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A boy is put on a train by his stepmother to make his first journey on his own. But soon that journey turns out to be more of a challenge than anyone could have imagined as the train stalls at the mouth of a tunnel and a mysterious woman in white helps the boy while away the hours by telling him stories - stories with a difference.Tags
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Opening Sentence: ‘…It was the first railway journey I had ever made alone…’
This is the second ‘Tales of’ book I have read by Chris Priestly, and once again I was deliciously scared! Priestly is a master of telling chilling stories, and a trip down the hall to the powder room at night is no picnic after reading one of the macabre tales.
Set in England during the Boer War, Young Robert is travelling to boarding school by himself. His step-mother takes him to the station and she has a little dream that something scary will happen to him at the tunnel’s mouth. Robert is a bit embarrassed by all this and insists on getting on the train. There are four other travellers in his carriage and Robert soon drifts off to sleep. When he show more wakes up all is quiet and the other passengers are sleeping and a young woman all dressed in white with red hair is now sitting opposite him and she is wide awake. Then Robert notices that the train has stopped – at the mouth of a tunnel!
To pass the time the lady offers to tell Robert some stories – but they are stories that are quite frightening. Each tale has a strange and nerve-jangling twist like the governess who discovers that the problem child in her care is not what she seems; a creepy boy who terrorises a young lady for a reason; a really nasty nun gets her comeuppance and the step sister who takes the ultimate revenge. There are killer plants, ghosts, evil fairies and cracks in the wall – Chris Priestly’s imagination knows no bounds.
There is a moral message in the eerie tales, lessons to be learned and the ultimate twist as Robert gradually becomes aware that there is something not quite right going on. A perfect Halloween read – young readers, as well as old, will love these creepy, and often gruesome, stories – however more sensitive people, such as myself, may find some of them truly frightening – so supervise if in doubt. show less
This is the second ‘Tales of’ book I have read by Chris Priestly, and once again I was deliciously scared! Priestly is a master of telling chilling stories, and a trip down the hall to the powder room at night is no picnic after reading one of the macabre tales.
Set in England during the Boer War, Young Robert is travelling to boarding school by himself. His step-mother takes him to the station and she has a little dream that something scary will happen to him at the tunnel’s mouth. Robert is a bit embarrassed by all this and insists on getting on the train. There are four other travellers in his carriage and Robert soon drifts off to sleep. When he show more wakes up all is quiet and the other passengers are sleeping and a young woman all dressed in white with red hair is now sitting opposite him and she is wide awake. Then Robert notices that the train has stopped – at the mouth of a tunnel!
To pass the time the lady offers to tell Robert some stories – but they are stories that are quite frightening. Each tale has a strange and nerve-jangling twist like the governess who discovers that the problem child in her care is not what she seems; a creepy boy who terrorises a young lady for a reason; a really nasty nun gets her comeuppance and the step sister who takes the ultimate revenge. There are killer plants, ghosts, evil fairies and cracks in the wall – Chris Priestly’s imagination knows no bounds.
There is a moral message in the eerie tales, lessons to be learned and the ultimate twist as Robert gradually becomes aware that there is something not quite right going on. A perfect Halloween read – young readers, as well as old, will love these creepy, and often gruesome, stories – however more sensitive people, such as myself, may find some of them truly frightening – so supervise if in doubt. show less
As usual, Chris Priestley's selection of horror stories is chillingly delightful, though maybe not always suitable for sensitive children who are, after all, the target audience. My favourites are 'The Glasshouse' and 'Gerald', with 'The Crotach Stone', 'The Island' and 'The Little People' close behind. As with his other Tales of Terror books, the stories themselves are set within a frame narrative, which adds to the enjoyment. Chris Priestley manages in each story to conjure up an atmosphere of slowly building dread and foreboding, in some cases more successful than in others, but the stories are all quite unsettling and memorable for this reason.
Originally posted at http://olduvaireads.wordpress.com/2013/10/02/mini-reviews-september-2013/
It’s the third part of a trilogy, but it can easily be read on its own (I’ve read the first book, Uncle Montague’s Tales of Terror, but couldn’t find the second book, Tales of Terror from the Black Ship, at least not in the library’s e-book catalogue – have since requested the physical book from the library). Young Robert travels by train to school and encounters a woman in white who has a way with scary stories:
“It was a curious thing, but I realised that listening to these stories was different to listening to any stories I had heard before. I felt myself actually there, as if I were a witness to the events being described. It show more felt as though, instead of listening to the words the Woman in White was saying, I was actually seeing images, hearing voices; it was like a dream, but at the same time more real than any dream.” show less
It’s the third part of a trilogy, but it can easily be read on its own (I’ve read the first book, Uncle Montague’s Tales of Terror, but couldn’t find the second book, Tales of Terror from the Black Ship, at least not in the library’s e-book catalogue – have since requested the physical book from the library). Young Robert travels by train to school and encounters a woman in white who has a way with scary stories:
“It was a curious thing, but I realised that listening to these stories was different to listening to any stories I had heard before. I felt myself actually there, as if I were a witness to the events being described. It show more felt as though, instead of listening to the words the Woman in White was saying, I was actually seeing images, hearing voices; it was like a dream, but at the same time more real than any dream.” show less
Cuentos de terror de la boca del túnel de Priestley, Chris.
May 31, 2016Spanish
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Tales of Terror (book 3)
Common Knowledge
- Original title
- Tales of Terror from the Tunnel's Mouth
- Original publication date
- 2009
- Original language
- English UK
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