The Frighteners follows the quest of Peter Laws, a Baptist minister with a penchant for the macabre, to understand why so many people love things that are
spooky, morbid and
downright repellent. He meets
vampires, hunts
werewolves in Hull, talks to a man who has slept on a mortuary slab to help him deal with a diagnosis, and is chased by a
chainsaw-wielding maniac through a farmhouse full of hanging bodies.
Staring into the darkness of a Transylvanian night, he asks: What is it that makes millions of people seek to be disgusted and freaked out? And, in a world that worships rationality and points an accusing finger at
violent video games and
gruesome films, can an interest in horror culture actually give us
safe ways to confront our mortality? Might it even have power to re-enchant our jaded world?
Grab your crucifixes, pack the silver bullets, and join the Sinister Minister on his romp into our morbid curiosities.

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CHAPTER ONE

THE SINISTER MINISTER

Iām in Luton airport, and the guy on security is rummaging through my bag. He keeps squeezing and prodding stuff. Checking if my pants are ticking or if my toothpaste contains a nerve agent. He asks me where Iām off to. Finally! Iāve been hoping he would ask that because I get punch-the-air excited when anybody does. I beam at him and I say, all chipper, āIām going on holiday.ā
āYes, but where to?ā
[mental drum roll] āTransylvania!ā
He drops the toothpaste, frowns, then eyes me up and down. āReally?ā
āYep.ā
āItās a real place?ā
āCourse! Itās in Romania.ā
āYouāre going to vampire land?ā He tilts his head. āOn holiday?ā
I want to slap my hands together like a sea lion. āIām staying in a spooky old Saxon village. Itās gonna be amazing.ā
He does something next that Iāve seen other people do in this situation: he slowly glances at my wife, as if sheāll explain this anomaly. Itās not like heās found cocaine in my bag, or a severed limb. Heās not horrified by me, but I can tell heās confused. My wife shrugs: āHe likes morbid stuff, and heās wanted to go since he was a kid.ā She looks apologetic. āItās his 40th birthday present.ā
His eyebrows spring up. āYes, but why on earth would anybody want to go there?ā
To be honest, itās the same reaction Iāve had from most people this last month, when Iāve told them where Iām headed for five days. I say the five-syllable word and they do a double take ⦠Transylvania. They donāt exactly cross themselves and stumble backwards, like the gasping, creeped-out innkeepers from the first ten minutes of a Hammer Horror movie, but itās close. A mate of mine had a similar frown last week. All he could say was: āWhy? Is Benidorm shut?ā Another told me about her upcoming break in France, and when I mentioned my trip she burst out laughing, right in my face. āWow, Peter,ā she said. āYou are so weird.ā
Iām used to these sorts of looks. Like when folks come round my house and see my home office; they canāt avoid the huge vintage drive-in posters of 70s movies like Draculaās Dog (1978) and Nightwing (1979). Or my badass Grizzly (1976) poster that screams 18ft of Gut-Munching Fury! Or maybe they spot my bookshelf, which is bulging with titles like Dreadful Pleasures, Ghoul Britannia and Everyone Loves a Good Train Wreck. Maybe they spot my signed collection of the complete soundtrack to all of the Friday the 13th movies (about a guy in a hockey mask who chops up teenagers), or if theyāre really observant, they might recognise a chunk of stone that I nicked from a supposedly haunted church, famous for grave desecrations in the 60s. I have a piece of it on my window sill. Next to that are the original storyboards from an 80s horror movie called The Mutilator (1985). And piles of magazines and books with real-life tales of the paranormal.
When guests see these morbid items, as I politely take their coats and offer them Earl Grey, they sometimes give me a look that says: Is it wise to accept this tea?
Iāve had the youāre-a-bit-kooky glance a fair bit because Iāve loved creepy and macabre things pretty much my whole life. And by that I mean Iāve really loved them. The dark, the mysterious, the weird, the scary, theyāre valuable to me. They matter. I reckon if you slice my brain open, thereād be a whole section dedicated to the gothic and strange. Or more likely itās threaded all over, like when you spill coffee on your laptop and it gets everywhere.
One of the earliest places I noticed my love of the dark side was at theme parks. Iād always slap open the map and search for the ghost train first. The big rollercoasters? The thrill rides? I skipped them, because I get spectacularly motion sick. I braved the waltzer once just to impress a girl and ended up puking on her shoulder and chest. Yet Iāll giddily push through cobwebs and hanging fake tarantulas in a fright ride because it clicks a pleasure switch in me that I donāt always understand; I just know that itās there.
When Halloween comes around, Iām the fella in the supermarket lurking in the tacky novelty fang aisle. Iām trying on masks and chasing my squealing kids down the ready-meal section. Iāve got this compulsion to squeeze and prod every single prop to see if it makes a ghostly scream or a blood-thinning cackle. Often I set them all off at once, just so I can unleash 30 wailing witches through an otherwise jolly store.
My humour cortex has a little horror spilled on it too. I saw a photo the other day of a plastic baby-changing unit, one of those drop-down ones you get in public toilets. Somebody had written on it: PLACE SACRIFICE HERE. Iām not exactly āproā baby sacrifice, but man, I laughed hard at that. When I showed it to others, they looked at me like I was insane. Which made me chuckle even more. So I looked even ⦠um ⦠insane-er.
Yeah, Iām that guy.
In the car, I sometimes listen to electro, sometimes kitsch lounge music ā the type youād hear in a 70s supermarket. And sometimes I even listen to normal everyday music that plays on low-number radio stations. But often itās the soundtrack to films like Creepshow (1982) or Tenebrae (1982), Donāt Look Now (1973) or Pet Sematary (1989). And as the violins squeal (minor chords, naturally) Iām popping to the shops or doing the school run. Not feeling glum or depressed at all, just living my life like everybody else, only threading it with a little spook.
Now, other fans of the morbid donāt have any issue with this at all. They slip into the passenger seat, hear the music and say, Wow! This is The Omen soundtrack, cool. But let me be frank, and perhaps obvious: most other people donāt say āwowā or ācoolā. When they gather in my kitchen for my 40th birthday and see the cake has meticulous icing replicating the hotel carpet from Stanley Kubrickās 1980 film The Shining (complete with sugary axe embedded in the centre) they say Oh yeah, you like those things donāt you? And thereās a nervy little twitch behind the awkward smile. A flicker that makes a statement: Maybe itās not just odd to love morbid culture, maybe itās odder than odd. Maybe itās twisted, dangerous even, to be so into the dark side of life.
Thing is though, Iāve been like this my whole life. I even remember the reports from my Parentsā Evenings. They consisted of a lot of āyes ā¦, but ā¦ā phrases from my teachers:
English: Yes heās good, but does every story have to have a werewolf in it?
Art: Yes, he tries hard, but arenāt there other things heād like to draw apart from skulls with chomping fangs? Plus, weāre running out of red crayon.
Music: Yes, I appreciate heās teaching himself the glockenspiel, Mrs Laws, but heās eight and heās playing the theme from The Exorcist over and over. Itās creeping Mrs Bates out.
My mum even says that when I was born (during a storm that blew the lights out, apparently ā how ominously cool is that?) I grabbed a pair of scissors and held them aloft. She immediately decided Iād either be prime minister or a mass murderer. Thankfully, her bizarrely polarised prediction never came true, but, at the same time, I have always felt a bit different. But then, doesnāt everybody? You probably feel odd sometimes, in those quiet moments in a coffee shop when you wonder if youāre the only person in town listening to that piece of music, reading that particular book, thinking that specific thought.
Some people use culture to make them laugh, others only watch tearjerkers thatāll guarantee a good cry. Iāll take those too ā Iāll happily watch a romcom. But my heart beats fastest when I read a spooky tale of hauntings or watch a scary movie, or when I sit on a plane thatās slicing through the clouds towards Transyl-bloody-vania! My wife Joy sits next to me. Sheās watching some BBC crime drama on her tablet while I devour The Bedside, Bathtub & Armchair Companion to āDraculaā. Iām reading a wild fact about the real Dracula (and national hero) Vlad the Impaler. He once nailed turbans to the skulls of a group of Turks because they refused to take them off in his presence. He got all sarcastic and said, āIāll help you keep your custom,ā and then the whacking began. Itās a barbaric incident, and I despise real-life violence, yet for some reason my brain notes the long passage of time since this incident happened, then files the story under ācoolā.
Saying that out loud probably sets warning bells off in some peopleās heads. For example, I recently read about a vintage issue of Cosmopolitan magazine which told women that the āvideo storeā was a great place to meet men ⦠unless they were in the horror aisle. In which case, such a man would obviously have āquestionable feelings about womenā and would be clearly, āa man to avoidā.1
Is that really what people think? Is it what you think ā that there ās a monster crouching inside me, waiting to unzip my chest and climb right out? And what about the other fans of the macabre, the millions scattered across living rooms, trains and airport terminals, libraries and swimming pool loungers, watching or reading grisly forensic crime dramas, or playing out ghostly visitations or murder in video games? Are all these people death-obsessed freaks? Violent time bombs, even?
Iām especially conscious that peopleās frowns deepen when they hear my profession. I might be wrong, but I suspect that itās this that makes people think Iām really off base.
You see, I love darkness, but Iām also a church minister.

