Showing posts with label 95/100. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 95/100. Show all posts

Frankenstein: City of Night Summary

Dean Koontz, Ed Gorman, Conspiracy, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Police Procedurals, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Frankenstein: City of Night

Published: 2005
Genre: Conspiracy, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Police Procedurals, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller
Book 02 of 05: Frankenstein

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

They are more powerful, heal quicker, and think faster than any human ever created—and they must be eliminated. But not even Victor Helios—once Frankenstein—can stop the created murderers he's unleashed on modern-day New Orleans. 

The sole chance now lies with a former "monster" and his all-too-human colleagues, Detectives Carson O'Connor, and Michael Maddison

Deucalion's centuries-long history began with Victor's first, unsuccessful effort to create the perfect human–and it is doomed to finish with the final confrontation between a wretched creature and his insane creator. 

But first, Deucalion must destroy a horror that not even Victor's evil imagination could have imagined—an invincible thing that emerges from humankind's collective nightmare with one goal in mind: to replace it.

I'm working on several other projects right now, and as soon as I finish them, I'll include a proper summary for this book.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Carson And Michael, Character Development, Frankenstein Series, New Orleans, New Race, Next Book, Odd Thomas, Page Turner, Victor Helios

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The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon Summary

Stephen King, American, Coming Of Age, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Psychological, Survival, Suspense, Thriller

The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon

Published: 6, April 1999
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Coming Of Age, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Psychological, Survival, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

A family hiking trip sets the story in motion, during which Trisha's brother, Pete, and mother constantly argue about their mother's divorce from their father, among other things. 

Trisha retreats to avoid listening and, as a result, is unable to locate her family after wandering off the trail to use the restroom. 

In an attempt to catch up, she slips and falls down a steep embankment and becomes hopelessly lost, heading deeper into the heart of the forest. 

She has a bottle of water, two Twinkies, a boiled egg, celery sticks, a tuna sandwich, a bottle of Surge, a poncho, a Game Boy, and a Walkman left to her. 

She listens to her Walkman to keep her spirits up, either to learn about the search for her or to hear a baseball game featuring her favorite player, and "heartthrob," Tom Gordon.

Trisha's family returns to their car without her and calls the police to begin a search as she begins to take steps to survive by conserving what little food she has with her while consuming edible flora. 

The rescuers look around the path, but not as far as Trisha has gone. Because of what she read in Little House on the Prairie, the girl decides to follow a creek (though it soon turns into a swamp-like river), reasoning that all bodies of water eventually lead to civilization.

As the cops stop looking for her, she huddles beneath a tree to rest. Trisha begins to hallucinate as a result of a combination of fear, hunger, and thirst. 

Several people from her past, as well as her hero, Tom Gordon, appear to her. It's unclear whether the increasingly visible signs of supernatural occurrences in the woods are also hallucinations.

Hours, and soon days, pass as Trisha wanders deeper into the woods. Trisha eventually comes to believe that she is on the verge of a confrontation with the God of the Lost, a wasp-faced evil entity on the hunt for her. 

Her trial becomes a test of a 9-year-old girl's ability to remain sane in the face of apparent death. 

She comes across a road while suffering from pneumonia and on the verge of death, but just as she discovers signs of civilization, she is confronted by a bear, which she interprets as the God of the Lost in disguise. 

Facing her fear, she realizes it's the bottom of the ninth inning and she needs to end the game. She takes a pitcher's stance and throws her Walkman like a baseball, hitting the bear in the face and startling it enough for it to back away. 

A hunter who comes across the fight between girl and beast scares the beast away and takes Trisha to safety, but Trisha knows she earned her rescue.

Trisha awakens in a hospital bed. Her divorced parents and older brother are waiting for her by her bedside. 

A nurse informs the girl's family that they must leave in order for Trisha to rest because "her numbers are up and we don't want that." 

Her father is the last one to depart. Trisha asks him to hand her a Red Sox hat (signed by Tom Gordon) before he leaves, and she points to the sky, just as Tom Gordon does when he ends a game.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Boston Red, Find Her Way, Gets Lost, Little Girl, Lost In The Woods, Main Character, Mother And Brother, Nine Year Old Girl, Red Sox, Tom Gordon, Trisha McFarland


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Dolores Claiborne Summary

Stephen King, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Psychological, Supernatural, Thriller

Dolores Claiborne

Published: November 1992
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Drama, Fiction, Horror, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Psychological, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Dolores Claiborne, a fiery 65-year-old widow living on the remote Maine island of Little Tall Island, is accused of murdering her wealthy, elderly boss, Vera Donovan

The novel is presented in the form of a transcript of her statement, as told to the local policeman and a stenographer. 

