This evening's viewing distraction: a revisit to 1981's Ghost Story, based on Straub's novel, boasting a cast of elder Hollywood royalty: Fred Astaire, Melvyn Douglas, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., & John Houseman, & an early #film for Alice Krige.

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#Horror #Horreur #GhostStory #1980sFilm #HorrorFilm #PeterStraub #AliceKrige #FredAstaire #JohnHouseman #DouglasFairbanksJr #MelvynDouglas

T.A.E.’s Book Review – Ghost Story by Peter Straub

Peter Straub’s Ghost Story is one of the great American haunted-house novels, but it is far more interested in memory than in mere haunting. On the surface, it offers the familiar pleasures of Gothic fiction: a remote town, winter weather, a creaking old mansion, and a presence that seems to gather force from every buried wrong. Yet the author’s real achievement is subtler. He transforms the ghost story into a meditation on guilt, aging, male friendship, and the way the past returns not as a single event but as a climate, a pressure system, a slow corrosion of the present.

The novel’s central achievement lies in its atmosphere. It illustrates that dread is most effective when it is cumulative rather than explosive. Milburn, New York, is not simply “haunted”; it is saturated with time. The town’s social life, its private scandals, and its historical silences all feed the sense that something has gone wrong long before the first supernatural disturbance becomes visible. Straub’s language is especially effective when it lingers over cold, darkness, and winter stillness. The result is not just scenic gloom but metaphysical unease: the world seems to have withdrawn its assurances. In that sense, the novel belongs to the highest tradition of Gothic fiction, where setting is never background but moral weather.

At the centre of the book is the Chowder Society, a group of aging men whose meetings are ostensibly social but actually confessional. Straub uses them to explore the consolations and failures of masculine fellowship. These men tell stories to one another, but storytelling here is never innocent; it is a strategy of self-preservation, a way of delaying truth. Their shared past contains the wound around which the novel turns, and that wound is crucially social as well as personal. Ghost Story suggests that evil is rarely a sudden intrusion from outside. More often, it is the afterlife of choices that were made, covered over, and then allowed to harden into habit.

One of the novel’s most interesting features is its treatment of narration itself. Straub keeps returning to the idea that stories do not simply describe experience; they shape the terms by which experience can be endured. In a book full of apparitions and uncanny events, the most dangerous force may be unrecovered memory. The novel’s structure mirrors that insight. It does not move cleanly from cause to effect, but circles, repeats, and revises. The past keeps reentering the present in altered form, as though history were refusing closure. That recursive design gives the book much of its power: each apparent explanation only deepens the mystery.

The writer is also unusually attentive to the slipperiness of fear. The novel does not rely only on shocks, though it contains memorable ones. More unsettling is the way he destabilizes perception. Characters are uncertain about what they have seen, what they remember, and what their stories have done to those memories. This uncertainty gives the supernatural a psychological double: the ghost may be external, but it is also inseparable from shame, repression, and self-deception. He makes the reader feel that the boundary between haunting and remembering is almost impossible to police.

Stylistically, Ghost Story is rich, ornate, and deliberately deliberate. Straub is not a minimalist; he writes in a textured, old-world idiom that suits his subject. At his best, the prose has the density of a winter forest—loaded, shadowed, resonant. That density can sometimes feel excessively mannered, but in a novel like this ornament is part of the design. The story is about accretion: of years, of secrets, of fear. The prose enacts that accumulation.

What makes the novel enduring is that its terror is moral as much as supernatural. The ghosts matter because they dramatize the impossibility of escaping consequence. Straub’s title is exact: this is a story about ghosts, but it is also a story that behaves like one, returning insistently to what has been suppressed. The dead in this novel are not simply dead; they are unfinished business.

Ghost Story is effective not because it proves that ghosts exist, but because it recognizes how thoroughly human beings are haunted by what they have done, what they have avoided, and what they cannot bear to say aloud. Its best horror is not the apparition in the dark, but the realization that the dark has been inside the community all along.

