3: Paranoia
The daily commute turns into a nightmarish game of hide and seek in Manhattan, in the next of five spine-tingling tales from the US queen of gothic horror, read by Sara Kestelman.
Sara Kestelman reads five deliciously dark tales from the ‘US Queen of Gothic Horror’, Shirley Jackson, including her most famous and indeed infamous story, ‘The Lottery’, one of the most controversial short stories of all time.
There’s something nasty in suburbia. In these eerie and unsettling tales a village ritual turns dark; a summer lake house becomes a prison; an elderly woman is brought down by her own gossip; and a nightmarish dream becomes reality. In the haunting world of Shirley Jackson, nothing is as it seems, and nowhere is safe.
In the tradition of Christmas ghost stories, these unsettling tales will chill, unsettle and delight.
Today: the daily commute turns into a nightmarish game of hide and seek in Manhattan...
Reader: Sara Kestelman
Writer: Neglected during her lifetime, Shirley Jackson is now known as one of the greatest horror writers of the twentieth century for her unsettling short stories of the horrors lurking beneath the veneer of suburban domesticity. She’s perhaps best known for her short story, ‘The Lottery’, which on its 1948 publication, provoked a slew of hate mail but became one of the most anthologised stories of all time, as well as for her gothic horror masterpiece, The Haunting of Hill House.
Abridged and producer by Justine Willett
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