The other things is the Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark series. The stories aren't that scary, ranging from humorous to campfire ghost stories to urban legends, with a few genuinely disturbing tidbits mixed in. But the illustrations...ye gods, the illustrations....those things burned holes in my brain when I read it in elementary school. And it should be stressed -- these are children's books.
Ugh, dear me. It's like putting H.R.Giger's or Beksinski's illustrations in a book for kids. A troubled childhood and a lifetime of morbid fascination guaranteed.
No shit. They *still* affect me. When the Google result page came up, there was a part of me trying to avert my eyes.
Some of the poems and songs were the most disturbing, either because they're so cheery-seeming or slightly demented.
Did you ever think as a hearse goes by
That you may be the next to die?
They wrap you up in a big white sheet
From your head down to your feet.
And the worms crawl in and the worms crawl out,
In your stomach and out your snout,
And your eyes fall out and your teeth decay--
And that is the end of a perfect day.
There was a man who lived in leeds;
He filled his garden full of seeds.
And when the seeds began to grow,
It was like a garden full of snow.
But when the snow began to melt,
It was like a ship without a belt.
And when the ship began to sail,
It was like a bird without a tail.
And when the bird began to fly,
It was like a seagull in the sky
And when the sky began to roar,
It was like a lion at my door.
And when the door began to crack,
It was like a penknife in my back.
And when my back began to bleed,
I was dead, dead, dead indeed!
Both of those, like most all of the stories, are taken from earlier works and folklore (the song was recorded in Brooklyn in the 1940s and the tune is well-recognized in cartoons as being a "spooky" music, and the poem was first published in 1975). But there's still something disturbing about them, and the accompanying NightmareFuel artwork kinda furthered that. Some of the illustrations are seriously HighOctaneNightmareFuel.
Incidentally, thanks for the name-drop. I'd never heard of Beksinski and after a quick Google, I'm intrigued. Love Giger's stuff and this looks promising as well.