#BookReviews #ghosts #Horror #LiteraryCriticism #PeterStraub #Straub

David Nathan liest – Stephen King/Peter Straub „Andere als diese Welten“

David Nathan
Andere als diese Welten
Hörbuchvorstellung © 2026 by Klaus Spangenmacher
für stephen-king.de

Erscheint am:14.10.2026
Ungekürzte Lesung
von David Nathan
Verlag: Random House Audio
Originalverlag: Heyne
Übersetzer: Bernhard Kleinschmidt
4 MP3-CDs, Laufzeit: 29h 10min
ISBN: 978-3-7599-0367-9
€ 28,00 [D] (* empf. VK-Preis)
Verlag: Random House Audio
vorbestellen bei Amazon

Wenn Welten kollidieren – das gigantische neue Epos von Stephen King in der Saga um den Dunklen Turm

Jack Sawyer lebt seit Jahren in der Anderwelt, die er die Territorien nennt, von der er nun jedoch weiß, dass sie Teil des größeren Reiches Mittwelt ist. Er hat sich an die seltsamen Gepflogenheiten dort und die mystische Geschichte gewöhnt, die von dem sagenumwobenen Revolvermann Roland handelt, der Mittwelt vor der Zerstörung des Dunklen Turms bewahrt hat. Jack kann zwischen den Welten wechseln, in unserer aber nicht lange verweilen, weil sie auf die Dauer für ihn tödlich ist. Als eine marodierende Mördersekte seine Freunde in Amerika in Gefahr bringt und anschließend in Mittwelt auftaucht, erkennt er, dass die Welten zu kollidieren beginnen. Eine dunkle Macht, die alles – alle Welten – zu verschlingen droht, gewinnt zusehends an Bewusstsein und Stärke.

Mit dem Segen vom leider verstorbenen Peter Straub verwebt Stephen King die Talisman-Reihe mit der Dunkler-Turm-Saga.

 

#DavidNathan #Hörbuch #metoo #PeterStraub #RandomHouseAudio #StephenKing #Talisman #Vorstellung

Over the past month or so I've repurchased four books from my (let's call it...) youth. I have lost a lot of stuff from my childhood home and while I can't replace everything, I do like that I can some things.

In this case, the items are actually upgrades.

Picked up hardback copies of #StephenKing ,errr #PeterStraub (ha) #TheTalisman and #TheBlackHouse. Also grabbed hardbacks of #CliveBarker #WeaveWorld and #Imajica. (I've also got autographed copies of #Everville and #TheGreatAndSecretShow, but those were picked up years ago)

I've read them all in paperback way, way back in the day, but I like the security of hardback.

All I know is, I'm gonna be pissed if Amazon ever buys #ThriftBooks.

YouTube Tipp ▶️
#StepphenKing’s Other Worlds Than These, #TheTalisman3! Everything we know so far
#DerTalisman #DasschwarzeHaus #PeterStraub
https://youtu.be/805jnLbnV1Y?si=zWdZ_dMsEohVi7_D
Other Worlds Than These, The Talisman 3! Everything we know so far about Stephen King's next book

YouTube

On a des nouvelles du troisième tome de la série Talisman de Stephen King et Peter Straub !

On vous dit tout ce qu'on sait sur Actusf sur "Other Worlds Than These".

#Talisman #StephenKing #PeterStraub

The third novel in the #Talisman series by #StephenKing and #PeterStraub has been announced!

"Other Worlds Than These" will release on October 6th.

Get notified of new releases by the King of Horror: https://www.booknotification.com/authors/stephen-king/

#newbookalert #bookstodon

• Stephen King writes Salem’s Lot.
• Peter Straub likes it and includes an homage to it in his own novel, Ghost Story.
• Stephen King writes A Winter’s Tale, which is similar to Ghost Story in that a group of old men tell ghost stories.
• Stephen King dedicates A Winter’s Tale to Peter Straub and Susan Straub.

So that’s King returning the favor of the homage, right? It sounds obvious when I lay out that timeline, but I haven’t seen anything where King confirms that.

#StephenKing #PeterStraub