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9 Creepy Photos That Appear In 'Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children'

Posted: 10/13/11 10:39 AM ET

I've been interested in photography since I was a kid, but it was only a few years ago that I started collecting photographs.

Because I was a starving grad student at the time, prints by well-known photographers were way beyond my reach. I could, however, afford the old snapshots they sell at flea markets and swap meets around Southern California, swimming loose in giant bins for fifty cents or a buck apiece.

You find a lot of junk when you're searching through lost and tossed photo ephemera, but every so often you'll find a gem, a wallet-sized masterpiece you're certain could hang on the wall of a gallery if only someone with a name had taken it. Find one or two of those and you're hooked for life.

Every snapshot collector has obsessions. Some only collect photos of cars. Others like World War II, or babies, or old-timey girls in old-timey swimsuits. I happen to collect the weird stuff: photos that make the hair on the back of your neck stand up a little. The uncanny. I don't mean circus freaks and kids in Halloween costumes, either -- I mean photos that seem wrong in a way that's hard to put your finger on, so unusual they make you look at them a second and then a third time, then reward you with uneasy dreams. The kind of photos that seem to stare at you from across a room.

That's what I looked for when choosing images for Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, my first novel, which weaves four dozen vintage photos into its story.

Since it hit shelves, I've been getting emails from readers complaining about weird dreams and lost sleep, as well as questions about specific photos (usually along the lines of, "So that picture of the guy with a face painted on the back of his head -- what is up with that?").

But because the photos are anonymous, long divorced from whatever context might have explained them, I don't know what's up with them any more than my readers do. All I know is that they creep me out. Each photo is an unsettling little mystery -- and I like them that way.

In the hopes that they might creep some of you out, here are nine of my favorites. Sweet dreams!

Click "Full Screen" to really give you sleepless nights

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I've been interested in photography since I was a kid, but it was only a few years ago that I started collecting photographs. Because I was a starving grad student at the time, prints by well-known ...
I've been interested in photography since I was a kid, but it was only a few years ago that I started collecting photographs. Because I was a starving grad student at the time, prints by well-known ...
 
 
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05:16 PM on 10/18/2011
these were hella flush:)
09:36 PM on 10/16/2011
love those photos. I want prints! oh yeah. the book is awesome.
08:11 AM on 10/16/2011
I laughed my head off. I have several photos with my dad's shadow looming in front of me, his head bent looking down into the Brownie camera. A kid who lived up the street had a book on taking photos to look weird. The dirty round circle in front of the feet would make it look like you were floating because it gives the illusion of shadow, and the headless outfit was another of their suggestions. And of course the flashlight up the face in the dark trick to look spooky. He took one of another kid holding his fingers just so, it looked like he was pinching the moon. Very cool stuff. And I read an excerpt from the book. Definitely going to buy and read it. What wonderful creativity!! You made my Sunday morning!!
08:08 AM on 10/16/2011
Nightmares? Really?

...I've seen way better. I do like the picture with the two girls standing next to each other with the picture taken from the back.
12:30 PM on 10/19/2011
I was just typing that when I saw your comment. They aren't so much creepy as they are (slightly) weird. I've seen creepier. The twins (are they twins?) is the one that stands out to me, too.

Maybe they just mean the book in general gives them nightmares and odd dreams? And the images just sort of add to that...Either way, I really want to read this book now.
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christina444
One must tremble indignation at every injustice...
02:31 PM on 10/21/2011
I thought the same thing... the kind of setting you would see in today's horror films.
08:03 AM on 10/16/2011
Amazing, and sometimes, horrifying what can take shape in a woman's body.
11:51 PM on 10/15/2011
I came across the posthumous photography of children and adults in the Victorian era by accident one day. They would dress them, posed them with other family members, open their eyes, pose them as if they were still alive or just sleeping. Often it was the only way a family member far away would ever see the child or adult. Those photos can be creepy, especially when you find one that looks like your child. It's easy to take for granted our low child mortality rate and high life expectancy is in the Western World.
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yoyodyne666
is it friday yet?
11:26 PM on 10/15/2011
What was so creepy about those?
11:58 PM on 10/15/2011
That's what I thought.
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ceefee
01:09 PM on 10/17/2011
Yes. And they're not all children. At least two are adults, and maybe more. We have no way of knowing if the headless man (one of two hoaxes) is headless boy or not.
09:55 PM on 10/15/2011
There really is something about black and white that adds an extra creep factor. I'm not only talking about B and W photos- any visual medium involving B and W is somewhat more unsettling than other color counterparts. In my personal opinion, "Night of the Living Dead" is still one of the most disturbing films I have seen, mostly due to the movie being shot in B and W.
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Kopie
All for a cuddle and a peck on the cheek
08:22 PM on 10/15/2011
Dogboy - they even had bad photoshop back then.
07:50 PM on 10/15/2011
These photos are so beautiful so as to be almost devastating,though not creepy in the esthetic sense i will not deny that there is a somewhat 'Silent Hill' quality to them, as in that i feel that they are clues to something,clues to how these people may have lived or dreamed. I see art where others so often see trash (which is not uncommon for me).
07:25 PM on 10/15/2011
Wow. Look it, creepy, but love it.
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bebby37
An old mad liberal white lady with pitchfork
05:31 PM on 10/15/2011
I just read the book and it was an entertaining read. The photos are perfect for the book. Thanks to the author.
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Kerry Cook
04:08 PM on 10/15/2011
I see credit for 1 of the photos is given to Thanatos.net & if you dare go there, that's where you'll see pictures much more "creepy" than this fluff. I've seen much more macabre pictures of my own family members & for those getting bent out of shape about society being "desensitized," all I can say is how milquetoast your lives must be.
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hursh 4 ever
Smart Commenter - logical and wise
05:30 PM on 10/15/2011
I noticed that you used the word "milquetoast"... are you trying to point something out? what message are you trying to send to other post readers? I don't get it.
05:55 PM on 10/15/2011
Considering he used "milquetoast" as an adjective, he's probably trying to point out that he doesn't know how the word is probably used in English.
02:01 PM on 10/15/2011
So very sad that things go so wrong and little ones have to deal with it at an early age. Not funny at all.
01:04 PM on 10/15/2011
so i ordered this book bc of the trailer it's linked to.....