Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids
Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids is a 1992 children's fantasy horror book of cautionary tales written by British author Jamie Rix and is the second book in the Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids series. It was published by André Deutsch and contains 15 short stories.
The cover of the Audible version, which is a modified version of the original hardback cover from 1992. Designed by Bobbie Spargo. | |
Author | Jamie Rix |
---|---|
Audio read by | Andrew Sachs (1996) |
Illustrator | Bobbie Spargo |
Cover artist | Bobbie Spargo; etc. |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids |
Release number | 2 |
Genre | Children's horror |
Publisher | André Deutsch Limited; etc. |
Publication date | 14 February 1992 |
Media type | Print (Hardback) |
Pages | 144 (first edition) |
ISBN | 9780590540049 |
Preceded by | Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids |
Followed by | Fearsome Tales for Fiendish Kids |
Went out of print c. 2010[1] |
Synopsis
Grandmother's Footsteps
The narrator cannot sleep because a long-fingernailed, messy-haired figure (presumably a man) is tormenting him outside of his window, promising to take him on a magic carpet ride to a magical breadstick land if he opens the window. Terrified, the narrator calls for his grandmother and tells her everything. They listen to the man's tapping outside and Grandma decides to distract the narrator with a ghost story. The story is about a boy named Jolyon, who is reading a book in his bedroom when he hears loud tapping from outside, which becomes faster and faster. He pulls his duvet over his head and watches the silhouette of a giant hand tap the window and smash the glass. He screamed in fear and his grandmother ran into the room, armed with a bedpan. The end.
The narrator is annoyed because Grandma promised that a ghost would appear. Grandma explains that the tapping came from the branches of the apple tree moving in the wind and the storm had caused the branch to break the window. As for the ghost, she says, "Here I am!" She walks towards the door, stops to take off her head, and disappears; outside, footsteps are heard fading away. The narrator did not sleep for a week.
Burgers
Burgerskip is the most successful fast food chain in the world, particularly in the UK. At the end of every school day, children of all ages would race out of school to meet with friends and grab their dinner at the Burgerskip in Crawley High Street, as the chain's mascot — a clown — would watch over them. The clown was based on Burgerskip's CEO, Seamus O'Burger, who is planning to expand his fast-food empire even further as his helicopter team escorts him to the Amazon rainforest. O'Burger decides to have parts of it bulldozed so that there would be more space for farmland, after his pilot suggests it to him. The next day, O'Burger leads a team of bulldozers through the forest, pushing over trees and pulling up flowers. O'Burger's Amazon guide realises the extent of his tourist's plans and begs him at break time not to cut any further. Seamus ignores him as he eats his breakfast burger and orders the bulldozing team to continue. The guide refers to the tree opposite Seamus, explaining that the Amazonian tribes respected it as a deity named Panachek, the "heart and soul" of the rainforest. Seamus notices that the team have become hesitant to follow his orders and cuts Panachek down with a chainsaw. Everyone and everything in the rest of the rainforest watches in mournful silence as the tree tips over dead and Seamus stands triumphant.
The chain becomes more successful to the point of Burgerskip rapidly running out of supplies. Seamus spends a lot of time with his helicopter team to travel around the world for more farmland space, whether forests had to be bulldozed or not. Meanwhile, in the UK, a little girl named Charlotte visits Crawley High Street's Burgerskip with her father. Charlotte orders a Jolly Burger with chips and takes a bite outside. She splutters and chokes and shows her father the tiny mahogany tree inside it. The news of the burger reaches Burgerskip headquarters and to Seamus, who redirects the plane to make an emergency meeting with the board of directors. Terrified of disappointing their boss, the directors are hesitant to speak up but one stammers that other complaints about trees in burgers have reached their headquarters. The tour guide from the Amazonia enters the room and refers to outside the window. Seamus looks out to see hundreds of Burgerskip buildings suspending in the air by 300 ft (91 m) trees. The tour guide explains that this is a part of Panachek's revenge for destroying the Amazon and that he is not finished with Seamus yet. Seamus jumps on the guide and attempts to strangle him but the boardroom starts to shake. The ghost of Panachek bursts through the floor, picks up Seamus and shoots up into the sky.
It was the last time Seamus was seen and Burgerskip was ever successful. An Australian farmer found a part of Seamus' clown costume but it could not be proven that it had belonged to him. The UK became the new rainforest where roasted parrot became a popular meal.
