Growing Things and Other Stories Audiobook
Growing Things and Other Stories Audiobook
- Cassandra Campbell, Sarah Naughton, Sean Crisden, Michael Crouch, Graham Halstead, Caitlin Kelly
- HarperAudio
- 2019-07-02
- 12 h 1 min
Summary:
A chilling assortment of psychological suspense and literary horror from your multiple award-winning author of the nationwide bestseller The Cabin by the end of the Globe and A Head Full of Spirits.
A masterful anthology featuring nineteen pieces of short fiction, Growing Things and Other Stories can be an exciting glimpse into Paul Tremblay’s fantastically fertile creativity.
In “The Instructor,” a Bram Stoker Award nominee for best brief story, students is forced to watch a disturbing video that about Developing Things and Additional Tales will haunt and torment her and her classmates’ lives.
Four men rob a pawn store at gunpoint and then vanish, one-by-one, because they speed from the crime scene in “The Getaway.”
In “Swim Wants to Know WHETHER IT’S as Poor as Swim Thinks,” a meth addict kidnaps her daughter from her estranged mom as their town is terrorized by a huge monster . or not.
Signing up for these haunting functions are stories associated with Tremblay’s previous novels. The tour de power metafictional novella “Notes from your dog Walkers” deconstructs horror and submitting, possibly bringing in a character from A Head Filled with Ghosts, all while portion being a prequel to Disappearance at Devil’s Rock and roll. “The Thirteenth Temple” follows another character from A Head Full of Ghosts-Merry, that has released a tell-all memoir written years after the events of the novel. And the title story, “Developing Stuff,” a shivery tale loosely shared between your sisters in A Head Full of Ghosts, is informed here in complete.
From global catastrophe to the demons within our heads, Tremblay illuminates our primal worries and darkest dreams in startlingly original fiction that leaves us unmoored. As he decreases the sky and yanks the ground from beneath our ft, we are compelled to contemplate the darkness inside our very own hearts and minds.