Dolores wants to make it obvious to the police that she did not murder Vera, whom she has cared for for years, but she does admit to organizing the killing of her husband, Joe St. George, nearly 30 years previously. 

Dolores' confession evolves into a narrative about her life, her rocky marriage, and her connection with her boss.

She begins by describing her connection with her boss, which began in 1949, when Vera and her rich husband bought a summer home on Little Tall Island and recruited Dolores as a maid. 

Dolores advances from maid to housekeeper in the Donovan mansion after proving her ability to meet Vera's ruthlessly rigorous standards. 

After Vera's husband is killed in a vehicle accident in the late 1950s, she spends more and more time at her island home, eventually relocating there permanently. 

Dolores becomes Vera's live-in carer and reluctant friend when she suffers a series of strokes in the 1980s. 

Dolores consoles the affluent woman while she suffers from horrific hallucinations of an entity she refers to as "the dust bunnies." 

Dolores combats Vera's developing mind tricks and power plays while she is conscious.

Dolores goes on to say that when she started working at the Donovan residence, her marriage to Joe St. George was already in trouble owing to his drunkenness and verbal and physical violence. 

Selena, Joe Jr., and Pete, their children, are completely oblivious of the abuse. 

Joe aggressively strikes Dolores in the small of her back with a piece of furnace wood after a minor transgression one night in 1960, escalating the marriage issues. 

Dolores shatters a porcelain cream pot over his head in retribution and threatens him with a hatchet, claiming she would murder him if he ever assaults her again. 

Selena, their adolescent daughter, is there throughout this altercation. Joe quits assaulting Dolores, and in an effort to preserve face, she lets him depart the island community. 

Selena is unaware that Dolores was abused and was acting in self-defense, and Joe exploits the hatchet event to get sympathy from her. Between mother and daughter, a schism emerges.

Dolores sees Selena has grown increasingly reclusive, fearful, unsociable, and unconcerned about her looks in 1962. 

Dolores confronts her daughter when they return home on the island boat, after assuming that she has met a boy or been engaged in drugs. 

She confesses the truth about the hatchet event, and Selena, without her will, admits her father assaulted her. 

Disheartened, Selena nearly jumps off the ship, but Dolores intervenes and calms her, promising to protect her. 

That night, she considers murdering Joe, characterizing the need to do so as an "inner eye opening." 

Instead, she confronts him, threatening to charge him if he ever approaches Selena again. 

Dolores eventually decides to leave Joe in order to protect her children. When she seeks to withdraw funds from her children's savings accounts in order to support their escape, she realizes that Joe has taken all she has accumulated. 

In despair, she bursts into tears at work, confiding in Vera. Vera, who is particularly compassionate, confesses that she has had some type of experience with Dolores' "inner eye," and casually notes that men like Joe frequently die in accidents, leaving their spouses little. 

As she walks away, she suggests that she caused the vehicle accident that killed her own husband and tells Dolores that "occasionally, an accident may be an unhappy woman's greatest friend."

Dolores begins arranging Joe's assassination, but she does not find a chance to carry it out until the summer of 1963. 

Vera gets preoccupied with a total solar eclipse that will be seen from the island, certain that it would persuade her estranged children to pay her a visit. 

She intends to host a large observation party on the island ferry. Dolores sends Selena to camp while sending Joe Jr. and Pete on a vacation to meet family since she thinks the island will be relatively desolate at that time. 

Dolores points out a dried-up stone well amid a clump of brambles on the outskirts of their land. 

Vera feels depressed and lashes out at her hired help when it becomes evident that her children will not be joining her at this time, only to be calmed down when Dolores confronts her about the wrongful dismissal of one of the maids.

Dolores buys Joe a bottle of scotch and cooks him a sandwich on the day of the eclipse, making him inebriated and comfortable, and they have a moment of physical tenderness for the first time in many years. 

Dolores gets a vision of a little girl in the line of the eclipse who is being sexually molested by her father at the same time the eclipse begins. 

Reminding herself of her goal, she purposefully enrages Joe by pretending she has recovered the money he took, leading him to assault her. 

She retreats into the brambles, fooling Joe into walking on the rotten planks that cover the well. The boards split, and he falls down the well, yet he is not killed instantaneously. 

He cries out for rescue for a while before losing consciousness. Dolores returns home and promptly falls asleep. 

She experiences a nightmare and then goes to the well. When she comes, Joe has recovered consciousness and is on the verge of climbing out. 

He grabs Dolores and tries to drag her in with him. She smacked him in the face with a rock, and he died and fell back into the well.

Joe is reported missing by Dolores, and his body is discovered after several days of searching. Despite the local coroner's suspicions and speculations, Joe's death is declared an accident. 

Dolores is no longer in Joe's clutches, but her actions have strained her connection with Selena, who believes her mother of murdering her father.

