Full description not available
B**A
Five Stars
Great stories and just the right length to keep the interest of all listening.
W**N
Great Camping Book
I bought this book for scout camp outs. I haven't told many of the stories, but my young boys have read them all and really like them.
D**K
Five Stars
Positive transaction. Would buy again.
V**H
Good short scary stories for party-telling.
Stories are 2-4 pages so they are easy to read at a party or become familiar enough with to tell from memory.
E**T
The author delivers as promised.
"Campfire Stories" delivers exactly as promised by Dr. Forgey: it coaches the reader in the fine art of telling scary campfire stories. Each of the twenty-one stories of deadly adventures, crawling quilts, cannibalism, poisonous snakes, and talking corpses is written out with the places where the teller should slow down, raise his or her voice ("THOUSANDS, AND THOUSANDS OF THE ROACHES POUNDED HIM ON ALL SIDES. HE COULDN'T GET HIS BREATH, BUT HE HAD TO BREATHE!"), and/or scream ("AAAUUUGGGHHH!"). An outline follows each of the stories, so that the would-be teller of campfire tales can memorize the gist of the story while supplying his or her own background details. There is also the occasional epilogue, in which the author explains why he likes the story.The author spent 10 years as a scoutmaster to 3 different troops, and has honed these stories to the 11 - 15 age group. Don't expect to find any heroines--these stories seem to be strictly for boys. Of course, there aren't many heroes, either as a ghost story wouldn't be a ghost story if someone wasn't creeping about at night when he was strictly warned to stay inside.The stories: "The Valley of the Blue Mist" (my favorite); "The Human Hand;" "La Cucaracha Mine;" "The Partner;" "The Mackenzie River Ghost;" "Death of the Old Lion;" "The Ice Walker;" "The Message;" "The Haunting of the House on the Ridge;" "The Curse of the Australian Gold;" "The Lost Hunter;" "The Ghost at Sevenoaks" (the original of this story is "Moonlight Sonata" by Alexander Woollcott - it can be found in " Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural (Modern Library) "); "Cannibalism in the Cars;" "The Vampire of Groglin Grange;" "A Musical Enigma;" "The Haunting at Vine Street;" "Deluse's Golden Curse;" "The Talking Corpse;" "The Creeping Quilt;" "The Indian Chief's Wait."I found the slightest tinge of racism in one of the stories, but you can easily delete it when you tell the tale yourself.
B**E
Dare to scare your younger Scouts...
Should you need to pick between the available Scout campfire story books instead of buying them all, don't leave Dr. William Forgey's "CAMPFIRE STORIES: Things that Go Bump in the Night" off of your list."Stories to be good have to be credible" is the advice Forgey gives, and it's the credibility factor that sets this collection apart. These tales sound so real your audience may not see them as fiction. Youths 11 to 15 years old, (the suggested age group) will believe them up to a point, and they will like them. Properly told, even an adult audience should find some meat this anthology. Although the book is marketed to Scout leaders in particular, these are not "Scout" stories for the most part. Your non-Scout youth group will like them.Besides the original stories created by the author, CAMPFIRE STORIES includes Forgey's masterful adaptations of uncommon vintage ghost stories penned by others, and even offers a true tale, "Death of an Old Lion" as told by Ernest Thompson Seton. Even a story by Mark Twain comes included. All of these stories are highly memorable, with entertaining, suspenseful plots. In "The Valley of the Blue Mist," Forgey shares his version of this old story, which is found elsewhere under other names, but his is the best version I've yet seen.Only two of the stories out of the twenty were a disappointment: "La Cucaracha Mine," a pointless, plotless hole, and "The Indian Chief's Wait," which you will soon figure out is that familiar joke story, "Falling Rocks" in a poorly disguised form. The 5 stars are for the other eighteen "must-have" stories.At least the storytelling advice given in this book is practical and useful. Forgey includes a sequentially-numbered plot outline at the conclusion of each story, which I don't find necessary, but I'm certain many will find these most helpful. This book is a bargain!-Byron C. Justice, author of Haunted Camps and Violent Night
M**N
What camp did you go to.
I dont think the author of this book every sat at a campfire, let alone told a scary story. The 7 and 10 year olds at our campfire got up and walked away and the adults just moaned. Nothing but goody two shoes morals for endings and no suspence. Make up your own stories instead of purchasing this book.
R**O
Brilliant book
I bought a couple of campfire story books recently and this was my favorite. What sets it apart from other books is that there is a summary at the end of each story which helps you to retell them without needing to refer to the book. Being British I didn't connect to all of the stories but I was often able to change them to fit landmarks in Britain that I knew the kids would know about, for example gold mine to blue John mine in Derbyshire, pirate to smuggler in Cornwall. This is a very well written book that will definitely inspire you to retell the ones in the book or even weave some of your own. There are other volumes too which I will definitely track down.
E**E
Campfire Stories.
This book was a bit of a disappointment to me. I expected it to be a bit more frightening. It wasn't. Okay for children and teenagers.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
1 week ago