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Posts Tagged ‘Halloween books’

Get in the (adult) Halloween Spirit with 5 Spooky Books and Paired Wines

Tuesday, October 31st, 2023

Happy Halloween everyone!

Kim Beaussible reporting in on the spookiest day of the year! Wherever you are, I hope that your candy bowl is full for tonight and that your costume will keep you warm and toasty this evening. Here on the west coast, costumes are covered with coats or bolstered by several layers underneath, making my four-year-old nephew’s Spiderman costume look suspiciously buff this year. But this time of year is my favorite. As the summer burns away and the ghosts come out to play, I sink into my books, my spooky movies, and my wine that will eventually spill onto the page when I jump out of my skin. Even spies get scared sometimes.

This Halloween I’ve chosen a few books, paired with a bottle of wine, with something for every reader, from those who like a cozy mystery or a whimsical witchy tale to those who want to be looking over their shoulder after they put the book down. 

 The Thursday Murder Club

This season is the one for book clubs if you ask me. My mother and her friends always seemed to revamp their club in the fall, each leaf on the ground like another page they would burn through. The Thursday Murder Club, from British TV personality Richard Osman, would be my pick for them this spooky season. Set in a retirement home with a diverse cast of characters, this cozy follows a group of retirees who have created a club to solve mysteries in their remaining free time, only to be embroiled a murder case on their doorstep. With humor and mystery, this offbeat cozy is perfect for anyone who’s looking for a spooky read that will make you think but won’t give you nightmares. 

  • I’ve paired this cozy mystery with the Phantom Chardonnay. White wines scream cozy to me, they’re easy to sip and not too heavy, and Phantom wine bottles always catch my eye.

Witch of Wild Things

Now, readers, what would Halloween look like without witches, or books about them for that matter? Practical Magic will always be on my spooky season watchlist or TBR list, with its romantic, whimsical interpretation of witches. Looking for something that fit into my obsession with the Owens witches’ greenhouse, I chose a Witch of Wild Things by Raquel Vasquez Gilliland, a romantic fantasy about Sage and her sisters that are figuring out their own unique magical powers. With family, romance, and a little bit of a Poison Ivy killer botany desires mixed in, this book will take you on an emotional, magical rollercoaster. 

  • If it’s romance, it’s got to be rosé. Our Halloween inspired pick, Banshee Rose, had to make the list. With notes of berry, light baking spice and dried herbs, this wine would be any witch’s pick.  

The Lost Apothecary 

If witches and magic haven’t always struck a chord for you because of the fantastical elements, The Lost Apothecary is a great alternative, as a female driven, historical fantasy. A haunted woman runs an apothecary for women in late 1700s London, doling out remedies and poisons for the ladies of the city, when she’s caught up in a scheme from one such lady and her maid. 200 years later, a woman facing the crossroads of her failing marriage finds a vial that once belonged to the apothecary, taking her on a wild goose chase to find out where it came from and to find what she’s been missing in her life. Light and dark all at the same time, this book balances apothecary magic with the real world feminine experience, where a woman’s magic might just set her free. 

  • With the misty fog of London as the backdrop and the ghosts following each character, Ghost Pines Pinot Noir seemed a fitting pair for this book. The label itself reminded me of the apothecary, Nella, making her trips across the Thames to collect supplies for her potions, and the mixture of blackberry and black pepper are perfect for the fall weather.

Ladies of the Lake

If you’re looking for a thriller that sounds like a soap opera drama to drink up with your wine, look no further than Ladies of the Lake from Beaufort Books. After a fight and then a horrific accident in an affluent neighborhood leaves a man dead, his second wife lives her life as if she can finally breathe but other wives start getting jealous and then other husbands start dying and the LAPD and their children turn suspicious. Filled with mystery, suspense, drama, and a little romance this book is the perfect mix for those who like reality TV this Halloween. This is another lighter read for those who aren’t looking to be too scared but rather spookily entertained. 

  • A wine that looks sweet and light but is much darker than it seems, just like this book, my pairing is the Willamette Valley Vineyards White Pinot Noir. While this wine looks like a rosé, it expresses both red and white wine characteristics — creaminess, rich mid-palate, bright aromas and flavors with balanced acidity. 

 A Flicker in the Dark 

This end of the spooky spectrum is where I like to read and live. Thrillers and Horror books are some of my favorites, purely because of their ability to surprise me. A Flicker in the Dark by Stacy Willingham is one of my favorite thrillers I’ve read this year; I couldn’t get to the end fast enough, reading the last 100 pages in one sitting. Chloe is afraid of the dark, and rightfully so after learning at 12 that her father was a serial killer. Now 20 years later, she downs her wine with a Xanax just to sleep at night, and when someone appears to become a copycat of her father’s crimes, she takes it upon herself to find the killer despite her fears. 