The narrative ultimately gets to the details of Vera's death, which prompted Dolores to recount her story. 

She admits that during one of her hallucinations, Vera managed to escape her wheelchair and flee in horror from "the dust bunnies," going down a flight of steps. 

Dolores gets a terrible vision of Joe's dust-covered ghost as Vera falls. Vera, who is still alive and cognizant despite her injuries, asks Dolores to let her end her pain. 

Dolores goes to get a rolling pin for Vera, but she dies before she can use it. The damning scene is discovered by the local postmaster, who accuses Dolores of murdering the elderly lady and forces her to contact the cops. 

Dolores is hounded and intimidated that night by members of the island community who believe she has previously evaded punishment for murder. 

The following day, Dolores receives a phone call from Vera's lawyer, who informs her, much to her surprise, that she has inherited Vera's entire fortune—nearly $30 million. 

Dolores first declines the money in favor of Vera's estranged children, but later discovers that they were killed in a car accident in 1961, and that Vera had spent the last 30 years of her life just believing they were still alive. 

Dolores convinces herself that the money will be used as a reason for murder, further complicating the case against her, and that the only way to cleanse her name is to confess everything. 

She concludes her remarks, finally at peace with herself. Several media pieces conclude the narrative by saying that Dolores was exonerated of any culpability in Vera's death and anonymously gave Vera's riches to the New England Home For Little Wanderers

The conclusion hints that Dolores and Selena have reunited and that Selena will return home for the first time in 20 years.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Charles Mulvehill, Christopher Plummer, David Strathairn, Eric Bogosian, Gerald Game, Jennifer Jason Leigh, John C. Reilly, Judy Parfitt, Kathy Bates, Little Tall, Main Character, Rose Madder, Tall Island, Taylor Hackford, Vera Donovan, Warner Bros


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Needful Things Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Rural, Small Town, Supernatural, Thriller

Needful Things

Published: October 1991
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Rural, Small Town, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

In the little town of Castle Rock, Maine, a new shop called "Needful Things" opens, piquing the residents' interest. 

Leland Gaunt, the proprietor, is a nice older man from Akron, Ohio, who always appears to have something in the store that is ideally suited to each client that walks through his door. 

Considering the items – which includes a rare Sandy Koufax baseball card, a carnival glass lampshade, and a shard of petrified wood said to be from Noah's Ark - the prices are fairly modest, but he wants each buyer to perform a small trick on someone else in town. 

When striking a bargain with Gaunt, each consumer enters a trance and becomes extremely convenient to control, later forgetting anything unusual about the experience. 

Gaunt has comprehensive awareness of the individual townspeople's long-standing secret histories and disputes, and the pranks are his way of causing them to intensify.

Soon after opening his business, Gaunt characterizes local Sheriff Alan Pangborn and Polly Chalmers, Alan's lover and the owner of a nearby sewing shop, as "difficult clients" who are likely to question and meddle with him. 

Gaunt avoids Alan and instead provides Polly with an alleged old charm that both cures her arthritic pain and gives Gaunt power over her. 

Tensions in Castle Rock quickly rise after Polly's servant Nettie Cobb and her adversary Wilma Jerzyck kill each other with knives in a conflict prompted by local youngster Brian Rusk vandalizing Wilma's home and drunk Hugh Priest killing Nettie's dog. 

Many more rivalries emerge, fueled by the persons involved's personal agendas and secrets. 

Gaunt ultimately employs petty criminal John "Ace" Merrill as his assistant, presenting him with high-quality cocaine and implying the existence of buried wealth that may help him pay off a couple of drug traffickers. 

Ace's first mission is to acquire boxes of handguns, ammo, and blasting caps from a Boston garage; Gaunt quickly starts selling the weapons to his clients as a means of protecting their purchases.

Gaunt has deceived innocent people for millennia, tricking them into buying useless trash that mysteriously looks to be anything they cherish or desire most. 

They grow so concerned about their belongings being stolen that they readily buy the weapons he invariably offers and bargains away their souls until the entire town is engulfed in chaos and carnage. 

Ace begins to mistrust his new boss's magical heritage, but Gaunt uses intimidation and threats of vengeance against Alan and the community to keep him in line. 

Soon after, other incidents of violence occur at the same time, such as when gym teacher Lester Pratt fights Deputy John LaPointe, his fiancée's ex-boyfriend, and is ultimately killed in self-defense. 

Hugh Priest and Henry Beaufort, the proprietor of a tavern, murder each other in a gunfight. 

Brian commits suicide as a result of his guilt over his role in Wilma and Nettie's deaths, and town selectman Danforth "Buster" Keeton, who has been secretly embezzling thousands of dollars from public funds to fund his gambling addiction, attacks Deputy Norris Ridgewick before fleeing to his home and murdering his wife Myrtle with a hammer. 