Tag
One day, a boy in Terry Blotch's class arrives at school with a giant marble that he got for his birthday from a Scottish grandmother, which everyone on the playground gathers around to admire. Terry envies his friend's sudden popularity and is determined to make them cry. He sneaks into the classroom and steals a ring from the classmate's desk. This envy triggers a need for Terry to steal and he begins to shoplift from many stores, stealing a variety of items, and stealing from the streets, notably a dog. While hiding in a locker in an empty school changing room, Terry notices a sports bag containing a football kit belonging to "A. Phantom", according to the name tags. Terry snatches the kit, puts it on and leaves, and wears it for the rest of the day.
At home, the name tags cause blemishing rashes that would itch all over. By the next morning, Terry's face is covered in boils. His mother telephones for an emergency home doctor, who recommends that he avoids eating junk food and to have a bath, assuming that it is acne (although he admits that he has no idea whether his hypothesis was accurate). Terry's mother suggests that it is chickenpox when she notices that the boils had spread all over her son's body but Terry knew no one who may have had chickenpox in his class. "It's that football kit!" his mother cries and runs out of the bathroom. In bed days later, the boils begin to itch and Terry cannot resist scratching them. Each scratched boil exploded and covered his bedroom floor with thick pus, making him howl in pain. His mother rushes in, falling in the pus and gasps: her son's boils had disappeared and he had 1019 "A. Phantom" name tags sticking out of his body. The biggest (the 1020th) hung from the back of his neck which read "Thief". She tried to remove the tags with scissors but the name tags regrew whenever she cut them off. She demands to know what is going on so Terry tells her about his secret shoplifting addiction.
Terry returned to school the next day, still covered with name tags. He sneaked into the changing room and put the sports bag on the hook he stole it from and runs away. The name tags had disappeared by lunchtime apart from "Thief", which soon fell off after a few days. Terry never stole again — the slightest itch would remind him of his humiliation, whenever he had a potential shoplifting opportunity — however, he started to get a lot of acne that was hard to get rid of.
The Locked Door
Somewhere in an unspecified country is a house with a locked door that has not been opened in 75 years. Every midnight, blood trickles from a lightbulb, and screams for help and heavy thumping is heard by anyone coincidentally awake. Many people who once lived alone in the house had been found dead days later. It is bought by Matt and Jodie, two deaf newlyweds from New Zealand who give birth to a daughter they named Rosie, who is not deaf and is fascinated by the mysterious locked door that her parents do not want to open. One night, she disappeared. The parents searched every creepy room of the house until the locked door was the only option. Matt kicked the door but the force made the ceiling collapse in front of him. He looked up and saw baby Rosie looking through the hole back at him. Everyone in the house was banned from the loft ever since.
That had been three years ago, but Rosie had suffered from nightmares since, and would wake up to the locked door's midnight sounds frequently. This, and being banned from the floor above only fuelled Rosie's curiosity even more. One midnight, Rosie wakes up to scratching and investigated her bedroom's fireplace. Dust shoots out and a voice begs for help; Rosie runs out of the room towards the locked door. A pale hand appeared under the door with a key as a voice begs her to let them free. Rosie takes the key and unlocks it. Inside was an axe, broken furniture and wood. An old man with a long beard is standing behind her and thanks her. Rosie takes him to meet her parents and lets him eat sponge cake; Matt and Jodie are expectantly shocked and surprised that they could hear his voice. The old man explains that he had been locked in the room for years and had spent nights chopping firewood, occasionally cutting his hand. He was most likely 115 years old. Rosie jumps into his lap and lands on the wooden chair.
A Tangled Web
Nigel has a passion for torturing spiders, and a habit of clicking his tongue when he talked and daydreaming with his mouth open. He nicknamed himself "Black Nigel" and would declare himself the spider that spiders feared, confusing (and sometimes annoying) his parents. One day, Ariadne, a pregnant spider, rushes into his bedroom to prepare for her labour. She crawls towards the wardrobe to make a web at the top. Nigel hears her tiny footsteps and waits, picking up a jar that he hid under his pillow. When Ariadne had spun her web, Nigel swiped the jar across it, trapping her. Nigel screws the lid on and holds the jar against a candle flame, burning the spider alive. He dumps the corpse into a bin outside his window which is collected the next morning by the bin collectors. At the landfill, the ghosts of the unborn babies are "born" and allow the wind to carry them through the town.
The spider ghosts float through Nigel's open bedroom window and into Nigel's open mouth. Hours later, Nigel wakes up with a tight chest as if he had a severe cold; through the night, the spider ghosts had spun webs around his ribcage. Nigel coughs up a spider but only spots it after it had run across the bedsheets. He realises that it came from him when he coughs up another. Nigel never opened his mouth again and now spends a lot of free time knitting. He has no idea why he always knits webs as big as his bedroom. It was just instinct.
