About this book

According to the American College Dictionary, terror "implies an intense fear which is somewhat prolonged and may refer to imagined or future dangers." When Alfred Hitchcock chooses stories to arouse terror, he is meticulously faithful to this definition.Does a haunted house frighten you? A contest between a man and a rat? Possession? Witchcraft? Does your blood chill when you think of someone being deliberately driven mad? How about a man who becomes half man, half fly? How about a tree that screams when you cut it down? Or a room that shrieks when no one is in it?Alfred Hitchcock has chosen twenty-one stories, two novelettes, and a complete novel guaranteed to terrify most normal people and even some abnormal ones. As everyone knows, he is a specialist in the macabre and bizarre. Askes to explain his approach to fictional crime, he wrote:"The blunt instrument, the gang murder, the paid assassin have always seemed to me positively indelicate. Murder is a fine art and needs the embellishment of a sophisticated imagination. The true aficionado prefers to have his nerves ruffled by the implied thread--the Borgias rather than the Syndicate. What is more delightful than a domestic crime, when it is executed with subtlety and imagination? I leave to other more pedestrian talents materials based on newspaper accounts. True crimes, ugh! Alas, most of them are dull and give no evidence of the careful planning and loving thought that should go into any human activity as rewarding as murder."

Where to buy

No purchase options available at this time.

More by Ray Bradbury

100 Hair-Raising Little Horror Stories

100 Hair-Raising Little Horror Stories

David Drake, Fritz Leiber, Steve Rasnic Tem, Barry N. Malzberg, Joe R. Lansdale, Charles Dickens, Chet Williamson, Jack Dann, Phyllis Eisenstein, Edgar Allan Poe, Avram Davidson, Nancy Holder, Dennis Etchison, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Saki, Mark Twain, H.P. Lovecraft, Washington Irving, Rudyard Kipling, Al Sarrantonio, Edward D. Hoch, Robert Sheckley, Jerome K. Jerome, Ramsey Campbell, William F. Nolan, Ambrose Bierce, William Hope Hodgson, Norman Partridge, Ed Gorman, Bill Pronzini, Richard Laymon, Richard Chizmar, James E. Gunn, Bernard Capes, Robert Barr, Donald A. Wollheim, E.F. Benson, Henry Slesar, E.G. Swain, Thomas F. Monteleone, Mort Castle, Eric Frank Russell, Juleen Brantingham, Gary Raisor, Barry Pain, Melissa Mia Hall, Frances Garfield, Ruth Berman, Frank A. Javor, James M. Schmitz, Robert Fox

20 Masterpieces of Fantasy Fiction Vol. 1: Peter Pan, Alice in Wonderland, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Tarzan of the Apes......

20 Masterpieces of Fantasy Fiction Vol. 1: Peter Pan, Alice in Wonderland, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Tarzan of the Apes......

Lewis Carroll, Kenneth Grahame, L. Frank Baum, G.K. Chesterton, George MacDonald, William Morris, E. Nesbit, William Hope Hodgson, J.M. Barrie, David Lindsay, Ernest Bramah, Charles Kingsley, Charles John Cutcliffe Wright Hyne, Athenaeum Classics

50 Masterpieces of Occult & Supernatural Fiction Vol. 1

50 Masterpieces of Occult & Supernatural Fiction Vol. 1

Robert Louis Stevenson, Charles Dickens, Franz Kafka, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman, H.P. Lovecraft, Arthur Conan Doyle, Lord Dunsany, Ambrose Bierce, Henry James, William Hope Hodgson, Wilbur Daniel Steele, W.W. Jacobs, Amelia B. Edwards, J. Sheridan Le Fanu, M.R. James, Arthur Machen, Algernon Blackwood, Robert W. Chambers, Cynthia Asquith, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Irvin S. Cobb, Margaret Ronan, Ulric Daubeny

Alfred Hitchcock Presents: 12 Stories They Wouldn't Let Me Do on TV

Alfred Hitchcock Presents: 12 Stories They Wouldn't Let Me Do on TV

Margaret St. Clair, Saki, Jerome K. Jerome, William Hope Hodgson, William Sansom, M.R. James, Robert Arthur, Philip MacDonald, John Russell, Edward Lucas White, Q. Patrick, Arthur Williams, Robert S. Hchens