Weāve landed in the Transylvanian city of Sibiu.
The airport has strip lights, clean floors and industrial strength hand dryers which shine little blue lights on my wrists before trying to blow all the skin off. Itās like any other airport Iāve been in. Iām not sure what I expected really: large oak doors creaking open? A shuffling hunchbacked man with a sheet over his arm, holding a candelabra and grunting: Passport, sir? Did sir pack his satchel hisself, sir?
Iām not disappointed though, because as weāre collecting our bags from the conveyor belt all I keep thinking is: Iām in Transylvania, Iām in Transylvania. I catch Joyās gaze. She winks at me. This is a cosmic wormhole away from her ideal holiday. Sheād rather be on a city break, eating fish in a glam restaurant, but she knows this matters. She understands that I have a bucket list like anybody else, only mineās scrawled with Gothic swirls and thunderbolts.
There are supposed to be three other English couples on the same trip as us, but we havenāt seen them yet. I start scanning the crowd looking for people who look like theyād choose scary castles over poolside karaoke. Thereās no guy with studded boots and a long leather jacket striding about; no top-hatted pseudo-Goth, creeping to the Coke machine in a ādark and epicā way. Everyone just looks normal. But thatās the thing about us fright fans. We can blend in. Some of us even wear fleeces. We lurk in unexpected places.
We brus...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- CHAPTER ONE: The Sinister Minister
- CHAPTER TWO: Theatre of Blood
- CHAPTER THREE: Wired For Fright
- CHAPTER FOUR: Hiding the Bodies
- CHAPTER FIVE: Zombies, Everywhere
- CHAPTER SIX: Killer Culture
- CHAPTER SEVEN: The Beast Within
- CHAPTER EIGHT: Deadtime Stories
- CHAPTER NINE: The Haunted
- CHAPTER TEN: Sister
- Acknowledgements
- Copyright
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