Scary Stories to Tell In The Dark (Literature)/YMMV


 * Big Lipped Alligator Moment: Some consider the illustration for "Oh Susannah!" to qualify as one. The story is supposed to be about a student's roommate being killed, while the illustration is . . . not.
 * Actually, though it's a bit oblique as it's done more symbilocally than most other illustrations, the picture for Oh Susannah! actually goes with the original version of the story where the protagonist wakes up and finds either the killer or the roommate's decapicated corpse in a rocking chair and her head on the wall.
 * Complete Monster: Samuel Blunt from "Wonderful Sausage." easily catapults him to this level of villainy.
 * Fridge Horror: These are typically classified as children's books.
 * Ho Yay: Thomas and Alfred, the two farmers from "Harold."
 * Also O'Liery and O'Riley, the two dead men from "Ba-Room", exactly why and how the two men ended up dead in the same bed is never explained.
 * Narm: The girl in "The Girl Who Stood on a Grave" agrees to a bet to stand on a grave for a dollar. Yeah, you read that right. Just one dollar.
 * This is possibly due to our current inflation--barely a few decades ago, a dollar was a lot of money.
 * But the girl ended up dying, so that dollar wasn't worth it anyway.
 * This line in the otherwise terrifying "Me Tie Dough-ty Walker!": "His dog had never uttered a word before."
 * Nightmare Fuel: Where to begin with these?
 * The illustrations are a good start.
 * The story about summoning ghosts in mirrors.
 * Nightmare Retardant: The stories in the final chapter of each book are "supposed to make you laugh, not afraid".
 * Older Than You Think: The Bus Stop. According to Mr Schwartz in the book's foreword, this story actually dates *to Roman times*.
 * Tear Jerker: The ending of "The Bus Stop".
 * "The Hog".
 * They Changed It, Now It Sucks: The books are being re-released to commemorate the 30th anniversary... with new illustrations. Many people who grew up being terrified by these books and their original, creepy illustrations are not happy.
 * And adding insult to injury for those who were never able to obtain personal copies of the originals, they have been taken out of print (including the more recent anniversary editions) and online prices are being inflated.
 * Ugly Cute: The illustration of the pale woman in "The Dream".
 * Uncanny Valley: The illustrations never leave it. Even relatively innocuous ones like "The Babysitter" are extremely unnerving.
 * What Do You Mean It's for Kids?: The books are usually categorized as children's books. The illustrations, especially the one for "The Dream", leave us wondering why.