The Well
Mr and Mrs Halley live in Wellsdeep cottage in Devon, which has an 1100-year-old well at the bottom of the garden, with a 144 feet (44 m) bottom. Mrs Halley wants her husband to cover the well before their two grandsons (Louis and Ben) arrive, who put their hands anywhere. In the morning, Mr Halley promises to do block it but by the afternoon, the boys arrive and the well is not covered. "I'll do it tomorrow," says Mr Halley when his wife confronts him. That night, Mr Halley feels tiny hands tickling his feet and touching his eyelids as he sleeps. He jumps out of bed and opens the curtains, and hears laughter coming from the well. He loudly vows to cover it before his wife reminds him that he is not wearing his pyjamas. At sunrise, Mr Halley races to the well with measuring tape and a pencil but the tape falls down the well before he could read the measurement of the diameter. He has a tantrum, throws his hat after the tape, and tells his wife that he will fix the well tomorrow with better equipment. At lunchtime, Louis and Ben run to the well to play Pirates; Louis sits in the well's bucket to imitate the crow's nest and Ben holds the rope. Mrs Halley runs to the well to stop them as Ben lets go, and grabs the rope before the bucket dropped too far. Mr Halley (who had been asleep inside throughout the incident) is woken up by his wife angrily pouring water over him and splutters that he will fix the well tomorrow.
That night, Mr Halley is woken up by the tiny hands and laughter again. He opens the curtains to see a full moon's light making the well glow. He spots a tiny person run out of the back door and jump into the well. He rushes out to the garden with a torch and searches the inside, seeing neither of his grandsons at the bottom. A force pushes him and he lands in the water. He crawls onto a ledge above and calls for help. A little boy climbs out of the water and joins him, introducing himself as The Ghost of Jobs Left Undone, pointing out that the well should have been blocked already. Mr Halley adamantly claims that he was going to do it and the ghost replies that his grandfather had said the same but never kept his promise, which caused his death. Ben and Louis appear at the top, preparing to rescue their grandfather. Mr Halley orders them to not move but they climb into the bucket. The rope snaps and the boys fall into the water.
Mr Halley wakes up in his bedroom, soaking wet and screaming. Before the grandsons woke up, he blocked the well the best he could. Mrs Halley is pleased and suggests that he should paint the outside of the house as he promised. Mr Halley says that he will do that tomorrow.
An Elephant Never Forgets
The upper-middle-class Crumpdump family are driving their Rolls-Royce car through the African wilderness on a safari, impatient to see elephants. They eventually find a herd and the children, Belinda and Percy, become excited. "I want one!" demands Percy. Mrs Crumpdump is against it because a living one would destroy the house and a dead one would stink but Mr Crumpdump remains quiet, hiding his smirk. After the family returns home, a parcel is delivered one breakfast later, containing an elephant's foot. The children are disturbed as Mr Crumpdump proudly explains that he had someone trophy hunt for him but they move the foot towards the door by the leopard skin rug to use as an umbrella stand.
One rainy day, before a trip to the shoe shop, Belinda says aloud that she wished that the rain would stop as she takes her umbrella from the elephant's foot. The rain stops and the sun appears in the sky. Percy becomes excited and grabs the foot, wishing to be 20 feet (6.1 m) tall. He grows through the ceiling and then wishes himself back to normal size. The children start to love their magical umbrella stand, making their schoolfriends jealous, and wish for several things every day until the mansion is almost full. They also used it to be lazy: Percy wished that he could go to bed without having a bath and the prepared water dried up, whereas Belinda wished for an excuse to not go to school, making it burn down. However, because Belinda and Percy were spoilt children who already had many toys and games, they were never satisfied with the things they wished for. After running out of ideas, Belinda suggests that they should wish for the elephant they wanted and does so despite Percy's hesitance. A bleeding, three-legged baby elephant limps across the landing towards the stairs. Percy orders his sister to wish it away but Belinda is too scared; the elephant rolls down the stairs and crushes them.
Mr and Mrs Crumpdump return home to find a broken staircase, a dirty carpet and the umbrella stand missing (the story writes that it had been stolen). Every night since, the ghosts of their children cry for the elephant's forgiveness. Their parents cannot take another sleepless night and file for divorce.
School Dinners
The narrator has always had a bad relationship with food. It began at lunchtimes during school when the horrible school dinners would be served: unspecified pork fat, cauliflower, prunes, stewed peas, lumpy and cold rice pudding, and Pork rind, to name a few. The school dinner lady would patrol the aisles and openly scold any students that were avoiding certain parts of their plate. Once, she yelled at the narrator to eat his cold and maggot-infested kedgeree so hard that her spittle sprayed it but he still had to eat every mouthful. One student she never had to ask twice was Elgin (nicknamed Blue Bottle by the rest of the school), who worshipped her and the dinners. When he had cleaned his plate, he would crawl under the tables to eat off the floor and then would go to the bin full of leftovers and eat its contents as well, as the rest of the school was forced to listen and tried not to retch. The narrator never got sympathy from his parents, who would lecture that he was ungrateful and selfish because there were children his age in the world that never got a chance to choose, let alone eat. The dinner lady stalked the narrator to check that he had swallowed everything and even followed him into the boys' toilets. Eventually, the narrator's parents agreed to send in a medical note to excuse him from eating school dinners but the dinner lady made him eat it for lunch.
