Halloween Favorite Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark Gets Upcoming Documentary Treatment, Featuring R.L. Stine and Other Notable KIds Horror Authors and Scholars

While Hollywood director Guillermo Del Toro is adapting popular kids book Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark into a film adaptation, a documentary exploring the legacy, art, and folklore of the books is nearly wrapped and crowdfunding for finishing costs on Indiegogo.

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Chicago, IL -- (SBWire) -- 10/17/2016 --Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark is an anthology of folktales and urban legends by Alvin Schwartz with original illustrations by Stephen Gammell. Along with being a wildly popular kids book series around Halloween time, it is also the most banned book title of the last 30 years. Examining the legacy of the books will also be an exploration of how children's books are banned, challenged, or censored in elementary schools, middle schools, high schools and even libraries. The Scary Stories books were the most challenged children's books of the 1990's according to the American Library Association and remained on the top ten in the subsequent decade. Along with being a nostalgia title for so many people, they are also a controversial title for many schools and libraries.

In addition a documentary about Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark allows Producer Cody Meirick and his team to delve into folklore, folk tales, and the history of horror and scary stories within children's literature and storytelling. The source materials and detailed appendices listed in the books invite us into an intriguing exploration involving some of the foundations of cultural storytelling. Death, fear, the unknown. There are a host of Hollywood and horror movie directors, horror writers, and gothic artists who attribute these kids books as both an early inspiration as well as a cultural phenomenon, especially around the Halloween season. Understanding the source of the fears and exploring what it is that inspires us to love them at an early age promises to be an interesting journey.

Interviews conducted include family members of author Alvin Schwartz, long since passed away, as well as a veritable who's who of authors, folklorists, and scholars in the field of literature. This includes fellow Scholastic book author and Goosebumps and Fear Street scribe R.L. Stine just shortly after the Goosebumps children's book series was adapted into a feature film themselves by Sony Pictures.

Exploring censorship, folklore, children's literature, modern art and gothic art, this upcoming documentary about the Scary Stories books is bound to be a unique story in and of itself.

The Scary Stories Crowdfunding Campaign - http://bit.ly/2e9Pbti

Media Relations Contact

Howard Sherman
President
888-983-1682
http://www.crowdfundbuzz.com

View this press release online at: http://rwire.com/732878