The 13 Most Terrifying Junji Ito Manga Stories

There is no storyteller on Earth like Junji Ito. Since his professional manga debut in 1987, he’s been terrifying readers with his macabre tales and chillingly iconic creations. The brilliantly talented mangaka has rightfully become one of the most well known horror storytellers of his generation, and for good reason. Junji Ito’s beautifully illustrated comics hide deep, devastating secrets, and each tale he weaves haunts and horrifies in the most unique way.

Junji Ito Collections

To narrow down Junji Ito’s massive oeuvre to just 13 of his most bone-chilling offerings was no easy feat. While most of the scariest Junji Ito’s short stories can be found as scans online, his short stories are also compiled into physical collections. Some collections, like Tomie and Uzumaki, contain stories that follow a specific narrative, while others, like Shiver and Smashed, include standalone stories collected by theme.

The Scariest Junji Ito Stories

From ominous ghost stories, heart-twisting gothic horror, and grotesquely bizarre modern fables, here are the 13 most terrifying stories from one of the masters of horror manga, Junji Ito.

13. The Beautiful Boy at the Crossroads

Ito often writes of love and how it can curse us. The first–and throughline–story from his Lovesickness collection is a great example of just that. We meet Ryusuke on a train. The teen boy is moving back to his hometown after years away, but the simple notion of it haunts him.

The devastating reason for that will soon be revealed, but in the meantime, his arrival coincides with a trend of young women seeking out “crossroads fortunes.” Soon the bodies of school girls who ask strangers for their fortunes begin to turn up brutally murdered; but who is to blame? How does it connect with Ryusuke’s pass? This wonderfully chilly mystery is one of the most memorable of Ito’s tales and introduces one of his scariest creations.

12. Village of the Siren

Turning his hand to folk horror, Ito crafts another bleak homecoming in Village of the Siren. In the wake of a strange phone call from his parents and an ominous apparition at his window, Kyochi decides it’s time for a family reunion. Alas, when he returns he finds that the once lively–though rural–village has turned into a ghost town.

Life now revolves around a strange factory of unknown origin, and even weirder are the all-consuming sirens that emanate from it each night. If you love a story about strange rituals, unusual cults, and the occult then this is the sort of story you’ll gobble right up. If you enjoy horror that breaks taboos, then you’ll certainly be satisfied as the death count here is huge and features a rarely seen demographic of victims.

11. I Don’t Want to Be a Ghost

When Shigeru kindly picks up a beautiful wandering woman from the side of a road, his life is changed. Although Shigeru worries at first about her bloodied and disoriented state, she explains it away. Days later, the two begin a secretive affair despite the fact that Shigeru is married and expecting a baby. Blinded by his new acquaintance’s beauty, he’s willing to overlook how often his lover appears covered in blood and the fact that she claims to “love his ghosts.” Her real desires are darker than anyone could have foreseen and Shigeru of course doesn’t realize until too late.

10. The Strange Hikizuri Siblings

One of the funniest of Ito’s creations, this bleakly humorous slice of life story follows an unhinged set of siblings who take great pleasure in tormenting and terrorizing each other and unsuspecting victims. Over two tales collected in Lovesickness, we meet some of the unlucky people who come into their path including an old school friend of their most beautiful member and a photographer. While their schemes can have deadly consequences, the Hikizuri siblings are generally rather hapless, though you wouldn’t want to be invited to their table for dinner.

9. The Mystery of the Haunted House

The arrival of a haunted house turns a town upside down when derision turns to terror as each new visitor enters its doors. Two young boys become entangled in the proprietor’s twisted games after they try to sneak in for free. Upon exploring the ghoulish halls they discover a true house of horrors, one filled with victims who claim to be the owner’s family.

There’s a dark comedy to this one, which comes from another of Ito’s recurring characters, the scheming creeper Souichi Tsujii. But there’s nothing funny about his heinous crimes. The Mystery of the Haunted House is a wild ride that will delight fans of haunt culture.

8. Honored Ancestors

Family often comes up in Ito’s tale, and Honored Ancestors might feature his most psychedelically deranged yet. On a seemingly normal evening Risa is brought home by her close friend Makata who claims that the young girl is suffering from amnesia and couldn’t remember where she lived. According to doctors, her amnesia has been caused by immense emotional stress.

Risa becomes more and more distressed as she becomes haunted by visions of a giant caterpillar… but what does it all mean? The truth revolves around Makata and his family’s strange traditions which are revealed in Ito’s dementedly awful fashion as the tale comes to a close. It’s one family reunion that you’ll never forget, though you’ll wish you could.

7. Uzumaki

Likely the most famous of Ito’s many works, Uzumaki has been deemed a classic for a reason. Weaving a supernatural curse into a ghost story that centers around a small town, Kurouzu-cho, which is haunted not by spirits but instead by spirals, this is a uniquely spooky tale. It also helps that Ito’s distinctive linework does an epic job of making the usually unassuming shapes into something utterly terrifying.