Lunchtimes at school traumatised the narrator. He would have nightmares about talking food begging to be eaten and frequently had flashbacks whenever he smelt food that the dinner lady had forced him to eat or Elgin had eaten out of the bin or off the floor. His first panic attack was when he was 22: in a lift, he smelt spotted dick, which made him belch and his stomach churn loudly; he felt spotted dick appear in his mouth and gagged as he forced himself to swallow it. If he ever smelt baked beans being cooked, he crawled under the nearest table and screamed; tomato ketchup and carrots were two of his many trauma triggers. The worst panic attack was the day the narrator took his girlfriend out to a sophisticated French restaurant for a candlelit dinner. Although the menu was full of French meals which would not remind the narrator of anything at school, he decided to order the unspecified £125-for-two special with the champagne, which was brought to the table by the head waiter. The lid was removed to reveal fishcakes, making the narrator scream and cover himself with the tablecloth, spraying champagne over his girlfriend, who then ran out crying in embarrassment. The head waiter is alarmed and the rest of the restaurant paused to watch the commotion. In the narrator's mind, the head waiter had turned into the school dinner lady, who began to demand that he ate the cakes, so he picked up a bread roll and threw it at him, but the head waiter/dinner lady was trying to force him to eat it by waving a spoon with a piece on it towards his mouth. He kicked and screamed and later snapped out of the panic attack, finding himself outside of the restaurant with fish cake around his mouth.
The narrator points out that that was a long time ago and he was about to turn 83 next week. He had spent the rest of his life isolating himself from friends and family, and tried not to look at any advertising for food that used to torture him. Unfortunately, he is about to be moved into a retirement home within the next few days which has a scarily-familiar-looking dinner lady that promises to monitor his eating habits.
The Big Sleep
A father is talking to his son as he tucks him in bed. The son asks whether his father could tell whether he was still in a dream. The father replies that he wakes up and just knows but the son continuously repeats the question. The father gives up with a vague answer of "just knowing" because dreams are too ridiculous to be realistic. Then he unscrews his tail and jumps down to the floor, sings a lullaby out of a navel, screwed his teeth in, kisses his son with one of eight lips and put a sausage in his ear to turn off the bedroom light.
Bogman
Helen loves going to the toilet but only to escape her parents' rules. The complicated back of the toilet allows Helen to hide her comic books from her family's clutches so that her weak bladder excuses are more convincing. One morning, her mother orders her to clean up after breakfast and Helen starts to "feel" cramps. Her mother threatens that if she disobeyed, The Bogman will come for her. When she returns home from school hours later, Helen asks her father who The Bogman is. He explains as he prepares the family's dinner that six months ago, a skeleton from the Stone Age had been discovered under the drainage of their house and is said to have come to life at times to look for the people that had drowned him in a bog.
At dinner, Helen's parents are adamant that Helen washes everyone's dishes. Luckily, her father falls asleep and Helen sneaks away as her mother snaps at him. On the toilet, Helen hears clattering noises, assuming she had called her mother's bluff but the clattering becomes louder and she hears footsteps inside the toilet. A thunderstorm appears in the ceiling and she smells rotting wood as a voice wails for vengeance. A skeleton's hand shoots out of the toilet and grabs Helen, making the toilet break off the hinges. In the kitchen, liquidated peat pours out of the taps and floods the room until it wakes Helen's father up. The Bogman skeleton introduces himself as Marg and accuses Helen's family of killing him. Helen frantically denies it as the skeleton pulls her towards the toilet. Her parents burst into the room as her brother Damien runs to his room for cover. Helen throws a comic to her father, who rolls it and strikes Marg, turning it into a spear. Marg disintegrates into dust and the thunder clouds disappear, leaving the messy kitchen and the wrecked toilet behind. It would take three weeks for the house to be cleaned and fixed, and the epilogue notes that Helen would do the most work. Meanwhile, Marg's disintegrated remains are gathered in a bin bag with peat and dumped in the local landfill, but it is likely that Marg might return someday.
