Yet another Stephen King story is being adapted for the big screen. The screenwriters for A Quite Place are adapting the short story The Boogeyman for film.

While many of us are focused on the news breaking from the set of the sequel to King’s other huge film adaptation, It, there is some exciting news regarding the film adaptations of another, lesser-known King tale. King’s short story, The Boogeyman, was initially published in a 1973 issue of Cavalier, but then became a part of King’s 1978 short story collection Night Shift. The story is being adapted for the big screen, and the writers behind the latest hit in horror, A Quiet Place, are penning the script.

As Deadline reports, 20th Century Fox had just finalized a deal with Scott Beck and Bryan Woods to adapt the story. Shawn Levy, Dan Levine, and Dan Cohen from 21 Laps are producing the film.

For those unfamiliar with the story, The Boogeyman follows a man named Lester Billings who claims to have lost each of his three children to the Boogeyman that was hiding in their closets. While some might brush Billings’ story off to a grieving parent trying to make sense of tragedy, it soon becomes apparent that this Boogeyman is very, very real.

King’s works have been getting a lot of love lately. In addition to It and now The Boogeyman, King’s sequel to The Shining, Doctor Sleep, is being adapted for the big screen, and another of King’s short stories, Gerald’s Game was also adapted into a highly reviewed Netflix film starring Carla Gugino.

As The Boogeyman is still in very early stages, we don’t know much about the film. However, it’s exciting to see that another spooky tale from one of the modern masters of horror will be coming our way soon!