Section One: Youth Horror and What Matters to Adults
Chapter One: “And Whenever They Catch You, They Will Kill You”: Martin Rosen’s Watership Down (1978) as Horror
Brandon R. Grafius
Chapter Two: “The Sooner We’re All One Big Happy Family, the Better”: Children of the Stones as a Cautionary Tale
Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni Berns
Chapter Three:Abject Horror in Courage the Cowardly Dog
Katherine Ridolfi-Lizza
Section Two: Youth Horror and Imagining Differences
Chapter Four: Green Men, Literate Worms, and Swamp Monsters—an Ecocritical Reading of Select Goosebumps Episodes
Barbara Katharina Reschenhofer
Chapter Five:Everywhere and Nowhere:Pastiche and the Uncanny in Courage the Cowardly Dog
Kimberly Plaksin
Chapter Six: Developing in the Dark: Confronting Fears through Supportive Storytelling in Nickelodeon’s Are You Afraid of the Dark?
Michael Jacob
Section Three: Youth Horror Reaches Its Adulthood
Chapter Seven: “I Call This Story the Tale of . . .”: The Hosts and Narrators of Children’s Horror Television
Merinda Staubli
Chapter Eight: “We’ve Been Teenagers Forever”: Reference and Self-Reflexivity in Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated
Stacey Anh Baran
Chapter Nine: “Don’t Let Your Parents Watch It Alone!”: Cautionary Tales and Family Horror in R. L. Stine’s The Haunting Hour
Filipa Antunes