Ace eventually recruits Buster to help him in his efforts for Gaunt.

With the violence in Castle Rock intensifying, Ace and Buster use the caps Ace brought back to lay dynamite all across town. 

Alan sets out to murder Ace after being convinced by Gaunt that he is to blame for the vehicle tragedy that killed his wife and kid. 

Polly recognizes the wickedness in the charm she purchased and destroys it. Norris contemplates suicide after discovering that his prank on Priest resulted in the tragic gunfight, but instead decides to go to the police station for assistance. 

As the explosives detonate, Norris injures Buster and Ace puts him out of his agony. Ace kidnaps Polly and insists that Alan hand up a stash of hidden cash that he purportedly stole. Norris murders Ace, leaving Alan to confront Gaunt.

Alan pulls Gaunt back and steals his valise, which holds the souls of his clients, using sleight of hand and magical novelties that come to life. 

Gaunt exits the scene, his automobile transforming into a horse-drawn cart, leaving the survivors to contemplate an uncertain future. 

The story concludes in the same way it began, with a first-person direct address announcing that a new and mysterious shop named "Answered Prayers" is set to open in a small Iowa town — an alarming indication that Gaunt is ready to restart his business cycle.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alan Pangborn, Amanda Plummer, Bonnie Bedelia, Castle Rock, Dark Half, Dead Zone, Ed Harris, Great Read, Human Nature, J.T. Walsh, Jack Cummins, King At His Best, Leland Gaunt, Max Von Sydow, New Store, Peter Yates, Salems Lot, Small Town, Town Of Castle


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Black House Summary

Stephen King, Peter Straub, American, Arthurian, Classic, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Murder, Paranormal, Psychic, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Thriller, Witches, Wizards

Black House

Published: 15, September 2001
Genre: American, Arthurian, Classic, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Murder, Paranormal, Psychic, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Thriller, Witches, Wizards
Book 2 of 3: Talisman (The third book has not yet been published.)

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The community of French Landing, Wisconsin, has been plagued by a series of murders. The killer has been called "The Fisherman" because he made a determined attempt to imitate serial killer Albert Fish's tactics. 

The murderer in French Landing, like Fish, preys on youngsters and eats their bodies. As the narrative begins, two victims have already been discovered, with a third on the way. 

People all around the region are growing increasingly concerned as a result of the nature of the crimes and the local police's failure to apprehend the perpetrator, and certain segments of the local media are exacerbating the issue with inflammatory and provocative coverage.

Jack Sawyer has suppressed memories of his exploits in The Territories and his search for the Talisman as a twelve-year-old kid following the events of The Talisman; however, the residue of these events have served to subtly alter his life even after he has forgotten them. 

Jack rose through the ranks of the Los Angeles Police Department to become a lieutenant, where his professionalism and remarkable talent have earned him a near-legendary reputation. 

When a string of killings in Los Angeles is linked to a farm insurance salesman from French Landing, Wisconsin, Jack joins forces with the French Landing cops to apprehend the assailant. 

Jack is magnetically enthralled by the natural splendor of the Coulee Country while in Wisconsin, recalling his childhood experience in The Territories

Certain characteristics of the murder scene threaten to reawaken his suppressed recollections when he subsequently intrudes on a homicide investigation in Santa Monica. 

He then resigns from the Los Angeles Police Department and relocates to French Landing to enjoy his early retirement.

When the Fisherman begins terrorizing French Landing, the police practically beg Jack Sawyer for help, and are taken aback when he coldly refuses. 

The events of Santa Monica threaten to overwhelm Jack, and he thinks that becoming involved in the inquiry would cause him to lose his mind. 

When the Fisherman kidnaps a fourth child, Jack's aloofness is no longer possible. The Fisherman swiftly reveals himself to be much more than a serial killer. 

He is, in reality, a Crimson King agent tasked with locating youngsters who have the potential to serve as Breakers. Tyler Marshall, the fourth victim, is one of the most powerful Breakers ever, and he may be all the Crimson King needs to shatter the remaining Dark Tower beams and put an end to all worlds. 

Because the Fisherman may also "flip" into The Territories, Jack Sawyer is not just the sole chance for French Landing, but for all of existence.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Crimson King, French Landing, Hearts In Atlantis, Jack Sawyer, King And Peter, King And Straub, Sequel To The Talisman, Serial Killer


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The Talisman Summary

Stephen King, Peter Straub, American, Classic, Dark, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Occult, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Werewolf

The Talisman

Published: 8, November 1984
Genre: American, Classic, Dark, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Occult, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Werewolf
Book 1 of 3: Talisman (The third book has not yet been published.)

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jack Sawyer, twelve years old, sets off from Arcadia Beach, New Hampshire, in search of a crystal known as "the Talisman" in order to rescue his mother Lily, who is dying of cancer. 

