"The Ravaged Night" by Jean-Baptiste Del Amo, gripped by horror
%3Aquality(70)%3Afocal(2335x4692%3A2345x4702)%2Fcloudfront-eu-central-1.images.arcpublishing.com%2Fliberation%2FL6MGVXEJ5BES3MB3KVHDMX7RYM.jpg&w=1280&q=100)
Article reserved for subscribers
The Libé Books folder
The house even creeps into their dreams. (Olivier Metzger/Modds)
Almost all of us have the image of a haunted house in mind. Whether we believe in ghosts or not, certain places are known to harbor them. They frighten, deter buyers, and excite hunters. Fiction has long been nourished by them, each with its own references. Oscar Wilde's The Canterville Ghost left a bloody and indelible mark on the floor of the library at Canterville Chase Manor and in the mind of a terrified little girl. A piece of junk for fans of John Carpenter or Wes Craven films, raised on Halloween , Village of the Damned , Scream or A Nightmare on Elm Street . It is above all
The Libé Science-Fiction Books notebook
Libération