KEY POINTS
  • "Knock at the Cabin," a new film by director M. Night Shyamalan, is the first film adaptation of one of Paul Tremblay's horror novels. It is set to be released in February.
  • Tremblay, whose novel "The Pallbearers Club" was published this month, spoke with CNBC about what it's like having one of his works translated to film.
  • "I've had multiple producers say to me that they're looking for horror that isn't grim and has a happy ending, which means they're not really looking for horror," he said.
Paul Tremblay

Want to hear a scary story?

It was 2015. Paul Tremblay, a New England math wiz with a couple crime novels to his name, was experiencing his big breakthrough in horror fiction. His book, "A Head Full of Ghosts," an internet-era spin on the demonic possession genre, arrived in June to rave reviews. It would go on to win the Horror Writers Association's Bram Stoker Award for best novel of the year. Stephen King, the master of horror, tweeted that it "scared the living hell out of me, and I'm pretty hard to scare."