Jack's adventure takes him across the American heartland as well as "the Territories," a bizarre fantasy country located in a reality parallel to Jack's. 

Persons in the Territories have "twinners," or counterpart individuals, in our world. Twinners' births, deaths, and (it is implied) other key life events are generally mirrored. 

Twinners can also "flip" or migrate to the other world, however, they simply share the body of their parallel universe's equivalent. 

When flipped, the Twinner, or the actual person, will instinctively begin speaking and thinking in the language of where they are flipping into.

In rare cases (such as Jack's), a person may die in one world but not the other, rendering the survivor "single-natured," with the capacity to flip back and forth between the two realms, body and mind. 

A strange character known as Speedy Parker, who is the twinner of a gunslinger named Parkus in the Territories, teaches Jack how to flip. 

In the Territories, the adored Queen Laura DeLoessian, Jack's mother's twin (a movie star renowned as the "Queen of B Movies"), is also dying.

With the assistance and encouragement of Speedy Parker, Jack sets out for the magical Talisman in the Territories. 

After meeting a guy named Osmond, who works for Morgan Sloat's twinner, Jack leaves the settlement and follows a soldier along a road. 

Morgan almost captures Jack in the woods, but he flees. The trees then assault Jack, nearly strangling him and forcing him to flip back into America. 

Jack continues his travels around the United States, eventually landing a job as a bartender in the fictitious town of Oatley, New York. Smokey Updike, the owner, is vicious and nasty to Jack, and he treats him as a slave.

Jack flees Oatley a few days later, pursued by a monster named Elroy, who has been following him during his stay in Oatley. 

He eludes Elroy long enough to return to the Territories, where Jack recalls another of his father's associates, Jerry Bledsoe, who was killed in a bizarre explosion. 

Morgan Sloat had created the explosion by merely flicking between the two realities, according to Jack. After bumping with Elroy and Morgan again, Jack travels to the American Territories and discovers that he unwittingly caused the deaths of eight construction workers nearby, giving him great sadness and reminding him of Jerry Bledsoe.

In Ohio, Jack encounters Snowball, a blind singer who may or may not be Speedy, who inspires Jack to continue on his adventure. 

On the highway, Jack collides with Morgan at a petrol station, flips into the Territories, and almost drowns in a river. Wolf, a big werewolf beast, comes to Jack's aid. 

Before Morgan enters through a portal and activates a gadget that allows lightning bolts to hit, the two become friends. 

Using the final taste of the juice, Jack returns to his world with Wolf. Jack wonders if he will be able to return to the Territories now that his juice has been depleted. 

As they arrive in Indiana, Wolf quickly adjusts to life in the United States. A police officer arrests Jack and Wolf and transports them to the Sunlight Home, a boy’s school for misfits.

The owner, evangelical psychopath Robert Gardner, is Osmond's Twinner in the search for Jack

The guys are bullied by the school's prefects, namely Sonny Singer and Heck Bast. After a few episodes with the prefects and Gardner, in which a student flees the school and the youngsters are interrogated in the middle of the night, Jack and Wolf flee into the Territories, only to discover that the Twinner of the School is a prison camp. 

In the restroom, the prefects battle Jack and Wolf, and Gardner, realizing who Jack is, drugs Wolf and kidnaps Jack, torturing him to expose himself. 

Wolf transforms into a werewolf after being put into a crate in the fields and wreaks havoc on the school, massacring countless children and bursting into Gardner's office. 

Wolf assassinates the prefects in Gardner's office but is shot and killed by Sonny, who then bleeds to death from his wounds. Before going forward, Jack consoles the dying Wolf.

Jack locates Morgan Sloat's son Richard at an Illinois boarding school. Jack tries but fails to persuade Richard of his exploits and Morgan's purpose. 

The two escape and flip into the Territories when the school is changed into a monstrous parody of itself as the pupils morph into werewolves and seek to goad Richard into tossing out Jack

There, they encounter a guy named Anders, who is delivering weaponry to Morgan's warriors in preparation for a final fight against Jack

Richard, who is now hallucinating and thinks he has a tumor, is actually suffering from an illness given to him by Morgan

Jack made the decision to grab the package personally and stage an ambush. They must first travel by train across the Blasted Lands, a horrific environment filled with fireballs, deformed beasts, and smugglers.

The army base was bombarded by Jack and a sickly Richard, who destroyed much of Morgan's armada and killed Elroy and Osmond's boy. 

Jack travels to California, where Richard finally concedes to the existence of the Territories. 

They arrive at Point Venuti and enter the Agincourt Hotel (the Alhambra Inn's twin) unseen by the surviving werewolves. 

