Gothic Classics
Poe and the Macabre
Witches, Ghosts, and Ghouls
Modern Horrors
Death, Mystery & the Supernatural
100

Who wrote Frankenstein, often called the first science fiction novel?

Mary Shelley

100

What bird famously repeats “Nevermore” in Poe’s poem?

raven

100

“Double, double toil and trouble” is chanted by witches in which Shakespeare play?

Macbeth

100

Who is the author of The Shining, Carrie, and It?

Stephen King

100

This Emily Dickinson poem begins, “Because I could not stop for Death—”.

Because I could not stop for Death

200

This vampire novel by Bram Stoker introduced Count Dracula to the world.

Dracula

200

“The Masque of the Red Death” symbolizes this unavoidable human truth.

death

200

The ghost of this character tells Hamlet to seek revenge.

Hamlet’s father (King Hamlet)

200

In Neil Gaiman’s Coraline, what do the Other Mother’s eyes look like?

buttons

200

In Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the potion transforms Jekyll into whom?

Mr. Hyde

300

In The Picture of Dorian Gray, what object grows older while its owner remains young?

portrait/painting

300

In The Fall of the House of Usher, what happens to the mansion at the end?

It collapses/sinks into the tarn

300

In The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Ichabod Crane is chased by which spooky figure?

Headless Horseman

300

This Ray Bradbury novel features a sinister traveling carnival.

Something Wicked This Way Comes

300

Which 19th-century writer’s “sleepy” story takes place in a haunted New York village?

Washington Irving

400

This short story by Edgar Allan Poe features a man haunted by the sound of a beating heart.

The Tell-Tale Heart

400

Poe’s Annabel Lee is a poem about this enduring emotion that even death cannot destroy.

What is love

400

The “madwoman in the attic” appears in this Charlotte Brontë novel.

Jane Eyre

400

Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier begins with which haunting line?

“Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.”

400

The Monkey’s Paw warns readers to be careful about what?

What you wish for

500

This term describes gloomy, decaying settings and supernatural elements common in 18th–19th century horror fiction.

Gothic literature

500

What literary device does Poe often use to explore guilt and madness in his characters?

unreliable narration

500

This American short story by Shirley Jackson shocked readers with its depiction of a deadly village tradition.

The Lottery

500

In Pet Sematary, what terrifying truth do the characters discover about the burial ground?

things buried there (the ground) come back to life

500

In Wuthering Heights, what supernatural event happens to Mr. Lockwood at the window?

He’s grabbed by the ghostly hand of Catherine Earnshaw