Horowitz Horror

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Horowitz Horror
Horowitz Horror cover.jpg
Horowitz Horror front cover, British first edition.
Author Anthony Horowitz
Cover artist Larry Rostant
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesOrchard Black Apples
Genre Horror
Publisher Orchard Books
Publication date
1999
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages196 pp (first edition)
ISBN 1-84121-455-8
OCLC 55076934
Followed by More Horowitz Horror  

Horowitz Horror and More Horowitz Horror are two collections of short horror stories written by Anthony Horowitz, published in 1999 and 2000 respectively. A third set of stories called More Bloody Horowitz (or Bloody Horowitz in the United States) was published in 2009 (and later released as Scared to Death). The first two collections were also published in a single collection called The Complete Horowitz Horror (later released as Horowitz Horror: The Ultimate Collection).

Contents

Horowitz Horror was first published in 1999 and contained nine short stories. The stories in Horowitz Horror are written in a mixture of first-person and third-person narrative. Out of the nine stories, two (Light Moves and The Man with the Yellow Face) are conveyed from the viewpoint of the leading character.

Synopsis

More Horowitz Horror
More Horowitz Horror.jpg
First edition
Author Anthony Horowitz
Cover artist Larry Rostant
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesOrchard Black Apples
Genre Horror
Publisher Orchard Books
Publication date
2000
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages189 pp (first edition)
ISBN 1-84121-607-0
Preceded by Horowitz Horror  

More Horowitz Horror

More Horowitz Horror was published as a sequel collection in 2000. The book is marketed as containing eight stories. However, the tales obviously written by Horowitz himself are supplemented by an allegedly unauthorised add-on, written satirically by a serial killer.

As with its forerunner, More Horowitz Horror is not confined to third-person narrative. "The Hitchhiker" and "Twist Cottage" are written in first-person, while "Burnt" (renamed as Burned in the US release) is expressed as a series of diary entries. Meanwhile, "The Shortest Horror Story Ever Written" communicates directly with the reader through second-person narrative.

Synopses

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