweet spine-tingling action. Her women are dreamy, imaginative, isolated, terrifying. I love the audiobooks, too: Bernadette Dunne has an eerie, shivery voice that’s as perfect for tight-wound Eleanor and the inexorable omniscient narrator of Hill House as it is for spooky, sharp-toothed Merricat

  • The Secret History, Donna Tartt.
    Have I talked about this book enough yet? Have you figured out that I love it? You probably have, but just to confirm, i do. I really, really love this book. You know the whole “mystery” from about page 2, but the horror of it ebbs and flows, nightmarish and captivating. There are so many moments of loveliness and so many moments that are chilling and the whole thing feels suspended, like a spiderweb or a dream. It’s not as generous as The Goldfinch and a lot of people find Richard irksome, but who cares. I hope we’re all ready to leave the phenomenal world, and enter into the sublime?

  • Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, Susanna Clarke.
    This book is so expansive, so vivid, so – well, magical – that it transcends the usual prerequisites of an autumn read (viz., Be Creepy). Not that it doesn’t have its creep factor moments – Childermass turning Vinculus’s cards, Stephen in Lost-Hope, Lascelles at the castle of the plucked eye and heart – but they are scary mostly because you are wound so breathlessly in the spell of Clarke’s world. This book is like 900 pages long and I’ve read it, estimating without exaggeration, probably 6 times all the way through and way more than that in snippets. I LOVE THIS BOOK.

  • The Turn of the Screw, Henry James.
    The Turn of the Screw is a classic for a reason. It will take you about an afternoon to get through, and it doesn’t matter where you are during that afternoon – an office, an airport, a cozy room, a crowded metro car – there will be a moment that catches you, a trickle of ice water down the spine that you’ll remember just when you’re trying to go to sleep. In the best way.

What about you guys? What do you read when it starts to get cold? Have you read Le Fanu or Wilkie Collins? I keep meaning to but I always just read these instead.

There’s a nip in the air and a sweater wrapped around my shoulders and I am SO PSYCHED to bring this post back. Here are some more Fall Reads, fiction and non-, for the coziest of creeps.

  • Deathless, Cathrynne M. Valente
  • Fingersmith, Sarah Waters
  • The Talented Mr. Ripley, Patricia Highsmith
  • White Is For Witching, Helen Oyeyemi
  • Eileen, Otessa Moshfegh
  • Smoke Gets In Your Eyes and Other Lessons From the Crematory, Caitlin Doughty
  • Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë
  • Frankenstein, Mary Shelley
  • The Thirteenth Tale, Diane Setterfield
  • Great Expectations, Charles Dickens
  • Sabriel, Garth Nix
  • And Then There Were None, Agatha Christie
  • Magic for Beginners, Kelly Link
  • The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, Joan Aiken
  • Dare Me, Megan Abbott
  • Artists In Crime, Ngaio Marsh
  • The Raven Boys, Maggie Stiefvater
  • The Graveyard Book, Neil Gaiman
  • Dark Entries, Robert Aickman
  • Gaudy Night, Dorothy Sayers
  • The Prestige, Christopher Priest
  • Rebecca, Daphne DuMaurier
  • Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë
  • The Diviners, Libba Bray
  • Ghost Stories of an Antiquary, M.R. James
  • In Cold Blood, Truman Capote
  • Shadow in the North, Phillip Pullman
  • Sharp Objects, Gillian Flynn
  • Dracula, Bram Stoker
  • Rivers of London, Ben Aaronovitch
  • Ghosts I Have Been, Richard Peck
  • Enduring Love, Ian McEwan
  • I’ll Be Gone in the Dark, Michelle McNamara
  • In The Woods, Tana French
  • A Morbid Taste for Bones, Ellis Peters
  • Her Body and Other Parties, Carmen Maria Machado

Got more? Tell me your favorites! Feed my insatiable hunger for creepiness!!!

Remember when JSTOR had an advice column?

jstor:

We did! On Tumblr no less. It was unceremoniously abandoned due to a lack of interest from certain people who shall not be named (Voldemort) but I WANT TO RESURRECT IT. 

Here’s how it works: send us your questions! We’ll research the answers and provide advice based on scholarship of the same. Be forewarned that not all topics have viable research on them, but we’ll do our best! Send us a message and start it “Dear JSTOR.”