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Tales of Terror by Alfred Hitchcock
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Tales of Terror

by Alfred Hitchcock

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'Tales of Terror' is a colletion of short stories which were published in Hitchcock's magazine, most of them in the 60's and 70's. All in all, I was a bit disappointed with this book. I would say that I found about half of the stories good, and none of them particularly terror-inspiring. There are a few 'supernatural' stories, but most of them are your average murder mystery. Why they didn't put them in the 'Tales of Mystery' or 'Tales of Murder' collection is beyond my guess. It was definately worth the 7€ I paid, and, like I said, about half of the stories are good. I would say that you are better off borrowing this from a library than buying it right away. ( )
  jenknox | Apr 6, 2007 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0883657104, Hardcover)

Be afraid—be very afraid: the master of suspense is serving up 58 bloodcurdling tales for your delectation. These suspenseful stories all appeared in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, and in the words of Hitch himself, they “are guaranteed to chill and unnerve.” Bill Pronzini contributes “The Arrowmont Prison Riddle,” Margaret B. Maron has “A Very Special Talent,” Barry M. Malzberg offers “A Home Away from Home,” and Patricia Matthews chronicles “The Fall of Dr. Scourby.” Meet a girl who stalks Jack the Ripper, a clairvoyant writer of newspaper obituaries, a homicidal partygoer in a sanatorium, and a police detective who lives vicariously through the exploits of one of his most notorious suspects: they all populate these frightening pages. Caution: not recommended for late-night reading—except for the very brave!

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:46:08 -0500)

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