Uzumaki features many of Ito’s favorite themes like obsession, paranoia, and the mundane becoming utterly bizarre. The impact of Uzumaki cannot be overstated, with multiple video game and film adaptations and a highly-anticipated anime adaptation in development.

6. Fashion Model

While many of Ito’s stories are slow burn haunters, this is a more in your face horror tale that reveals its monster from the earliest pages. Like our next entry, Tomie, Fashion Model has become one of Ito’s most popular long-running tales. When a young man sees a bizarre model in a magazine whose mouth is filled with dagger-like teeth, he becomes consumed by her image. He can’t stop thinking about her, about why she was hired, and why she fills him with an all-consuming existential terror.

Life moves on, and he and some friends begin casting for a student film. It’s here that the model reemerges back to the forefront of his life in brutal and all too real fashion. This is a great entry into both the Ito and monster horror canon.

5. Tomie

Probably Ito’s most famous creation, the stunningly beautiful Tomie was murdered by her classmates only to reappear the next day. Since then she’s been terrorizing readers and lovestruck men for years. There’s a collected edition of Tomie tales where you can read her story from her earliest to most recent appearances, and each one is more delightfully dark than the last. Her ever shifting true face is the thing of nightmares, but Ito’s striking illustration style has also made her a perennial pop culture figure.

Even if you’ve never read an Ito story, you’ve likely already seen Tomie as a sticker, tattoo, or t-shirt. Ironically, in her stories it’s near impossible to catch her beauty in an image unless you want to see her true face too.

4. House of the Marionettes

Puppets have always held a particularly creepy place in horror and Ito uses that to his advantage here in this ghastly story about a strange family obsessed with marionettes. It all begins when a young girl named Kinuko befriends the son of a family of puppeteers. Becoming close with one of the two sons, Haruhiko, she visits the home immediately becoming wary of a large marionette named Jean-Pierre.

Years later Haruhiko and Kinuko reconnect and get married. But when they’re called back to the former’s family home, they make an awful discovery. This is one of the most classical of Ito’s stories, but it will still shock and surprise at every turn.

3. Used Record

Eerie and atmospheric, Used Record tells the story of an odd record which hypnotizes and entices the listener. When Ogawa buys the vinyl, she quickly becomes obsessed as does her friend Nakayama when she hears it. Soon, all the pair can do is listen to the song again and again. But there’s only one copy, which means that the girls are on a tragic path.

The thing that makes this story so terrifying is the relatable fact that we’ve all had that one song that we can’t stop listening to. Ito just takes it to the next, supernaturally nightmarish level. And for that reason, this wonderfully drawn tale ends up being just as addictive as the song at its center.

2. Greased

Growing up above her family’s barbeque restaurant by Mount Fuji, Yui is sick of the grease that has slowly but surely accumulated, coating their home. While she worries abouts its effects, her violent and abusive brother Goro embraces the cooking oil that creates it, drinking it from the bottle until his face becomes covered in large, grotesque pustules.

Goro’s obsession with the grease and his sister’s hopes of surviving it are deeply entangled in this, one of Ito’s most stomach-churning tales which will threaten both your lunch and your sleep cycle. Truly, this is the kind of story you have to mentally prepare to read, so don’t take checking this one out lightly.

1. The Hanging Balloons

What makes The Hanging Balloons Ito’s scariest story? Well, it’s one of his most bizarre–which is where the mangaka excels — and it also manages to feel utterly claustrophobic and inescapable in the best way. After the unexpected suicide of a celebrity school girl inspires a spate of copycat deaths, people begin to report seeing imposing balloons in the sky.

But these are no ordinary balloons. In fact, reports claim it’s the giant inflated head of the woman who died. Many more of the balloons soon appear, chasing those whose faces they wear. Instead of strings, metal nooses swing beneath them. What is their purpose? If they catch up with those who they resemble, they catch and hang them… This is a psychedelic night terror come to life.

What’s Next for Junji Ito?

Alley is the most recent short story collection from the horror manga author, though Junji Ito continues to produce new stories (mostly for competitions) that will eventually recieve official translations. However, the author’s next big release is something entirely new. Uncanny: The Origins of Fear is a written memoir and analysis of the horror genre from Junji Ito releasing on October 15.

Uzumaki Anime

There’s been a tradition of less-than-incredible Junji Ito adaptations, but hopes are high for the upcoming Uzumaki anime for Adult Swim. After three production delays, Adult Swim released an official teaser trailer and announced the anime will release on September 28.

Looking for more manga guides? Take a look at our guide to the best manga for beginners or dive into some of the best free manga websites and apps.

Rosie Knight is an Eisner-winning journalist, author and comics writer. She co-hosts Crooked Media’s X-Ray Vision podcast, discussing pop culture from superhero movies to prestige television to the best fantasy novels and, of course, comics.