The Broken-Down Cottage
Augustus Filch hated: going to school, his parents, his friends (although the feeling was ironically mutual), and his boring life. Wanting a fresh start, he steals money from his mother's purse and rides the bus into the countryside. After making his way through the creepy woods, he finds an old, abandoned cottage named Dun' Inn and sneaks inside. Downstairs looked old and empty apart from a rocking chair by a working fireplace. A boy is there and introduces himself as Arthur, who had run away from his home as well, many years ago. They share biscuits and Augustus' stolen snacks and decide to prank call.
They telephone the police and claim that armed burglars had broken in. Several officers with dogs arrive minutes later and find the two boys cackling and no burglars. The chief of police warns them of crying wolf as he orders the rest of his team out. The next prank call victims are the ambulance service, who arrived minutes later, looking for a boy in shock. Augustus is lying on his back trying to hide his smirk as Arthur acts concerned, but then the two boys begin to laugh, and the ambulance team leave furious with the same message that the police officer had said, but Arthur had already grabbed the telephone to call the fire department, who arrived minutes later. The firefighters leave furious, leaving the boys laughing until their sides hurt. After gaining their composure, the two boys fall asleep in front of the fireplace.
The next day, the boys wake up feeling cold. Arthur suggests doing another prank call but Augustus is not in the mood and telephones his parents to take him home. The parents arrive much later to see a burnt Dun' Inn surrounded by the local fire brigade, ambulances and the police. The chief of police explains that there is a possibility that the house burnt down approximately overnight, due to the open fireplace inside. Augustus' mother says that her son had telephoned her from the house to come with his father to collect him because they saw ghosts and were scared for their lives; "Sounds like him," the chief of police mumbled to himself. Augustus' parents are allowed inside and find Augustus and another boy unharmed. Augustus' mother asks if they remembered what the ghosts looked like. The boys reply that the ghosts looked like them, then turn around and walk through the walls.
Guilt Ghost
An unnamed man went to a bar and had a bar brawl with another customer. He punched the customer, who fell to their death, and ran away until he was far enough to not be recognised. He buys a house to start a new life and forget about the accident. One day, he hears a voice whispering about the customer's death. The man shushes it. It is the voice of a tiny ghost behind his ear, which whispers that it will not disappear until the man confesses. When the police appear at the front door to ask questions about the bar death, the ghost gives snide commentary as the officer shows off the victim's photograph. The man denies that he ever saw and/or met the customer. The ghost grows to the size of a parrot and sits on the man's shoulder.
The man struggles to sleep as the parrot-sized ghost never moves from his shoulder and continues to remind him about his lies. The police officer returns with a scarf that the man had worn on the night of the bar brawl. Despite the officer pointing out the DNA all over it, the man denies being at the bar and/or being involved with any altercations. The parrot-sized ghost jumps off his shoulder and turns into a talking alligator. This version of the ghost never leaves the man's side and never shuts up: it purposely circles the man's feet when he walks to trip him up and the man loses any chance at friendships because he is stubborn and rude (ironically towards the alligator they cannot see) to them.
The police officer returns to the house with another officer. The man is drowsy and irritable, with a face full of stubble, exhausted from the alligator ghost's week-long monologuing. The officers have actually come to arrest him because the autopsy and forensic evidence finds him the culprit but the man still denies that he was involved with the bar patron's death. The alligator rolls itself into the corner of the room and begins to shapeshift again, growing a pinkish texture, and turns into a man, and says that he killed the bar patron; he is arrested and escorted out of the house. The man is confused but delighted that his ghost took the blame. He walks into his kitchen to take out beer to celebrate but his hand slides through the handle of the fridge, discovering that he has switched places with his guilt ghost.
A Lesson From History
Elisa joins the queue outside a school hall where her history exam is due to take place within minutes. She hated history lessons and had no motivation to prepare for any tests so she stands worried next to the rest of the students, who are firing miscellaneous questions at each other about a variety of history topics. Miss de Burm the monitoring teacher allows the girls inside and everyone sits at their assigned desks. When the exam begins, Elisa is the only person who is not writing and begins to fidget with her pen until she has ink all over her tongue. She hears a voice call her name but everyone is distracted with their papers. Elisa assumes she imagined the voice until the ghost of a little girl wearing a pinafore approaches her. The ghost girl is named Penny and explains that she went to the school 100 years ago but died when the school caught fire during her History exam. History exams during this time of year is a school tradition so she has returned to haunt it ever since. Miss de Burm marches through the aisles to confront Elisa for talking. As she warns her, Penny dances around and does loud, distracting things, showing that only Elisa can see her.