Speedy Parker, who is frail and dying, meets them on the beachside. Inside the Black Castle, Jack battles stone suits of armor protecting the Talisman and captures it, causing an earthquake that disbands the rest of Morgan Sloat's werewolves. 

Jack understands there are more realms than the two he is familiar with, and the Talisman connects them all. 

He uses the Talisman to cure Richard, kills Gardner on the castle steps, and battles Morgan on the beach. 

He eventually kills Sloat, heals Speedy, and returns to New Hampshire in a limousine. Jack reunites with Lily and employs the Talisman one last time to save his mother and the Queen.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Across The Country, Along The Way, Black House, Dark Tower, Highly Recommend, Jack Sawyer, King And Peter, King And Straub, Morgan SloatTower Series


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Any kind of support, even a simple 'like, thumbs up or a small comment' is enough and helps me grow, create and freely do more stuff and work on projects for the benefit of many.
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Cycle of the Werewolf Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Contemporary, Fantasy, Fiction, Folk Tales, Graphic, Horror, Literature, Mythology, Shape Shifter, Suspense, Werewolf

Cycle of the Werewolf

Published: November 1983
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Contemporary, Fantasy, Fiction, Folk Tales, Graphic, Horror, Literature, Mythology, Shape Shifter, Suspense, Werewolf

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The narrative takes place in Tarker's Mills, Maine, a fictitious town. Each chapter corresponds to a month on the calendar. 

At each full moon, a werewolf ruthlessly murders local inhabitants, and the otherwise normal village lives in dread. 

Marty Coslaw, a 10-year-old youngster in a wheelchair, is the story's protagonist. The narrative shifts back and forth between the horrifying episodes and Marty's younger day-to-day existence, as well as how the tragedy impacts him.

An intoxicated railway worker is the werewolf's first victim. A hitchhiker, an abusive spouse, one of Marty's friends at the city park, a herd of pigs at a rural farm, a sheriff's officer while sitting in his cruiser, and lastly the owner of a café are the next characters to appear.

The town's Independence Day fireworks have been canceled for this year. Marty is angry since he has been anticipating for them all year. 

Marty's uncle, feeling sorry for his nephew, brings him some fireworks and warns him to light them off very late so his mother doesn't find out. 

The werewolf assaults Marty when he is outside having his own private Fourth of July party, and Marty manages to snuff out the monster's left eye with a bundle of firecrackers. The werewolf flees, and the police dismiss Marty's story since they are hunting for a human killer, not a werewolf. Every full moon as the summer progresses, the bloodshed resumes.

Fall has here, and with it comes Halloween. Marty and his father went trick-or-treating to celebrate. While out and about, he notices Reverend Lowe, who is sporting an eye patch. 

Lowe, on the other hand, doesn't know Marty since he's wearing a Yoda mask. Marty, who comes from a Catholic family, never attends Lowe's church services, which is why he didn't figure out the werewolf's identity sooner.

Marty writes the pastor anonymous letters throughout the following two weeks, asking him why he doesn't kill himself and end the torment. 

In December, he delivers the final letter, which is signed with his name. Reverend Lowe has no idea that Marty has persuaded his rather hesitant uncle to have two silver bullets produced and to come to spend New Year's Eve (which falls on the full moon) with him and his sister. 

The werewolf breaks into the house just before midnight to murder Marty. Marty uses the silver bullets to kill the werewolf twice. After the wolf dies, it transforms back into Reverend Lowe, much to the surprise of everyone in the room.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Berni Wrightson, Bernie Wrightson, Black And White, Corey Haim, Daniel Attias, Everett Mcgill, Full Moon, Gary Busey, Martha De Laurentiis, Martha Schumacher, Marty Coslaw, Quick Read, Short Story, Small Town, Tarker Mills, Town Of Tarker


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Christine Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Christine

Published: 29, April 1983
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

In 1978, Arnie and his friend Dennis come upon a damaged 1958 Plymouth Fury being sold by Roland D. LeBay, an older man with a back brace who christened the automobile "Christine." 

Arnie buys Christine for $250, despite Dennis' objections. Dennis sits inside Christine while Arnie finishes the paperwork and has a vision of the vehicle and its environs as they were 20 years ago when the automobile was new. 

Dennis, terrified, thinks he doesn't like Christine. Christine is taken by Arnie to a do-it-yourself garage owned by Will Darnell, who is accused of using the garage as a cover for illegal activities. 

Arnie loses his spectacles and his acne clears up as he fixes the automobile, but he also becomes reclusive, humorless, and pessimistic. 

Dennis encounters LeBay's younger brother, George, after he dies, and George explains LeBay's history of rage and violence. George discloses that LeBay's small daughter choked to death in the back seat of the car while eating a cheeseburger and that LeBay's wife later committed suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning in the front seat.

