Do you remember the Hitchcock compilations of short stories?

I remember reading a bunch of these, though I’m not sure if mine were directed at children or not… one that I remember is a guy who has buddy who is a scientist, who basically regressed Alligators, trying to get dinosaurs, but ends up with a dragon. Good times!

About the same time(4th grade) I got into the Three Investigators as well.

I had to go home and look: the two I have are Stories for Late at Night and My Favorites in Suspense. Highlights include The Birds, It’s a Good Life, Second Night Out, and The Ash Tree. As I was looking at them, a kid came along with nothing to read and I put one in her hand. :slight_smile:

I used to have a couple; I think they must have been the ones pitched for younger readers. I couldn’t remember any of the titles until The Scrivener posted that list above. I know I had Spellbinders in Suspense, and maybe Daring Detectives. I wish that I had paid attention to the names of the authors of the stories so I could have explored their other works.

The only story I remember was one about a man who was killed by his own dog. It turns out that someone had injected him with a substance which made him smell different, and so his dog thought he was an intruder. A bit far fetched, but for some reason I always remembered that one.

Oh, man! I loved those when I was a kid back in the 1970s and, like others here, I read every one the library had! I don’t remember any of the plots now, but they were good. I’ve also introduced the younger generation to them. Several years ago, my priest’s son loved the Goosebumps books, so I introduced him to the good stuff by giving him one of the Alfred Hitchcock collections. I still have one of my own somewhere.

This story was televised in the original half-hour “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” series. Steve McQueen played the guy with the lighter and Peter Lorre played the man who bets McQueen his finger that the lighter won’t light ten times in a row. One of my all-time favorite episodes!

One year (I think I was about 12) I asked for the “Stories They Wouldn’t Let Me Do on TV” anthology as a Christmas present, and got it! It was hardbound. Wish I knew where that book was now!

I remember that, great tension in that episode!

There was another series of short-storey compliations with titles like Stories to read with the Door Locked. Scared the pants off me wen I was eleven.

I remember buying a couple – *Get Me to the Wake on Time *and I Am Curious (Bloody).

This thread brings back memories.

My dad got me started on Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine and Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine way back when. I liked that there were stories of different lengths, so you could select one for a long read on the porch or a short read on the john. (Or vice versa ;)) I never had any of the AH books; didn’t even know about them but I’ll put them on my list of things to search for at the used book store.

I remember puzzling at the title of a story called “Wide O” until the last line when the heroine, checking her house for intruders, discovers that her back door was wide o . . .

In the early seventies, our family had a bunch of these, and I read the hell out of them.

The one that I remember best had a title that tickled my juvenile sense of humour: Stories To Be Read With The Light On.

I had a couple that were my dad’s. The best was Alfred Hitchcock’s Sinister Spies. Some damn good stories in there!

Oh, hell, yes! My aunt was a librarian, and I’d hang out at the library all day and read all of Hitch’s compilations, for kids and adults both. Scared me out of several years growth, those books did.

There is one story that has haunted me, because it was not only creepy, but puzzling. It involved a young girl and a…a…garbage monster? some garbage in a dump came together in a humanoid shape and came alive. The irate townspeople chased it and buried it deep in the ground. And the young girl would go out to that spot and lie down on the ground and hear the garbage monster buried far below, scratching, scratching away…brrrrrrrrrrr!!!

And another one, written to resemble A Curious Experiment in Victorian Times - an invisible creature just … arrived in a room…it was invisible, and I forgot what happened, they may have killed it - took a mold of its face and it was the most hideous deformed thing they had ever seen. A demon from hell? ???

I remember watching his TV show where he would always start the show with his profile shadowed on a door, and I would be thinking, “Wow, he’s almost as cool as Rod Serling!”

I really had no idea what a giant he was in film until I studied him in film class.

Me too. And I’ve been finding them in a cool used bookstore (on Main St. in Galena, IL). Almost any story I start hits me with “Oh, wow. I remember this! And right where I was when I read it… in 1968!”

I’ve got a collection of somewhere around 50-60 of those books. Great stuff. Originally, I bought only those that featured Robert Bloch stories, but I quickly learned to appreciate many of the other authors, Henry Slesar in particular (who also wrote some of the scripts for the CBS Radio Mystery Theater in the early/-70s, hosted by E.G. Marshall).

“Sorry, Wrong Number.”

Best wishes,
hh

And it was adapted to film in 1948, starring Barbara Stanwyck and Burt Lancaster. It gets pretty damn complicated, what with flashbacks within flashbacks, but is still kinda neat.

Are you saying there was a story titled “A Curious Experiment in Victorian Times” with that plot? Because it sounds exactly like the short story What Was It? by Fitz-James O’Brien. XIII What Was It? A Mystery - Collection at Bartleby.com

Oh, that’s the story I was thinking of - “What Was It?”. Thanks for digging it up! ( I could have sworn it was called A Curious Experiment).

I used to love that magazine. I resubscribed to it a couple of years ago and was aghast at how the quality of writing had gone down hill. Some truly execrable stuff.