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20th Century Ghosts is a critically acclaimed short story collection by Joe Hill, Stephen King’s son, featuring over 20 tales that blend classic ghost stories with modern horror and emotional depth. Praised for its polished writing and diverse themes, it holds a 4.4-star rating from over 5,000 readers and ranks highly in ghost fiction and short story categories.









| Best Sellers Rank | #231,852 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #404 in Short Stories (Books) #544 in Ghost Fiction #1,506 in Horror Occult & Supernatural |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (5,132) |
| Dimensions | 5.31 x 0.76 x 8 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| ISBN-10 | 0061147982 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0061147982 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 336 pages |
| Publication date | September 16, 2008 |
| Publisher | William Morrow Paperbacks |
P**R
Joe Hill writes amazing stories
Joe Hill's 20th Century Ghosts is good. Very good. Like, Books of Blood good. Like, Night Shift, and Skeleton Crew good. Even the stories in this collection that don't aim to deliver more than a plot twist and a good scare are polished gems. And some pieces qualify as priceless masterpieces. "Best New Horror" asks the question, who's weirder: horror writers, horror readers, or the horror editors who bring the two together? Hill employs nice story-within-a-story framing techniques is this modern take on the classic EC-style horror tale. "20th Century Ghosts" is the only traditional ghost story in this collection. It's an effective ode to old movie houses and the people who love -- and haunt -- them. "Better Than Home" and "Voluntary Committal" both deal with living with -- and loving -- people with mental disabilities. Hill demonstrates the challenges and mysteries of such relationships beautifully in this passage from "Voluntary Committal." "At times, my brother made me think of one of those tapered, horned conch shells, with a glossy pink interior curving away and out of sight into some tightly wound inner mystery." Great writers make it look easy, and Hill is no exception. Saying he has "a way with words," is a massive understatement. Saying, "Hill has his way with words" is more accurate. He bends them to his will, and makes them do his bidding in tales like "The Cape" and "Last Breath." These tales flow so naturally, it's easy to overlook the skill required to create them. The best writing crafts words to convey great ideas. This is demonstrated in "Pop Art," another tale about loving a disabled person. In this case, the affliction is, well ... inflatibility. The narrator's childhood friend is an blow-up boy named Art. ("Pop Art" ... because he's, like, a balloon. Get it?) It's an absurd joke, (see SpongeBob SquarePants' "Bubble Buddy" episode for another brilliant take on the same concept) except Hill renders it so poignantly, it becomes a masterful mediation on life, death, and life after death. Art dreams of being an astronaut, traveling to worlds beyond this one, then realizes everyone gets the chance to live this dream with death's ultimate release. "You get an astronaut's life whether you want it or not. Leave it all behind for a world you know nothing about. That's just the deal." Art possesses a Zen-like serenity that eludes the narrator, a boy who is all too familiar with the world's harsh cruelties. When Art tells him an angry dog named "Happy" would be more pleasant if it wasn't penned up, the narrator disagrees. "It is my belief that, as a rule, creatures of Happy's ilk -- I am thinking here of canines and men both -- more often run free than live caged, and it is in fact a world of mud and feces they desire, a world with no Art in it, or anyone like him, a place where there is no talk of books or God or the worlds beyond this world, a place where the only communication is the hysterical barking of starving and hate-filled dogs." Hill hits it on the head, and out of the park with this description of life in a world of cruel, artless dunderheads. If pressed to find a flaw in 20th Century Ghosts, my only critique would be too many of the stories use a child protagonist, which is a kind of writer's crutch. Casting a kid as a hero can be a cheap literary trick because: It allows you to dumb down your story, seeing things through "the eyes if a child." It gives your characters a reason to do stupid things, because, "they're just kids!" It hijacks the reader's own childhood memories, imbuing the kid characters with an intimacy and nostalgia the writer didn't earn. Admittedly, this is more of a personal writing peeve than a criticism. Hill writes amazing stories. His ideas are fresh, and his characters are honest, engaging, and human no matter what their age. Maybe it's uncool to say, but Joe Hill has big shoes to fill -- his father is Stephen King, after all. One of the reasons he writes under the name Joe Hill is because doesn't want his work compared to his Dad's, and to dispel any belief he was given a publishing contract because of his family heritage. Joe Hill needn't worry. He might be following in his old man's footsteps, but he's wearing snowshoes, and leaving pretty impressive tracks of his own.
B**)
Great read, but not scary...
I'm not going to review EACH of the stories in the book, but I will talk about the ones that randomly "pop" out in my memory. The first story in the book called "ButtonBoy" I thought was very good. I need a story to suck me right in if there is going to be any hope of me finishing the book, and "ButtonBoy" did just that. Without giving away too much of the story, I will say it did have a Texas Chainsaw Massacre/Hills Have Eyes kind of vibe. I really like that. The story within the story was actually really good too, and I could see it really being book of its own. LOL. Though I saw the ending coming a mile a way, it still had me *fingers on - ready to turn the page before I got there*. The next story, "20th Century Ghost", wasn't to me horror but more a suspense type story. Had that been what I was in the mood for I would have really liked it. But I was laying in the dark, snuggled up under my covers, itching to have the hair stand up on my neck and jump at every odd sound. This story wasn't that - for me. I will say this one would be a fantastic read for anyone who likes ghost stories, but really isn't into scary or gory stuff. its actually quite beautiful, but definitely not horror. The last story I'm going to talk specifically about today is "Pop Art". This story is, different. lol. Ok, I have to say it, for a story in what is supposed to be a horror story book - it sucked. When I got what the title meant, I got excited and really expected some evil ending. What I got was moosh. The story is touching and actually, it made me tear up a little. That made me mad. I wasn't looking for tears, I was looking for fears. lol... Nothing scary about it, at all. Even the Cujo-esque escape to me, was lame. But if you are looking to feel all warm and fuzzy, and want to get a story with a little "deep" in between the lines raw emotion brought on by the remembrances and cruelties and emotions of what childhood with a dysfunctional family is like, then... YOU will LOVE this one. D**n you Joe Hill. lol. Ok, it wasn't the last. I want to talk about "Abraham's Boys". If you do not read any other story in the book, this one makes it worth the price of the book. It is a vampire story and in my opinion, the BEST story in the book. A father's forbidden study and children's loss of innocence. Given my scorecard, you may think I am not liking this book. That is actually inaccurate. So far, I am a Hill fan. I think he has a great grasp of language, and his stories all have an excellent flow. They all ebb, tide, and climax at the most proper points. My disappointment is, however, that this book is listed as horror. Over half of the stories inside are NOT horror. When you are a horror fan, and you pick up a horror book, you do not want to feel all "warm and fuzzy". Instead, you are looking to be jaunted, the hairs tingling on your arms and neck, the shadows to sway on the walls causing you to sink deep into the safety of your covers. You want it to grip you, rendering you unable to put it down because you HAVE to know what danger lies around the turn of the page.
A**S
Joe Hill picks up where Stephen King left off after he abandoned horror and took his disappointing left turn to murder mysteries. Genuinely creepy stories!
N**S
Awesome
D**D
出鱈目の翻訳ばかり出ているので、外国文学は是非原書で読もう。
J**S
Los cuentos están bien, hay algunos muy buenos, otros no tanto. Lo que si mi e-book trae incompleto el cuento DeadWood
D**A
Il libro è arrivato nei tempi stabiliti in ottime condizioni. Storie molto belle, ma bisogna conoscere bene sintassi e terminologie dell'ainglese americano per apprezzarle al meglio.
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