Best of
Horror

1980

Dark Forces: New Stories of Suspense and Supernatural Horror


Kirby McCauleyEdward Gorey - 1980
    E. D. KleinThe Detective of Dreams by Gene WolfeVengeance Is. By Theodore SturgeonThe Brood by Ramsey CampbellThe Whistling Well by Clifford D. SimakThe Peculiar Demesne by Russell KirkWhere the Stones Grow by Lisa TuttleThe Night Before Christmas by Robert BlochThe Stupid Joke by Edward GoreyA Touch of Petulance by Ray BradburyLindsay and the Red City Blues by Joe HaldemanA Garden of Blackred Roses by Charles L. GrantOwls Hoot in the Daytime by Manly Wade WellmanWhere There’s a Will by Richard Matheson and Richard Christian MathesonTraps by Gahan WilsonThe Mist by Stephen King

Gilded Needles


Michael McDowell - 1980
    With her daughters and grandchildren, Black Lena led a ring of consummate female criminals - women skilled in the art of cruelty.Only a few blocks away, amidst the elegant mansions and lily-white reputations of Gramercy Park and Washington Square lived Judge James Stallworth. He was determined to crush Lena's evil crew, and with icy indifference he ordered three deaths in her family.Then, one Sunday, all the Stallworths receive individual invitations - invitations to their own funerals. Black Lena has vowed a reign of revenge. Can even the Stallworth fortune and awesome power save them from her diabolical lust for revenge?

Comes the Blind Fury


John Saul - 1980
    Then the children came - taunting, teasing - until she lost her footing and fell, shrieking her rage to the drowning sea... Michelle: Now Michelle has come from Boston to live in the big house on Paradise Point. She is excited about her new life, ready to make new friends...until a hand reaches out of the swirling mists - the hand of a blind child. She is asking for friendship...seeking revenge...whispering her name...

The Mist


Stephen King - 1980
    Suddenly a violent storm sweeps across the lake and ends as abruptly and unexpectedly as it had begun. Then comes the mist...creeping slowly, inexorably into town, where it settles and waits, trapping you in the supermarket with dozens of others, cut off from your families and the world. The mist is alive, seething with unearthly sounds and movements. What unleashed this terror? Was it the Arrowhead Project---the top secret government operation that everyone has noticed but no one quite understands? And what happens when the provisions have run out and you're forced to make your escape, edging blindly through the dim light?

The Voice of the Night


Dean Koontz - 1980
    Colin was so shy; Roy was so popular. Colin was nervous around girls; Roy was a ladies’ man. Colin was fascinated by Roy — and Roy was fascinated with death. Then one day Roy asked his timid friend, “You ever killed anything?” And from that moment on, the two were bound together in a game too terrifying to imagine… and too irresistible to stop.Includes an afterword by the author.

Cold Moon Over Babylon


Michael McDowell - 1980
    Her killer is rich and powerful, beyond the grasp of earthly law.Now, in the murky depths of the local river, a shifting, almost human shape slowly takes form. Night after night it will pursue the murderer. It will watch him from the trees. And in the chill waters of the river, it will claim him in the ultimate embrace.The cold moon rises, the awful squishing sounds begin...

Famous Tales of Mystery and Horror


Edgar Allan Poe - 1980
    Librarian note: There is a later printing with a different cover using the same ISBN available on Goodreads here.This collection contains five stories:    The Telltale Heart (1843)    The Masque of the Red Death (1842)    The Oblong Box (1844)    The Murders in the Rue Morgue (1841) (A Chevalier Dupin story)    The Purloined Letter (1844) (A Chevalier Dupin story)

Whispers


Dean Koontz - 1980
    And even though she died five years ago, the whispers still haunt him in the dark…enough to make him kill—and kill again…Hilary Thomas is one of his intended victims. And she’s about to learn that even death can’t keep a bad man down…

The Headless Horseman Rides Tonight: More Poems to Trouble Your Sleep


Jack Prelutsky - 1980
    "Prelutsky's rhymes are as lethal, lithe, and literate as ever, and Lobel wrings every atmospheric ounce out of them."--School Library Journal.

