Meghan: Hey Lex! Welcome to Meghan’s House of Books. You haven’t been here yet, but were a regular over on The Gal in the Blue Mask. It’s a little different here, but definitely interesting. We appreciate you stopping by today. What is your favorite part of Halloween?
Lex: I love decorating the house for the big Halloween party I host every year. โTrick or Treatingโ isnโt really a huge thing in Britain in the way it is in America, so you donโt generally see a lot of houses that have really gone crazy with it. The ones that do tend to be having some sort of party, whether itโs for children of adults. Having grown up watching American films and shows, I always wanted to do big Halloween parties with everything from theme music, themed foods, games, costumes, and of course decorations inside and out. Now that I own my own house, I get to that every year.
Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween tradition?
Lex: Planning the decorating for the house. I like planning and organizing, it helps me enjoy things better as I donโt do well with outright spontaneity and chaos. So Iโll have a notebook with sections for each room (and the garden), and Iโll work out a different theme for each. After Iโve worked that out, Iโll see what I can get from the shops, how much of it I might need, and then as a rule, buy far more than that. I always end up needing more cobweb. However much cobweb you think youโve bought, I promise you itโs not enough.
Meghan: If Halloween is your favorite holiday (or even second favorite holiday), why?
Lex: Itโs my second, as my first is Christmas. I know a lot of people donโt like Christmas and have their own reasons for that, and thatโs fine. But I love it and always have.
Halloween, though, comes a close second as itโs the time of year when everyone is suddenly โintoโ the stuff that Iโve always liked. I particularly liked, as a child, that for one month of the year the shops would suddenly be full of skeletons and ghosts and such. Essentially all the kinds of toys and decorations that I coveted the year round.
Meghan: What are you superstitious about?
Lex: To be honest, Iโm not. Iโm an absolutely rational atheist (not the militant dickhead kind like Dawkins, donโt worry) so I donโt really do superstitions. The one thing I have which is kind of close to that, is we have a phrase you hear a lot in Britain is โdonโt speak ill of the deadโ. Now from a purely โabsolute honestyโ point of view (which Iโm often guilty of, given that Iโm autistic) I admit that I find it odd when I hear folk describing a dead man as an absolute angel, when in life heโd been an unrepentant career criminal. But, itโs not about them. Theyโre dead, they canโt hear and donโt care. But their relatives, already grieving from their loss, donโt need to hear someone bad-mouthing them. So we tell little lies and say they were nicer than they were. Or, at the least, donโt point out the (still true) bad things about them. I always try to adhere to that. But itโs out of politeness to the living, rather than fearing the wrath of the dead.
Meghan: What/who is your favorite horror monster or villain?
Lex: I love ghosts. Theyโve always been my favorite. Just the ethereal nature of them, the floatiness, the fact theyโre sort of there and sort of not. I find anything purely physical less frightening as a โmonsterโ, because ultimately itโs just another thing to shoot or stab or run away from. Yeah a werewolf is scary, but ultimately itโs a just a big dog isnโt it? A zombie is just a diseased human. These things still exist within the confines of the natural world and must operate within it. Shoot it in the head and itโs done. Get home and lock the doors and youโre safe. But a ghost? Well thatโs a different matter entirely.
Meghan: Which unsolved murder fascinates you the most?
Lex: Itโs probably an obvious one to say, but the Jack The Ripper murders. Itโs not as though thereโs no information about them, because actually thereโs a fair bit. And many expert criminologists and investigators and outright historians have dug into it to try and figure out the case. And yet they never come up with the same answer. I do think weโll never know the truth of that one.




Meghan: Which urban legend scares you the most?
Lex: Thereโs that one about a man waiting for a phone call that will tell him if heโs about to lose his business or not. The thing heโs worked all his life for. If he gets a call at 4pm then heโs fine. If he doesnโt, heโs lost everything. The story goes that 4pm comes, the phone fails to ring, so he goes up to the roof and jumps off. As heโs falling past his office window, he hears the phone ring. They were a couple of minutes late.
Now, like any urban legend, itโs absolute nonsense. How would we know any of this, for one thing? But what makes this one chilling to me is because, nonsense it may be, but itโs a cautionary tale about giving up too quickly. How many times do you nearly give up on that dream or ambition today, only for something amazing to happen next week which really pushes it along? As shitty as today may be, you have no idea how good tomorrow might be. So donโt ever give up.
Meghan: Who is your favorite serial killer and why?
Lex: Boring as it may sound, I donโt have one. Iโm not really โintoโ serial killers, they donโt interest me that much, so Iโd struggle to pick any out of a lineup. Manson seems vaguely interesting to me, I guess, because he wasnโt the typical serial killer and was more of a cult leader. Iโm fascinated by cults, because I never quite understand how people can fall into them. Seemingly intelligent people can fall down these rabbit holes of absolute nonsense and refuse to climb out of it, even when their own health is at stake.
Meghan: How old were you when you saw your first horror movie? How old were you when you read your first horror book?
Lex: As a child I had that classic โslightly older friendโ who was a gateway to more grown-up things that Iโd otherwise not have access to. Through him I saw bits and pieces from Alien, A Nightmare On Elm Street, Fright Night and The Terminator, but the first horror film I saw all the way through was Predator. Now, I know thereโll be some debate about whether this is horror, sci-fi, action, or a mix of all three. But I think itโs fair to class it as horror. Predator was shown to me (probably far too young, aged about 8, I think) by my grandad. He loved horror movies and knew I was into monsters, so without my parentsโ knowledge he showed it to me one day. And I loved it.

