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Top 10 urban legends

From Bloody Mary to 'the spider bite', urban myths have inspired countless
creepy books and films here James Dawson shares his 10 favourites and
explores their roots and influence
Ghost-less ghost stories, urban legends are modern day fairytales. Just as
Little Red Riding Hood and Goldilocks were spread by oral tradition, urban
myths are spread by word of mouth, creating contemporary folklore, often
with a moral sting in the tail. Let's face it, a sleepover isn't complete without at
least one candlelit tale of terror.

Much like traditional folklore, modern myths are embellished or altered as


they are retold. Most are still told orally over marshmallows and hot chocolate
but some are recorded. Many authors have retooled urban legends as
inspiration for novels or movies.

My new novel, Say Her Name is my version of the most famous urban legend
of them all, the "Bloody Mary" curse.

I'm far from alone, however. Here I present 10 of the scariest urban legends
and examine their roots and influence.

1. Bloody Mary
Perhaps the most famous modern myth, this tale suggests that if you are to
look in the mirror and say "Bloody Mary" a specified number of times,
something will happen. It's the what that legend disagrees on. In the earliest
versions, an unmarried woman would see the face of her future husband in the
glass or a skull if she were destined to die before being wed.

This evolved into something more gory groups invoking a bleeding spirit or
witch called Mary. Some links have also been made to Queen Mary I as she
suffered multiple miscarriages during her reign.

The story has been hugely influential. Mirrors and reflections, a regular fixture
in uncanny literature play parts in Clive Barker's The Forbidden, which went
on to be the film Candyman, while Ringu, by Koji Suzuki, substitutes a mirror
for a television set. The X Files and Supernatural directly tackled the Mary
myth on screen.

This year sees not one but two novels retelling versions of the legend: my
own Say Her Name and an American version, The Summoning.
2. The spider bite
Possibly one of the more "believed" urban myths, this one tells the tale of a
young person, often a traveller to a far-flung location, who is bitten by a spider
and/or an ant. On returning home, the victim experiences a "hatching"
whereby parasitic baby spiders and/or ants burst out from under their skin.
FYI this isn't physically possible, but it hasn't stopped parasitology being a
defining feature of the body horror genre from Alien and Wrath of Kahn to
Stephen King's Dreamcatcher and Stephenie Meyer's The Host.

3. The hookman
Another campfire must, this tale features an amorous young couple out for a
drive when the radio informs them a hook-handed lunatic has escaped from a
local institution. Either the couple go home to find a hook embedded in the
back of the car or one of them ends up suspended above the car with his
fingers scraping against the roof.

In the original, novelised version of I Know What You Did Last Summer by
Lois Duncan, the killer uses a gun but the cinematic version by Kevin
Williamson features a hook-handed fishermen hell-bent on revenge. The
Candyman also has a hook for a hand.

4. Freaky food
Recently, outraged internet people were taken in by claims that popular fast
food outlet KFC were breeding genetically mutated chickens for their burgers.
While the "shock pictures" were quickly revealed to be fakes, more than one of
my Facebook friends were taken in.

Foodstuffs often fall victim to urban myths are MacDonald's burgers really
made from earthworms? Will mixing popping candy and fizzy pop make you
explode? Don't forget the perennial "dog meat takeaway" rumour.

Food is at the centre of our lives so it's no surprise it's at the heart of our
fiction. The Hunger Games presents kids willing to kill for a lifetime of food
while Soylent Green (based on the 1966 novel Make Room, Make Room) goes
one further and suggests we'll soon be eating people, much like in Matt
Whyman's The Savages.

5. The licked hand


In this popular tale, a scared girl (or sometimes an old woman) listens to an
ominous dripping coming from within her home. She is reassured by the
presence of her faithful dog who licks her hand from under the bed.
Eventually, she investigates the noise only to find her dog slaughtered and a
message written in blood "humans can lick hands too".

This story was actually taken from a much earlier MR James story called 'The
Diary of Mr Poynter' in which a character experiences a similar fate.

6. The kidney heist


In this tale, a young man is either seduced by a beautiful woman or pays for an
escort. The following morning, he awakens in a bathtub full of ice to find one
of his kidneys has been removed for sale on the black market. The moral
couldn't be clearer, really, could it?

Organ harvesting is a staple of horror fiction from Ishiguro's Never Let Me


Go to Neal Shusterman's excellent Unwind.

7. Location, location, location


As someone eager to get on the property ladder, I don't know how bothered I'd
be to check what my house was built on, but you might want to get a surveyor
to have a look. Everyone knows houses built on burial grounds are bound to be
cursed, right? Although ancient Indian Burial mounds are few and far between
in the USA, they sure get a lot of flack.

From Stephen King's The Shining and Pet Cemetery to Hollywood classic
Poltergeist and even Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the message is very clear
don't just look at a home before you buy it, look under it.

8. Chain letters
You know this one. You get sent a communiqu that suggests if you don't pass
it on to five more people there'll be some terrible consequence. This urban
legend seems to have predicted viral marketing by twenty years or so.

The concept of the deadly chain letter was best explored in Christopher Pike's
Chain Letter, but the idea of cursed texts is also explored in Scarlet
Thomas's The End of Mr Y and also Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.

9. The call is coming from inside the house


The moral is clear: WOMEN, PROTECT YOUR CHILDREN. Variations of this
one see a babysitter being tormented by threatening phone calls that turn out
to be coming from a inside the house. The children in her care are often
murdered.

Variations of this story are everywhere, notably in Point Horrors The


Babysitter by RL Stine and Mother's Helper by A Bates. Kevin Williamson
paid homage in the Scream series as did I in Hollow Pike.

With advances in mobile phone technology expect this to develop into


Snapchat based horror or killers using Tinder to track down their victims.

10. The Slender Man


A truly modern modern myth, Slender Man started online as part of a
competition to Photoshop pictures to include a supernatural element. User
'Victor Surge' added a suited, faceless, unnaturally tall figure into two black
and white photos which were copied and distributed virally over the net.

Since then, millions of authors, mostly online, have shared and spread the
story on websites such as Creepypasta. The Slender Man's MO is to abduct
people, often children who seem to willingly go with the figure never to be
seen again, making him a terrifying version of the Pied Piper.

New urban legends will almost certainly have some sort of viral online
element. Jeff the Killer is a similar, facially disfigured internet meme.

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