Elisa realises that she had no need to worry about her exam now that someone who had haunted the school for a century was talking to her. Penny agrees to do the exam, picks up the pen and starts answering the questions as Elisa relaxes in her chair. After the writing is finished, the ghost girl says goodbye and walks out the hall through the fire exit door. On Results Day, the history class stands by a bulletin board poster full of everyone's grades, ordered from best to worst by percentage. Rachel, best friend and the student Elisa envied the most, is expectantly at the top of the list with 98% whereas Elisa is shocked to discover that she is at the bottom with 0%. The last paragraph of the story points out that it had not occurred to Elisa that Penny the ghost girl had paid attention to the world around her during her haunting, or whether she had been a studiously-diligent student when she was alive.
The Ghost of Christmas Turkeys Past
Jack loves eating turkey for every meal. His parents loathe the lack of variety but Jack can detect whenever his mother attempts to sneak different but similar-looking meat into her shopping basket. Jack enjoys turkey enough to go on holidays to Greece to see the world's best turkeys. Determined to end his son's turkey obsession for good, on Christmas Eve, Jack's father climbs the roof of a neighbour's house and waits for Father Christmas. Eventually, Father Christmas arrives on his sleigh, crashing into the roof at the shock of seeing a man sitting on it. Jack's father interrupts the magical old man's rant to explain why he caused the distraction. Father Christmas is disappointed because he loves turkey as much as Jack but reluctantly uses his Christmas magic.
Jack wakes up to see a one-legged talking chicken in his bedroom. It introduces itself as the Ghost of Christmas Turkeys Past and flies Jack to an empty field. It shows Jack a retirement home for unused turkeys, showing elderly anthropomorphic turkeys looking exhausted and miserable. It points out how turkey is wasted throughout holiday seasons and then neglected when it does not live up to expectations, adding that it caused his leg to disappear. Jack points out that he still loves eating turkey as turkey bones rain over him for 20 minutes. Another turkey appears, dressed as an army general: The Ghost of Christmas Turkeys Present. It takes Jack to a broiler room full of turkeys and explains how abusive and terrifying the poultry farming industry is for its species, especially during December. Jack begins to feel unwell from watching the turkeys suffering but admits that he still likes turkey regardless. In walks a turkey the size of a human dressed similarly to a hippie who takes Jack's hand and flies up to the outer atmosphere. Jack feels more queasy as the turkey circles the Earth a few times and lands in front of a house. The turkey explains that they have time-travelled 100 years into the future, to 2090. Jack looks through the window to see a family of anthropomorphic turkeys sitting down at a table for Christmas dinner. The mother walks in with a lid-covered plate and places it in the middle of the table as the excited family look on. The lid is removed to reveal Jack's cooked corpse.
It is the morning of Christmas Day when Jack wakes up screaming from his nightmare. At the inevitable Christmas dinner, Jack barely eats. His father (looking notably smug) points out that he did not immediately reach for a piece of turkey. Jack gathers some of the surrounding vegetables as he says that he is not in the mood today. His father looks up to the ceiling and silently prays his thanks to Father Christmas.
Rogues Gallery: The Seven Most Wanted Ghosts in Britain
This story is a list of the seven most-wanted ghosts in Britain. In order:
- Old Hollow Legs (Case number 101X): Winner of the Greediest Ghost of Greenwich competition. He is a giant head on a pair of legs, who died ten years before due to unspecified reasons about a slice of chocolate fudge. He often steals from the living's fridges or waits under dinner tables to catch falling scraps;
- Transparent Tony (Case number 102X): Tony causes people to lie badly, especially children. He whispers into targets' ears and the target repeats what they heard;
- The Headless Coachman (Case number 103X): Similar to the Headless Horseman, the Coachman drives a horse-drawn coach and causes traffic jams on the M25;
- The Bermuda Triangle (Case number 104X): A secret organisation full of the ghosts of 700 South American gangsters based in the sea. They frequently steal model boats and remote control planes from unsuspecting children;
- Nostalgic Nora (Case number 105X): Nora possesses the elderly, causing them to talk about trivial things about their childhood for long periods of time;
- The Immortal Remains of Henry Fink (Case number 106X): The smelly, disembowelled remains of Henry Fink, who was killed by an axe murderer in 1970, which scatter themselves around every house they haunt;
- Smudger (Case number 107X): The reason why eaten food stains clothes and smears against lips and cheeks.
Themes
Compared to the previous book in the series, the stories in Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids reflects the title consistently because ghosts appear as main characters, whether heroes or villains. They are frequently poltergeists that can act the same as they would when alive or they have magical powers ("Rogues Gallery", "Guilt Ghost", "The Ghost of Christmas Turkeys Past", "Tag"), and vary from turkey ghosts, child ghosts, and Judge A. Phantom Esq, who punishes stealing children.[2] The first story, "Grandmother's Footsteps", used the phrase ghost story as word play because the plot twist of the grandmother being dead all along changed the phrase's meaning to "story from a ghost";[3] "A Lesson From History" uses wordplay for ghostwriter because a ghost wrote Elisa's exam. Meanwhile, "Guilt Ghost" and "The Broken-Down Cottage" end with the main character(s) discovering that they had died. "The Big Sleep" is the only story that is not about or features ghosts.
