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Five True Stories to Scare You Silly

Kim Ukura

Staff Writer

Kim Ukura is a book lover, recovering journalist, library advocate, cat mom, and lover of a good gin cocktail. In addition to co-hosting Book Riot’s nonfiction podcast, For Real, and co-editing Book Riot’s nonfiction newsletter, True Story, Kim spends her days working in communications at a county library system in the Twin Cities area. Kim has a BA in English and journalism from a small liberal arts college in Minnesota, and a master’s in journalism from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. When not getting to bed before 10 p.m., Kim loves to read nonfiction, do needlework projects, drink tea, and watch the Great British Baking Show. Instagram: @kimthedork Twitter: @kimthedork

I’m not sure if Halloween ranks as my favorite holiday, but it’s definitely up in the top few. And the whole nature of Halloween lends itself to lots of good and spooky reading. Although horror or thrillers might come to mind first, there’s plenty of scary nonfiction to read as well. Below I’ve got a couple of old favorites and a few I haven’t read yet but am looking forward to this month.

Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers by Mary Roach

StiffStiff by Mary Roach is a really fun and sometimes gross book. In it, Roach explores what happens when a person decides to donate their body to science after the die. While many go on to be donors for medical school classes, others are used as crash test dummies, for decomposition studies, or other feats of science. If you have a bit of a stomach, this is a great book. And it’s Halloween connection? Cadavers are sort of like zombies, right? As a bonus, Roach also wrote a book on ghosts, Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife, that I think would be totally appropriate on this list.

Ghost Hunters: William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of Life After Death by Deborah Blum

Ghost Hunters

I haven’t read Ghost Hunters by Deborah Blum yet, but I do know her well (she was a former professor), and have enjoyed all her other writing so far. Her most recent book, The Poisoner’s Handbook would do equally well on this list, as it explores the birth of forensic toxicology through murder and mayhem in Jazz Age New York.

In this book, however, Blum explores looks at a group of scientists and intellectuals who, around the turn of the century, tried to close the gap between religion and science at a time when these pursuits were heading in different directions.

I had big plans to read this book last Halloween, but alas, too many books and too little time. This year, Ghost Hunters and I are going to spend some quality time together.

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt

Midnight in the Garden of Good and EvilI think the best way to explain this book is just to quote directly from the back cover, which is so good I can’t possibly top it:

Genteel society ladies who compare notes on their husbands’ suicides. A hilariously foul-mouthed black drag queen. A voodoo priestess who works her roots in the graveyard at midnight. a morose inventor who owns a bottle of poison powerful enough to kill everyone in town. A prominent antiques dealer who hangs a Nazi flag from his window to disrupt the shooting of a movie. And a redneck gigolo whose conquests describe him as a “walking streak of sex.”

These are some of the real residents of Savannah, Georgia, a city whose eccentric mores are unerringly observed — and who dirty linen is gleefully aired — in this utterly irresistible book. At once a true-crime murder story and a hugely entertaining and deliciously perverse travelogue, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil is as bracing and intoxicating as half-a-dozen mint juleps.

The book is sort of a conglomeration of types of narrative nonfiction – part travelogue, part profile, and part true crime – but manages to pull off every part successfully, resulting in a book that’s lush in scenery, broad in characters, and tinged with mystery and intrigue. So, so good.

Monsters in America: Our Historical Obsession with the Hideous and the Haunting by W. Scott Poole

Monsters in AmericaUniversity presses often have some of the more challenging and innovative nonfiction books out there, and I suspect that Monster’s in America by W. Scott Poole won’t be an exception. In the book, Poole looks at our ideas of the monstrous — from our colonial past all the way through the present. Poole promises big things in his introduction:

Right now, I am your crypt keeper and your Vampira. I am going to introduce you to monsters. I aim to give you unpleasant dreams.

Clearly I won’t be reading this one late at night…

Truman Capote and the Legacy of In Cold Blood by Ralph F. Voss

I’m turned into a bit of an October evangelist for Truman Capote’s 1966 nonfiction novel In Cold Blood, but honestly, that book is one of the scariest and creepiest pieces of nonfiction I’ve ever read. Capote writes about the murder of a prominent family in a small town in Kansas, committed by two recently-released felons for no real reason.

Ralph F. Voss was a high school student in Kansas when he learned about the murders of the Cutter family in Holcomb. In his book, Voss considers In Cold Blood as a story, using literary analysis to explore the style and shape of the narrative. I’m utterly fascinated by thet idea of this book, since as much as I love In Cold Blood, I know very little about it outside the basics as a classic text of narrative nonfiction. My English-major heart is a flutter, and I am so ready to get my journalism-nerd on.