Transplant


Leonard Goldberg - 1980
    The genetic mutation makes her organs, which are transplantable into anyone without worry of rejection, a valued commodity. After this discovery, she is soon hounded by a wealthy, powerful man in desperate need of a new kidney.This is Leonard Goldberg's first novel, inspired by a case he encountered during a research project at UCLA.

Rituals of Surgery


Richard Selzer - 1980
    The sense that death lurks around every corner is heightened by dark irony and wit. He brings to light the horrors of surgery while displaying overwhelming compassion for his characters, creating a provocative commentary on the human condition.

Kill the Dead


Tanith Lee - 1980
    But not everyone welcomes an exorcist who will remorselessly deprive them of their beloved dead.Dro began his vocation at an early age. And now he will not be turned aside, no matter how you may threaten, curse or weep. He is seeking too the greatest stronghold of the deadalive: Ghyste Mortua, the ghost town in the mountains, and he means to destroy it.If he will face that, what use the pleas of the desperate sisters, Cilny and Ciddey, what use the rage of Myal, with his genius for music and his imperfect talent for crime?Only one thing, it seems, motivates Parl Dro.His determination to kill the dead."Tanith Lee is one of the most powerful and intelligent writers in fantasy." —Publishers Weekly"With Lee… expect the unexpected." —Starburst

Utwory wybrane, tom 1. Nowele


Stefan Grabiński - 1980
    

Echoes Of Terror


Mike JarvisCharles Dickens - 1980
    Henry, W.W. Jacobs, and others, with vivid illustrations.

Such Nice People


Sandra Scoppettone - 1980
    Life was opening its arms before him, but Tom could think only of death. As Christmas drew closer and his relatives made their holiday plans, Tom, tormented by the voices in his head, made his own plans – to murder his whole family. Only Kit, his favorite sister, could be allowed to live. All the others would perish. That was the way it had to be. As Tom raced toward his destiny, each member of the Nash family became aware that something was terribly wrong – though nobody was quite sure what to do about it. Everything would be better after the holidays, they thought. If they make it through the holidays alive ...

Screenplays by Stephen King: Rose Red, Kingdom Hospital, Creepshow, the Stand, Children of the Corn, Cat's Eye, Pet Sematary


Stephen King - 1980
    Commentary (plays not included). Pages: 27. Chapters: Rose Red, Kingdom Hospital, Creepshow, The Stand, Michael Jackson's Ghosts, Maximum Overdrive, Children of the Corn, Pet Sematary, Stephen King's Desperation, Sleepwalkers, Storm of the Century, Cat's Eye, Silver Bullet, The Shining, Golden Years, Trucks. Excerpt: Rose Red (also known as Stephen King's Rose Red) is a television miniseries scripted by horror novelist Stephen King. The series was premiered in the United States on ABC on January 27, 2002. The story involves a cavernous Seattle mansion called Rose Red, which is investigated by parapsychologist Dr. Joyce Reardon and a team of psychics. Dr. Joyce Reardon, an unorthodox university psychology professor, leads a team of psychics to the massive and antiquated Seattle mansion known as Rose Red in an attempt to record data which would constitute scientific proof of paranormal phenomena. The mansion is publicly thought to be haunted, as at least 23 people have either disappeared or died there and the interior of the house appears to change or increase in size. Reardon's team unleashes the spirit of the house, leading to several deaths and the revelation of the mansion's secrets. According to information revealed at various points in the miniseries, Rose Red was built in 1906 by wealthy oilman John Rimbauer for his wife, Ellen. Rimbauer used much of his wealth to build the mansion, which was in the Tudor-Gothic style and situated on 40 acres (160,000 m) of woodland in the heart of Seattle on the site of a Native American burial ground. The house was rumored to be cursed even as it was being constructed; three construction workers were killed on the site, and a construction foreman was murdered by a co-worker. While honeymooning in Africa, Ellen Rimbauer fell ill and made the acquaintance of Sukeena, a local tribeswoman. The two wo...