Attain Ghost Stories: The Best Of The Daily Telegraphs Ghost Story Competition Illustrated By Lorna Bradbury EPub

on Ghost Stories: The Best of the Daily Telegraphs Ghost Story Competition

In, the Daily Telegraph launched a ghost story competition, with the six winning entries published in this short ebook, I'd had it on my Amazon wishlist for ages, and as it's onlyp I'm not sure why I didn't buy it earlier, Anyway, I decided I was in the mood for some ghost stories this weekend so I impulsebought it,

A couple of things to note about the stories are:
, I assume there was a very limited word count for any stories entered into this competition, as all of them are extremely short, This obviously limits what can be done with them and often makes the conclusions feel incomplete and unsatisfying, I think the betterwritten stories in the collection could have been turned into something far more effective if the authors had been given a higher word count to play with.

. As absolutely every other review of this anthology on Goodreads and Amazon has pointed out, poor editing spoils the reading experience, For some reason, there are lowercase letters at the beginning of sentences and lowercase 'I's and proper nouns all the way through the book, Really not sure how this has ended up happening, but it's very annoying!

The six stories are:
Grace by Gill Baconnier: There were some beautiful turns of phrase in this story, but in other places it was clunky and felt rushed.
I was interested, but not really compelled,
Daniel's Caul by Ceri Hughes: I really didn't like this, Poorly written with cringeworthy dialogue and a rather baffling plot,
A Hollow Cause by Craig Drew: This was more like it: wellwritten, interesting and properly fleshedout central character, effective building of tension.
The schlocky ending let it down, though,
The Rites of Zhou by Justin Crozier: Another good one in terms of style and theme, but there really wasn't space to resolve it all within such a short story.
The ending was far too abrupt,
Gimme Shelter by Pat Black: Quite atmospheric, but too obviously amateurish it reminded me of something you might have come up with for a GCSE English assignment and definitely didn't feel as accomplished as the previous two.

Friends by Richard Crompton: The winner of the competition, and it's not hard to see why as this was definitely the most original of the stories.
I enjoyed it but, again, wished it could have been much longer,

I enjoyed a few of these tales but, overall, the collection was more frustrating than anything else, I'm glad I satisified my curiosity, but there are lots and lots of superior ghost stories out there! If you are looking for ghost stories and cold chills down your spine you will be soooo disappointed.
But if you are ok with some melancholy and atmosphere then this will be fine, I found the stories haunting but in the way old photos stay with you, Only the first even tried to be scary if you ask me and the title is hugely misleading but once I made my peace with it, they were fine.
Gave up on this book which isn't like me, It's lots of short stories and had too many mistakes in it, I was rather disappointed with this short ebook, I suspect that "The Telegraph" made the parameters too tight for many writers, I saw the competition advertised and thought of entering it myself but you had to keep the body of the story so light to avoid exceeding the maximum word count that I could not enter something that I considered fully formed.
As a consequence there are a few cliffhangers which are a little disappointing and a few where the authors have seriously pared the story back to reach the acceptable word count.
Despite these rather bad comments this book is still worth a purchase for a few reasons, Some of the tales are very good and work well even in short form,
The book is either free or costs so little that I did not notice the cost and you get to read seminal tales from quite a few that may well become excellent writers given a little more space to exercise their imaginations and word skills a little more.
There are a few writers included in this volume that I feel will produce something of worth, Very interesting. The poor editing made reading some of these stories hard work in some places, I also found the stories quite variable, Some I really enjoyed and some I got to the end of feeling I must have missed something, I particularly enjoyed 'Gimme Shelter' which was a chilling tale and 'Friends' which was clever and up to date, The extract of 'The Small Hand' was enjoyable and I went on the buy the full version, A collection of great short stories that arent outwardly SPOOKY but leave you with a bit of a spine tingle, I enjoyed them. good thing it was free, This book was not bad, but if you're looking for scary ghost stories, keep looking, None of the stories in this collection are at all scary, nor are they intended to be, They are interesting. They might even be considered literature, But they are just simply relayed to the reader without any attempt to make them spooky or otherwise "ghostly", I have to admit I was a bit disappointed I had this book on my TBR list for most of a year, before I finally spent the.
for it yeah, I'm a big spender, The stories were interesting, like I said, but I was looking for something spooky, eerie, scary, gory, whatever, Just not "interesting". My favourite stories from this collection are Friends and Gimme Shelter, Though others like Caul and Grace are pretty chilling as well, I found each short story to be interesting yet a little odd and eerie, Each piece was well written and well layed out, Not chill worthy but still worth reading, Disappointing. If I did not know better, I would assume that the endings were actually cut off of some of the stories, Inthousands of people
Attain Ghost Stories: The Best Of The Daily Telegraphs Ghost Story Competition Illustrated By Lorna Bradbury EPub
submitted ghost stories to The Daily Telegraph's first ghost story competition, Standards were chillingly high and only the spookiest went through to the shortlist of six, Presented here are short stories from Gill Baconnier, Justin Crozier, Ceri Hughes, Pat Black, Craig Drew and the winner, Richard Crompton, whose story Friends is an uncanny take on social networking.
Currently available only in ebook form they are the perfect company for a long winter's night, .