FEATURED AUTHOR - Author Miranda Oh Is your typical girl: She loves the sunset, loves long walks on the beach, world travels, and When not playing the corporate part she can be found sipping wine and spending all her hard-earned money on shoes. Among her friends and family, Miranda Oh is known to be the storyteller of the group, always recapping crazy life stories and situations. Her personal experiences, emotions, and fantasies are the inspiration for most of her books, so there is a little bit of her in every…
Read more
Answers
The story of Ripper is obviously influenced by the "Jack The Ripper" mythos and the author is not one to pull any punches when it comes to killing off characters in creatively disturbing ways. I've read plenty of gory stories in my time, so even these were not enough to unsettle me, but when the occult elements start to appear thick and fast I admit that it made me feel a lot more tense.
-Suffer the Children by Craig DiLouie = Don't read this if you are a parent.
-Horns: A Novel by Joe Hill = Forget the motion picture, the book is the real deal and written by Stephen King's son.
-Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk = Is throwing up the same as feel unsettled? If so, this book definitely unsettled me.
]
With that said, books that stand out in my memory as really unsettling include American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis and Haunted: A Novel by Chuck Palahniuk. I am fairly sure that most people have read American Psycho or at the very least watched the movie where Christian Bale killed it as Bateman. For the lucky people who have not yet read it, it is about a businessman named Patrick Bateman who also happens to be a psychopathic serial killer. The story takes place in the eighties, so you have the Wall Street boom that has given Bateman all his wealth. The book is disturbing because of the casual matter of fact way in which the author describes Bateman's life as well as the murders he commits. It starts out "simple" enough with him stabbing people, but as Bateman becomes increasingly more unhinged, so does the murders. The book caused quite an uproar when it was released and I can understand why it had such an effect on people as it is very unsettling.
Haunted: A Novel is a completely different kettle of fish and it is the work of Fight Club author, Chuck Palahniuk. While I have always known that Palahniuk is a nihilist, I had no idea that he was able to write stuff of this caliber. The book is written in such a way that it is made up of unconnected short stories told by authors who supposedly went on a writers' retreat. The different stories are all unsettling in their own ways and the over arching plot is typical Palahniuk, but it is one of the stories "Guts" that stands out the most. I won't say much about it except that you should not read it while eating.
OK, here goes; Living Dead Girl is about a girl called Alice who is kidnapped by a pedophile when she is only ten years old. Her twisted captor then goes on to abuse her for the next five years until she isn't young enough anymore for his twisted preferences. In a shocking twist, he then tasks Alice with finding him a younger replacement for her. All of this makes for a very unsettling book, but the author also doesn't shy away in how Alice is mistreated, which is quite emotionally draining if you are a parent or sensitive reader. To make everything even more gut wrenching the whole story is told from Alice's perspective, which makes you feel like you are experiencing everything with her. Living Dead Girl is classified as a young adult novel, but I can't imagine any young readers not getting emotionally scarred from reading it.
In a similar vein there is a book by Iris Chang called "The Rape of Nanking." Reading about what happened in Nanking during World War 2 when the Japanese invaded the city is the stuff of nightmares. Then, just when you think things can't get any worse, you stumble upon the photos that are also included in the book. If you have a weak constitution I guarantee that you will feel ill after reading this book. It disturbed me even more when I found out that the later of this book ended up committing suicide. This was due to a number of reasons, but personally I think that the type of research that she had to do for books like this one contributed to her severe depression.
Finally, there is a very harrowing book called "We wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families." It is a book by Philip Gourevitch that covers what happened during the genocide that happened in Rwanda. Nevermind unsettling, the stories that emerge in this book are downright terrifying. There is another book about the topic called Shake Hands With The Devil by Romeo Dallaire, but I Think Tomorrow Will Be Killed is the "better" of the two for a lack of a better way to phrase it.
-Meat by Joseph D'Lacey: This one is even worse than Unwind and you can already infer from the title alone that it is going to be gruesome. I wasn't quite prepared for how gruesome it would actually be and I could hardly believe that it was the debut novel of the author. The long and short of it is that in the world of Meat being a vegetarian is punishable by a horrible death. That's just the beginning of people's problems.
-Gerald's Game by Stephen King: Stephen King is the master of disturbing stories, but for some reason this one unsettled me the most. I haven't watched the latest movie adaptation yet as not all his books translate well to films and I would like to preserve the memory of this one.
-Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy: The first and last "western" that I have ever read.
-Your House Is On Fire, Your Children All Gone by Stefan Kiesbye: Take Children of The Corn and make it a thousand times more unsettling and you might have a clue what to expect from this book. I've seen some creepy small towns in my time, but Hemmersmoor is a place I wouldn't want to visit in my worst nightmares.