My first horror book was a book of ghost stories called Ghostly Tales, which I was bought when I was four or five, I think. It was a beautiful hard cover book with illustrations (I still have a copy, actually). The stories, whilst ostensibly for children, were actually legitimately quite chilling. I must have read that thing so many times, as I remember having to stick some of the pages back into the spine with sticky tape.

Meghan: Which horror novel unsettled you the most?
Lex: I remember reading Slugs by Shaun Hutson, again probably far too young, and finding it very off-putting. Iโd never liked slugs as a creature in the real world. They just donโt look right. I think it was horror writer Arthur Machen who once described the eerie nature of slugs and snails and grubs in some of his writing, saying that they look like something from another world. Something that we, as denizens of the upper world, shouldnโt see, shouldnโt encounter. Theyโre things of darkness and slime, devoid of structure and organs and movements in the way the creatures above the ground are formed. Itโs the same as when we see creatures that live deep under the ocean, and they lack any sort of cuteness, resembling instead some nightmare beings from a realm that we should avoid at all costs. Slugs were always like that to me, as a child. As an adult Iโve got a garden now so I regularly have to move them away from my plants, so Iโve gotten over my dislike of them somewhat through necessity. But Hutsonโs book takes a creature that I already found disturbing, and made them into a carnivorous source of actual horror.

Meghan: Which horror movie scarred you for life?
Lex: I think the first time I saw The Fly (the 1980s version, not the B-Movie original) it stuck with me a long while. I always find body horror has that effect on me, because itโs the worst kind of thing imaginable. Itโs not a foe to be fought, a monster to be hacked at or a demon to be exorcised. Itโs the betrayal of your own body, twisted and broken into something it shouldnโt be. Iโve lost too many people close to me through dreadful illnesses, and body horror is always a little too close to that for me, so I tend to steer clear of it these days.

Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween costume?
Lex: A couple of years back, when it was the 20th Anniversary of Buffy starting, I think, we decided to have a Buffy/Angel themed Halloween party. Everyone dressed as different characters, and I went as Spike. Heโd always been my favorite character on the show. My friend Zoe was coming as Drusilla, which I didnโt know, so that worked out perfectly for photos. I put a picture of me and her together on Twitter, and the actual Drusilla, Juliette Landau, commented to say how great we looked. I particularly enjoyed wearing that costume because, prosthetics aside, it wasnโt particularly uncomfortable. Often the costumes that look the best are the most uncomfortable to wear, so itโs nice when you find one thatโs a good compromise.

Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween-themed song?
Lex: I donโt know if youโd call it strictly Halloween-themed, but โKilling Moonโ by Echo and The Bunnymen. I just feel like, from the 80s onwards, if you watch pretty much any film or show set at Halloween, youโd hear that song. It was ingrained in my psyche as the perfect Halloween Party song, so when I started hosting my own such events I whacked it straight on the playlist.
Meghan: What is your favorite Halloween candy or treat? What is your most disappointing?
Lex: Donโt be too horrified, but we donโt really get Halloween-specific sweets in the UK! What tends to happen is, stuff thatโs available all year round, will have a slight Halloween makeover. So the chocolate mini rolls with jam in them now have green-colored jam instead. The gingerbread men will have little fangs added to their smiles. Thatโs about the best we get. Weep for us.
Meghan: Before you go, can you share with us your top 5 Halloween movies?
Lex:
- Halloween (the original one)
- Trick R Treat
- The Addams Family
- Frankenstein (the original Universal Studios one)
- Beetlejuice





Boo-graphy:
Lex H Jones is a British author, horror fan and rock music enthusiast who lives in Sheffield, North England.
He has written articles for premier horror websites the Gingernuts of Horror and the Horrifically Horrifying Horror Blog, and appeared on multiple podcasts covering various subjects such as books, films, video games and music.
Lexโs first novel, Nick and Abe, a religious fantasy about God and the Devil spending a year on earth as mortal men, was published in 2016. This was followed in 2019 by noir crime novel The Other Side of the Mirror and illustrated childrenโs weird fiction book The Old One and The Sea. His latest release is a collection of ghost stories, Whistling Past The Graveyard. Lex also has a growing number of short horror stories published in collections alongside some of the greats of the genre, and in 2020 he co-created the comic strip series The Anti-Climactic Adventures of Detective Vampire with Liam โPaisโ Hill.
When not working on his own writing, Lex also contributes to the proofing and editing process for other authors.


Whistling Past the Graveyard —
A hilltop cemetery where the dead just wonโt stay sleeping. An ill-fated voyage to an uncharted region off the coast of Iceland. An English village reminded of its heritage through the discovery of ancient bones.These tales and more can be found within the first short story collection from author Lex H Jones. Light the fire, make yourself a comforting drink, make sure the doors and windows are lined with salt, and settle in to enjoy this gathering of haunts and horrors.
