![]() Much here is not only about the supernatural that scares us but also monsters of our creations and, the evil of men. ![]() What’s more you not only get into the psyche of the victims but in some stories, you get the point of view of the spooks themselves. Well, Julya knows this pain so in ‘Taiping Tales of Terror’, it starts off with a boy telling a tale and then you get to know what happens after. The guy got buried alive, abuden? Was she really a ghost? It was the wtf happened at the end that haunted me awake, not the hantu. I also remember feeling mildly dissatisfied because most of the storytellers are pretty rubbish at it and the tale will typically end abruptly. I know how it’s like to huddle close, torchlight under chins scaring ourselves shitless, then you nak terkencing so you have to run like the hounds of hell were on your heels to the toilet and back. But as the session draws to a close they realise they started with only twelve…Ĭome on! Remember those books of ghost stories you used to tear into when you were young? I went to boarding school AND I went camping. ![]() ![]() Set in a typical storytelling around a campfire, here are thirteen boys retelling these tales of horror in one night. ![]() Boys scouts sit around a campfire and tell ghost stories ranging from urban legends, supernatural encounters and cautionary tales. ![]()
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