Dennis notices that Arnie has started dressing like a 1950s greaser and has taken on many of LeBay's personality qualities. 

Arnie has become close to Darnell, even working as a courier in Darnell's smuggling operations, according to Dennis

As Arnie nears the completion of Christine's restoration, he begins dating an attractive student named Leigh

Christine is forced to stay in an airport parking lot by Arnie's parents. Soon later, Clarence "Buddy" Repperton, a bully who blames Arnie for his expulsion from school, discovers Christine's whereabouts and, with the assistance of his group, vandalizes the automobile. 

Christine's capacity to fix herself is recognized by Arnie, who pushes her through Darnell's garage until enough damage has been undone for her to run, and then through the junkyard until she is fully repaired. 

Arnie strains his back in the process and, like LeBay, starts wearing a back brace. Leigh nearly chokes to death on a cheeseburger during a date with Arnie and is only saved by the intervention of a hitchhiker. 

Christine's dashboard lights seemed to turn into bright green eyes, observing her during the tragedy, and Arnie only tried to save her half-heartedly, Leigh observes. 

Leigh swears she'll never get in the car again, believing she and Christine are vying for Arnie's devotion. 

Around town, there are a number of unexplained car-related deaths. Darnell, Buddy, and all but one of his vandalous accomplices are among the victims. 

Christine is linked to each of the deaths, but there is no proof on the automobile. Despite Arnie's impeccable alibis, Detective Rudy Junkins becomes skeptical of him. 

Christine is performing these killings on her own, possessed by LeBay's vengeful soul, and then healing herself.

While learning more about Christine and LeBay's background, Leigh and Dennis begin dating. 

Dennis believes LeBay sacrificed his daughter and wife in order to make Christine a vessel for his spirit. 

They compare Arnie's autographs before and after he bought Christine, as well as LeBay's. 

Arnie becomes enraged when he discovers Leigh and Dennis getting uncomfortably close in Dennis' vehicle. 

Junkins is killed in a vehicle accident shortly after. Dennis and Leigh develop a scheme to smash the automobile and save Arnie, fearing they would be next. 

While Arnie is at a college, Dennis and Leigh entice Christine to the garage and use a sewage tanker truck to rip her apart. 

Dennis sees LeBay's ghost pleading with him to come to a halt before the wreckage is crushed. 

Dennis discovers that Arnie and his mother were killed in a car accident and that Christine had previously murdered Arnie's father. 

According to witness stories, LeBay's ghost, who was linked to Arnie through Christine, exited the Plymouth and sought to reclaim Arnie, but Arnie battled him to a stalemate, culminating in the accident.

Dennis and Leigh's relationship has come to an end after four years. He learns about a vehicle accident in which a drive-in theater employee—the sole surviving member of Buddy's gang—was murdered by a car that slammed through a cinderblock wall in Los Angeles. 

Dennis theorizes that Christine has rebuilt herself and is preparing to assassinate anybody who stands in her way, sparing himself for last.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alexandra Paul, Arnie Cunningham, Character Development, Dennis Guilder, Former Owner, Friend Dennis, Great Book, High School, John Carpenter, John Stockwell, Keith Gordon, Killer Car, Much Better, Plymouth Fury, Richard, Kobritz, Roland Lebay


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The Dead Zone Summary

Stephen King, Classic, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Psychic, Psychic, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Thriller

The Dead Zone

Published: 30, August 1979
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Classic, Contemporary, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Psychic, Psychic, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Johnny Smith falls unconscious while ice-skating as a youngster in 1953, then mumbles a prophecy to an adult who later has an accident. 

Greg Stillson, a young, emotionally distraught door-to-door Bible salesperson, kicks a dog to death in an unrelated incident.

By 1970, Johnny has a new girlfriend called Sarah and is a high school teacher in the little Maine town of Cleaves Mills. 

Johnny gets injured in a vehicle accident and slips into a coma after constantly winning at a carnival wheel of fortune. 

Johnny discovers that he has suffered a neurological injury, with one section of his brain severely injured, resulting in a "dead zone," when he wakes up almost four years later. 

Other areas of the brain are now showing increased activity as if to compensate. As a result, when Johnny touches people or objects, he occasionally has clairvoyant visions. 

After assisting a number of individuals, Johnny is upset by sensationalized media headlines about his alleged psychic abilities. 

When Johnny declines a lucrative offer from tabloid reporter Richard Dees to publish phony forecasts under his name, Dees' publication calls him a liar. 

Despite his continuous, terrible headaches, Johnny is relieved and intends to resume his usual life as a teacher. 

He is feared by the town, but Sarah pays him a visit. Sarah makes it obvious that she has a new life with her husband Walt and their kid after she and Johnny conclude their romance. 

Sheriff George Bannerman of Castle Rock approaches Johnny and requests for his assistance in catching a local serial killer. 

