A welcoming and well-written introduction to many styles of horror. The genre-flipping and varied narrative voices prevent any sense of monotony. On the Day I Died: Stories from the Grave by Candace Fleming 3.3 (4) eBook 9.99 eBook 9.99 Audiobook 0.00 View All Available Formats & Editions Instant Purchase Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps. (Sneaky!) They also span horror subgenres that include campy ’50s science fiction, gothic (“Lily,” starring a lovelorn high school student in 1999, is a faithful homage to “The Monkey’s Paw”), and wry Hitchcockian suspense Fleming brings plenty of humor, too. Fleming has been rightly praised for her children’s nonfiction (Amelia Lost The Great and Only Barnum), and underneath this group of chill-inducing tales lays a wealth of detail about Chicago’s historical immigrant communities, criminal underbelly, the 1893 World’s Fair, and more. The stories span 100-odd years and give a colorful survey of Chicago through the decades and across classes (“Back in those days, Chicago was lousy with funeral homes, what with all them gangsters running around”). In this clever collection of ghost stories, 16-year-old Mike Kowalski discovers an abandoned cemetery for teenagers where nine 15- to 17-year-old ghosts tell him how they died. Dead men may tell no tales, but dead teenagers do.
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