The Most Horrible Story by John Jakes

(6 User reviews)   1222
By Aiden Simon Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - Bottom Shelf
Jakes, John, 1932-2023 Jakes, John, 1932-2023
English
Hey, I just finished a book that left me with that weird feeling where you can't decide if you want to read it again immediately or hide it under the bed. It's called 'The Most Horrible Story' by John Jakes. Don't let the title fool you—it's not straight-up gore. It's more about the quiet, creeping kind of horror that gets under your skin. The story follows this ordinary guy who inherits an old, isolated house from a relative he barely knew. At first, it seems like a lucky break, a fresh start. But then he starts finding these strange journals, and the house... it has a memory. It's not about ghosts jumping out of closets. It's about the weight of family secrets and the past refusing to stay buried. The real mystery isn't 'what's in the attic?'—it's 'what did my family do, and why am I now the one paying for it?' If you like stories where the setting itself becomes a character, and the scares come from a slow-drip realization rather than a jump scare, you need to pick this up. It's the kind of book you read with all the lights on, not because you're afraid of monsters, but because the real world suddenly feels a bit less solid.
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John Jakes, best known for his epic historical sagas, takes a sharp turn into darker territory with this unsettling novel. It proves a master storyteller can build dread just as effectively as they can build a historical world.

The Story

Michael, a man feeling stuck in his life, gets a surprise inheritance: a remote, crumbling Victorian house from a great-uncle he never met. Seeing it as an escape, he moves in to fix it up. The trouble starts subtly. Objects move. He hears faint, indecipherable whispers in empty rooms. The real hook comes when he discovers a hidden study filled with his ancestor's diaries and letters. As Michael pieces together the family's history, he uncovers a legacy of cruelty, betrayal, and a terrible, long-buried crime committed within the very walls of his new home. The house isn't haunted by ghosts in the traditional sense; it's haunted by the echoes of choices made generations ago. Michael's renovation becomes a dangerous excavation, and he realizes that to find peace, he might have to confront a truth that could break him.

Why You Should Read It

This book got me because it's so psychologically smart. The horror isn't about something external attacking the hero. It's about him slowly understanding that he's living inside the consequences of a rotten past. Jakes builds the tension brick by brick. You feel Michael's isolation and his growing desperation as the line between the house's history and his own present begins to blur. The supporting characters, like the suspiciously knowledgeable local historian and the few distant relatives who refuse to talk about the past, add layers of mystery that make the central puzzle even more compelling. It's a story about guilt, inheritance (both the kind you want and the kind you don't), and whether we can ever truly escape our family's shadow.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who love a slow-burn, atmospheric chiller over bloody thrills. If you enjoyed the creeping dread of Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House or the familial secrets in movies like Hereditary, this is your next read. It's also a fantastic pick for historical fiction fans curious to see Jakes apply his rich, detail-oriented style to a Gothic mystery. Just be warned: you might look at your own family heirlooms a little differently afterward.



ℹ️ Community Domain

Legal analysis indicates this work is in the public domain. Thank you for supporting open literature.

Nancy Moore
2 years ago

Comparing this to other titles in the same genre, the way it handles controversial points with balance is quite professional. I'm genuinely impressed by the quality of this digital edition.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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