There are also examples of ethical arguments on environmental issues: "An Elephant Never Forgets" uses the social class of the wealthy Crumpdump family[4] to imply that they have participated in trophy hunting occasionally, Mr Crumpdump boasting that he paid someone to kill a baby elephant for him,[5] and his children leaving their present next to a rug made out of leopard skin in the hallway because they did not like the present, although they were prepared to have an entire elephant corpse.[6] In "Burgers", Seamus' greed and desire to own the most successful restaurant in the world makes him deforest the Amazonia.[7] No character is portrayed as sympathetic.[8][9]
"The Well", "A Lesson From History" and "Bogman" are stories about laziness: Elisa refuses to prepare for an exam in a lesson she loathes and then makes a ghost do the test for her, whereas "Bogman" and "The Well" are also about procrastination. "Tag" is about envy, which leads to kleptomania. "The Broken-Down Cottage" is the first story in the book series that is about the dangers of playing pranks, along with "Knock Down Ginger" and "The Gas Man Cometh" from More Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids, "Monty's Python" from Nasty Little Beasts, and "The Piranha Sisters" from Blubbers and Sicksters.
Television adaptation
Only six stories were not adapted for the cartoon programmes: "The Well", "School Dinners", "The Big Sleep", "Guilt Ghost", "The Ghost of Christmas Turkeys Past", and "Rogues Gallery". Out of these six, "The Big Sleep" and "Rogues Gallery" are a short story and a list, respectively. It has not been explained why the rest were not adapted, however.
With the rest, there have been changes in the adaptations. For example:
- "Burgers"' episode was renamed as "Burgerskip" (Series 1, Episode 8),[10] after the eponymous restaurant. Seamus was renamed as Oswald and dressed as a cowboy instead of a clown.
- "Tag" (Series 2, Episode 9)[11] changed the owner of the football kit from A. Phantom to Jim Spectre.
- "Bogman" (Series 4, Episode 5)[12] changed the action of Helen throwing the comic book to her father to her brother Damien throwing the comic book to him instead. In the book, Damien had run to his bedroom to hide.
- "A Lesson From History" was adapted as the episode "The History Lesson" (Series 1, Episode 11).[10] The main character was renamed Elizabeth from Elisa, which can be the full version of "Elisa".
- "An Elephant Never Forgets" changed minor details:
- When Belinda wished the rain would stop, it is not mentioned that the family were going out to the shoe shop;
- The rug that the umbrella stand is placed next to is tiger skin instead of leopard;
- Percy wishes he was 10 feet (3.0 m) tall instead of twenty;
- The children's wishes that get them out of school and having a nighttime bath are not included;
- Mr and Mrs Crumpdump move out of their now-haunted mansion instead of divorcing.
Publication history
The original front cover was illustrated by Bobbie Spargo, who was also illustrator.[13] Sue Heap illustrated the front cover in the 1995 edition,[14] but Spargo's story illustrations were still included in the book (he only illustrated for "Rogues Gallery").[15][16] After the cartoon series aired on CITV, the covers were re-designed by Honeycomb Animation, the producers of the cartoon.[17]
The book is said to have officially gone out of print in 2010.[1] It was briefly available on Kindle in 2011, published by Orion.[18]
Pub. date | Format | No. of pages | Publisher | Notes | ISBN | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 February 1992 | Hardback | 144 | André Deutsch Ltd. | ISBN 9780590540049 | [19] | |
20 October 1995 | Paperback (Mass Market) | 192 | Scholastic Inc. |
| ISBN 0590132423, 9780590132428 | [20] |
1 January 1996 | Audio book (Cassette) | — | Chivers Audio Books | Read by Andrew Sachs | ISBN 0745124712, 9780745124711 | [21] |
21 January 2000 | Paperback | 192 | Scholastic | Front cover designed by Honeycomb Animation | ISBN 043901445X, 9780439014458 | [22] |
2011 | Kindle Edition | 86 | Orion Publishing |
| ASIN B00B8SNN1G (ISBN 978-1-908285-05-8) | [23] |
24 January 2017 | Audio book | 2:48:27 | Audible | Audio from Chivers Audio Books | ISBN 1536641731, 9781536641738 | [24] |
References
- "Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids by Jamie Rix (Paperback, 1995)". Retrieved 23 November 2019.
