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Paperback The Ghastly Ones & Other Fiendish Frolics: A Gallery of Gruesome Creeps Book

ISBN: 1945665416

ISBN13: 9781945665417

The Ghastly Ones & Other Fiendish Frolics: A Gallery of Gruesome Creeps

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Format: Paperback

Condition: New

$13.40
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Book Overview

Humorous Horror for Gleeful Ghouls


Welcome, fiends, to a gleefully ghoulish look at maniacs, monsters, and mayhem. As you creep through these pages, you'll meet axe-swinging psychos, blood-thirsty beasts, and sinister stalkers of every size and shape--all captured in frightfully witty verse and devilish drawings that will make you shiver with delight Admirers of Edward Gorey and Charles Addams, as well as fans of the television show, Wednesday, will appreciate Richard Sala's charming pen-and-ink drawings and macabre sense of humor.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Poetic Injustice

Out of all of Sala's works I have read so far, this is the most clearly inspired by Edward Gorey. Although Sala's art has a style all its own, this book copies the usual Gorey format with a series of illustrations (one on each double-page spread) accompanied by rhyming text telling short, humourous nasty stories (the same sort of tongue-in-cheek horror fun for all ages of a Vincent Price movie). I personally prefer Sala's short stories aimed at an older audience in traditional comic book format, but this book is still a howl.In this collection are four stories:"The Ghastly Ones" is about a bragging master detective detailing the modus operandi of a rogues gallery of fiends he has locked to the lascivious delight of a boy obsessed with crime. "The Morbid Musings of Malcolm de Mulch" is about a young man obsessively contemplating the many ways he might unfortunately meet an untimely demise. "The Skulkers" is a series of portraits of various fiends not unlike the first story, but the mini-poems are each told from the fiends' own points of view. Lastly "Beware, Beware" is about an old woman warning her young grandson that they best keep themsleves locked indoors because of all the dangers that face them in the city at night. All but "The Skulkers" (which isn't really a story) has a twisted twist ending.My one complaint is that it takes only minutes to read through the whole book, but it is still one that will be treasured by fans of Sala or dark humour, and I'm sure most young readers would get perverse delight from it as well. This is the type of fun book that encouraged me to read books when I was young because it is so "cool".
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