  • A dark red wine for a dark book, the Prayers of Sinners Red Blend is my favorite on this list as well, with the title sounding just like Chloe’s attempt at atonement for the sins of her father. With notes of coffee, fruit, and gunsmoke, the wine has a bold, elegant finish just like Chloe. 

Breaking Beau: 3 Books To Read This Halloween Season (Not Written by Edgar Allan Poe or Stephen King)

Friday, October 19th, 2012

Halloween is fast-approaching. If you haven’t already, it’s time to get in the Halloween mood, which means watching a scary movie (like Nightmare on Elm Street), going to a haunted house, and in some cases, reading a “scary” book. I’m not one for reading to get in the Halloween mood. Whenever I do read a scary book, it’s very reluctantly. Let’s just say that I find no joy in getting goosebumps, especially from a book. Movies I can somewhat handle. Yes, they can stay in your head long after they’re finished, but –with books—there is a certain sense of deeper psychological investment. With reading a book, you spend much more than two hours as with a movie. Reading a book is a multi-hour investment, which can sometimes mean a book has a more long-lasting effect.

Yet, there are a few “scary” writers who many of us read, the most iconic being Stephen King and Edgar Allan Poe (Some might think of R.L. Stine as well). Yes, both of these writers are just brimming with “Scary Classics,” such as It, “The Cask of Amontillado,” “The Pit and the Pendulum,” The Shining, Carrie, the list goes on and on. So, for this blog post, I’ve decided to provide you with 3 books you could read for the Halloween season that you may not be familiar with (or maybe you are). These 3 books are creepy, disturbing, gross, and chilling in all of their own unique ways. Moreover, they are from 3 different centuries and provide 3 different flavors to make your Halloween complete.

1. The House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski (2000)

Best Word/Phrase to Describe novel: Mind-Bending

Excerpt from The House of Leaves – Notice how the text is not always linear.

If you are not familiar with The House of Leaves, there may be no possible way to capture the experience of this book in words (ironically). It’s just one of those things that you need to experience for yourself. Nevertheless, just to give you an idea of what to expect: take a look at the picture to your left. As you can see from this excerpt, The House of Leaves moves beyond the conventional creepy story line of a stormy night in a mildew-filled basement and gets under your skin in a deeper, more psychological way — through blank pages, words that ascend/descend, and other means of postmodern experimentation.

Beyond just its postmodern flavor, the story line of The House of Leaves left me truly creeped out. The book centers on a photojournalist’s encounter with a supernatural house, a house that, for example, has measurable differences in dimension when standing outside as opposed to inside. Such bizarre images and layered visuals make for a book that can be described simply as an exploitation of your mind.

 

 

2) The Turn of the Screw by Henry James (1898)

Best Word/Phrase to Describe novel: A Ghost Story

Book Cover for The Turn of the Screw

A governess is hired to take care of two children in the mansion of their wealthy uncle. She begins to discover, though, that strange phenomenon haunt the house and have ultimately haunted the two small children.

From its basic summary, it doesn’t sound like much, but the way Henry James presents the story is sure to leave you feeling a little “weirded out,” mainly due to its ambiguous layers. If you are not a little disturbed by the end of the novel, you will at least be asking a million questions by the end of it.

This is why in the academia world, more scholars and professors have ardently debated this book, through written articles and books, than any other work in the history of literature (even more so than Hamlet). Why? Because The Turn of the Screw explores that fine line between psychological paranoia and supernatural ghosts, and  in turn, delivers a story where the ghost story takes on a new form, one that leaves you with grotesque images and fallen-innocence.

 

 

 

3) The Monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis (1796)

Best Word/Phrase to Describe novel: Demonic

Book cover for The Monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis

Don’t let the title fool you. The Monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis is even disturbing for 2012, let alone 1796. Lewis wrote the title when he was only 20 years old in a 10 week period. Because of its “first-draft” status, we get somewhat of a book that is unorganized and frankly a little messy.

With that being said, once you read The Monk, you will always remember the book. The basic storyline: Ambrosio, a monk, slowly falls into the hands of evil when he is seduced by another monk who poses as a boy but is actually a girl. Ambrosio gets more than he bargains for when he ends up facing Lucifer himself and has to make the decision between selling his soul to the Devil or begging God for salvation. The sexual promiscuity and the demonic visions are not even the tip of the iceberg – this novel is just downright hellish.

The plot may sound a little off to you, but what you get is a scary book that will oftentimes leave your imagination running wild (believe it or not).

 

 

 

 

So, what about you? What “scary” books/novels have you read that may not be as well-known?

 

-Breaking Beau