- Ghostly Tales 1995, p. 29, "Tag": What Terry didn't know was that he would never be challenged by A. PHANTOM because A. PHANTOM did not exist. A. PHANTOM was a ghost — an exceedingly law-abiding ghost, who travelled through time and space in a never ending [sic] quest to bring thieving children to justice.
- Ghostly Tales 1995, pp. 7-8, "Grandmother's Footsteps":
- Then I added, 'If Jolyon's ghost was not a real ghost after all, then you lied to me.'
- 'Did I?' said my grandmother.
- "You said that you were going to tell me a ghost story."
- "And so I did."
- "And you definitely said that the ghost would appear at the end."
- "That's right," said my grandmother. "And here I am."
- She stopped at the door and removed her head to rest her tired shoulders. Then she just disappeared, and I was sure I heard her ghostly footsteps treading a path back into a different world.
- Ghostly Tales 1995, pp. 77-78, "An Elephant Never Forgets": Belinda and Percy Crumpdump belonged to Mr and Mrs Crumpdump of Crumpdump Road, Crumpdump town, in Crumpdump County. Mr Crumpdump was a very, very wealthy man and owned an entire town all by himself.
- Ghostly Tales 1995, pp. 84–85, An Elephant Never Forgets:
- 'It's an elephant's foot,' said Mr Crumpdump proudly. [...] 'You remember those baby elephants we saw in Africa, the ones you wanted to bring home with you?'
- [The children] nodded.
- 'Well, obviously, I couldn't bring a whole elephant back to England, so I had a hunter cut off one of the baby's feet. Isn't it lovely? [...] Of course [the elephant]'s not walking around. He's dead. I had him shot before I chopped his leg off!'
- Ghostly Tales 1995, p. 81, An Elephant Never Forgets:
- Belinda tossed the curls off her forehead and laughed at her mother. 'Oh, Mummy!' she said. 'You are a silly mummy! It [the elephant] wouldn't have to be alive.'
- 'We could shoot it,' added Percy.
- Ghostly Tales 1995, pp. 11-12, Burgers (chpt. 2):
- 'Down there,' shouted the pilot to the clown sitting behind him.
- 'What is?' shouted Seamus back, trying to make himself heard above the noise of the engine.
- 'The greenest, most fertile land you'll find for thousands of miles,' said the pilot.
- 'But it's all trees! [...] I can't graze my cattle on twigs and branches! [...] They need wide open spaces.'
- 'So?' said the pilot. 'Cut all the trees down.'
- 'I know,' said Seamus [...] 'I'll cut all the trees down and graze my cattle there.' [...] Seamus' eyes lit up with pound signs as the helicopter climbed steeply and headed for home.
- Ghostly Tales 1995, p. 10, "Burgers": Seamus' evil plan for world domination through the minds and stomachs of children was having a far more sinister effect. In his bid for global expansion, Seamus was sacrificing the heart and lungs of the planet. The Amazonian Rain Forest.
- Ghostly Tales 1995, pp. 79-80, An Elephant Never Forgets:
- "Our little babies are not happy!" blubbed the stupid woman [Mrs Crumpdump] in the bush hat.
- "Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids - TV Episode Calendar". Archived from the original on 26 September 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
- "Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids - TV Episode Calendar". Archived from the original on 26 September 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
- "Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids - TV Episode Calendar". Archived from the original on 26 September 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
- "GHOSTLY TALES FOR GHASTLY KIDS AUDIO CASSETTE TAPE-JAMIE RIX ANDREW SACHS". Archived from the original on 12 December 2019. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
- Ghostly Tales 1995, [BACK COVER]: "Cover illustration by Sue Heap"
- Ghostly Tales 1995, [COPYRIGHT NOTICE]: "Inside illustrations © Bobbie Spargo, 1992"
- Ghostly Tales 1995, pp. 176-184
- Bor, Simon. "The Grizzly Corner of My Bookshelf". Blogspot. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
- "Grizzly e-books for Gruesome Kindles". Blogspot. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
- "Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids by Jamie Rix". Retrieved 21 November 2019.
- "Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids by Jamie Rix". Retrieved 21 November 2019.
- "Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids by Jamie Rix". Retrieved 21 November 2019.
- "Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids by Jamie Rix". Retrieved 21 November 2019.
- Rix, Jamie (June 2011). Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids. Internet Archive (6 ed.). Jamie Rix (Orion Publishing). ISBN 978-1-908285-05-8. Retrieved 27 December 2019.
- "Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids (Audio CD)". Retrieved 21 November 2019.
Literature cited
- Rix, Jamie (20 October 1995). Ghostly Tales for Ghastly Kids (second ed.). Scholastic Books UK. ISBN 9780590132428.