I have always found the titles a little jarring. The Forbidden Game Trilogy includes the books The Hunter, The Chase and The Kill. A book you know anyone in their adult years would scoff to read but whose characters have stayed with you for so long they are like family. An outrageous film you know you should scorn for its obvious poor quality but once it’s on your butt won’t move till the credits roll. A cheesy song we can’t help but dance or sing to. Next to text books about Shakespeare and various Oxford World Classic books they began to look a little out of place but I have always kept them out. Whilst the majority of my Point Horror collection got relegated to the dusty confines of my parent’s loft (a.k.a attic to Americans) these three books have always remained on my book shelf. I made the transition from Point Horror to more grown-up horror stories such as those by James Herbet and Stephen King at around the age of twelve. I had finally brought over the remainder of my books from my parent’s home, now that my husband had hung the custom shelves, so as I scanned the titles I found myself looking at a fair few books that I have had for a long while. This last week, with Christmas drawing in and the dark nights being especially cold and wet I scanned my (new) bookshelves for something to read. But, in the early nineties, she put pen to paper for the Point Horror imprint from Scholastic and created three of my all time favourite books. L J Smith is more famous for her series The Vampire Diaries which has been adapted for television.
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