If you’ve ever read a spooky story alongside a child, you’ve probably noticed something interesting:
You’re focused on the big moments.
The twist.
The reveal.
The “what’s actually happening” behind it all.
But kids?
They’re paying attention to something completely different.
And once you see it, you can’t unsee it.
They Don’t Start With Logic—They Start With Feeling
Adults want answers.
We try to figure things out:
- Is the house actually haunted?
- Is there a real explanation?
- Where is this going?
Kids don’t do that.
They don’t need everything to make sense right away.
Instead, they ask:
- Why does this feel weird?
- Why did the room suddenly feel different?
- Why did that part give me chills?
They experience the story before they analyze it.
And that changes everything.
They Notice the Smallest, Strangest Details
Adults often focus on plot.
Kids focus on moments.
The tiny things.
- The window that was closed… now slightly open
- The sound that wasn’t there before
- The feeling that someone is watching—even if no one is
These details might seem minor to an adult reader.
To a kid?
That’s the story.
That’s where the tension lives.
They Sit in the Unknown Longer
Most adults rush toward resolution.
We want clarity. Closure. Answers.
Kids are far more comfortable sitting in uncertainty.
They’ll linger in that space where:
- You don’t know what’s out there
- You’re not sure what’s real
- Something feels off—but you can’t prove it
And honestly?
That’s where the best suspense lives.
They Make It Personal
Here’s the part that makes spooky stories stick:
Kids don’t just read the story.
They place themselves inside it.
They think:
- What would I do?
- Would I go down the hallway?
- Would I open the door?
The story doesn’t stay on the page.
It follows them.
(In the best way.)
Why This Matters for the Stories I Write
When I write for Papermoon Parcels, I don’t write with an adult lens.
I write for the reader who notices:
- The flicker of light
- The shift in silence
- The feeling that something isn’t quite right
Because that’s where the magic happens.
Not in over-explaining.
Not in making everything obvious.
But in building a story that lets the reader feel their way through it.
The Real Secret to a Great Scary Story
It’s not about how frightening something is.
It’s about how long you can hold someone in that moment of:
“Wait… did that just happen?”
Kids understand that instinctively.
They don’t rush past it.
They sit in it.
And that’s exactly why spooky stories work so well for them.
Final Thought
Adults read to understand.
Kids read to experience.
And when a story does both?
That’s when it becomes unforgettable.