After the death of a nine-year-old girl, Johnny investigates and unwillingly names the Castle Rock Strangler as Bannerman's subordinate Frank Dodd, who kills himself after leaving a confession. 

As Johnny had predicted, the event rekindled public interest in his power, and he is considered pretty scandalous to resume teaching.

Greg Stillson, now a prosperous businessman and the mayor of Ridgeway, New Hampshire, threatens to kill those he bullies if they report his acts or refuse to assist him. He wins a seat in the United States House of Representatives as an independent in 1976, after blackmailing a local businessman into collecting cash for him. 

Johnny begins working as a private tutor for a teenage kid in Ridgeway, where he develops an interest in politics. When he meets Stillson, he is frightened to have a vision of an older Stillson, now President, initiating a global nuclear war. 

As Johnny's health deteriorates, he mulls about Stillson's presidency, comparing his predicament to someone with time travel having the potential to murder Hitler in 1932. 

Rather than murdering Stillson to prevent his vision from coming true, Johnny procrastinates due to uncertainty in his vision, his abhorrence of murder, and his perception that there is no urgent need to act soon as he had met an FBI agent investigating Stillson as a possible danger.

A vehicle bomb kills the FBI agent. Meanwhile, others disregard Johnny's warnings that a calamity would occur at his pupil's graduation celebration, resulting in multiple deaths. 

Johnny buys a firearm to murder Stillson after realizing he needs to take more serious action to avoid nuclear war and knowing his headaches are caused by a brain tumor. 

Stillson begins his address at the next gathering when Johnny fires from a balcony. He misses and gets injured by guards. Stillson snatches a little child and uses him as a human shield. 

An onlooker captures Stillson's antics on camera. Johnny gets shot twice by the bodyguards because he is unable to shoot a child. He is almost killed when he falls from the balcony. 

Johnny touches Stillson one more time before passing away. He gets only fleeting impressions, but he is certain that the dreadful future has been avoided. When the photo of Stillson using a child as a shield was published, it effectively ended his political career.

An epilogue intersperses fragments from Johnny's letters to his loved ones, a "Q & A" transcript of a fictitious Senate committee inquiry into Johnny's attempted assassination of Stillson (headed by real-life Maine Senator William Cohen), and a narrative of Sarah's visit to Johnny's grave. Sarah had a brief psychic touch with Johnny's soul and drives away, reassured.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Brooke Adams, Car Accident, Castle Rock, Christopher Walken, David Cronenberg, Debra Hill, Dino De Laurentiis, Greg Stillson, Herbert Lom, James Franco, Jeffrey Chernov, Johnny Smith, King At His Best, Martin Sheen, Salem's Lot, See The Future, Serial Killer, Tom Skerritt, Wheel Of Fortune


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End of Watch Summary

Stephen King, American, Fiction, Horror, Literary, Mystery, Police Procedurals, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

End of Watch

Published: 7, June 2016
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Fiction, Horror, Literary, Mystery, Police Procedurals, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller
Book 3 of 3: The Bill Hodges Trilogy

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Bill Hodges, a retired detective who now owns the private investigative firm Finders Keepers with his sidekick Holly, is diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. 

With only a few months to live, he finds himself sucked into a recent suicide spree. All of the deceased have one thing in common: they were all in contact with mass murderer Brady Hartsfield, the infamous Mr. Mercedes who, six years ago, intended a follow-up mass murder by blowing up a rock concert venue crowded with youngsters. 

Brady's ambitions were foiled by Hodges and Holly, who put him in a coma and he never recovered consciousness. 

Many staff members at the hospital where Brady is now being treated say that he is recuperating at an unbelievable rate and that he may be faking his injuries to evade prosecution for his crimes. Meanwhile, all individuals who have come near to establishing this notion appear to have committed suicide.

Brady discovered himself obtaining new skills after his head injury, including the capacity to maneuver small things with his thoughts and the ability to enter the bodies of specific persons vulnerable to his mental dominance. 

Brady, who is still in a hospital bed, has utilized his power to complete his homicidal task by developing a hypnotic video game software that increases the user's vulnerability. Once the users are under Brady's influence, he utilizes the software to manipulate their brains and encourage them to commit suicide. 

The teens who avoided death when Brady's plot to demolish the music venue failed are the targets. 

Brady's ultimate purpose, on the other hand, is to entice Hodges into the game and exact retribution. 

Brady employs the bodies of a corrupt neurosurgeon and a hospital librarian as puppets and red herrings to perform his dirty work and misdirect the police while making his last attempt to kill Hodges, all the while ignorant that Hodges is already racing against the clock towards his own death.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bill Hodges, Brady Hartsfield, Character Development, Great Ending, Highly Recommend, Hodges Trilogy, Holly And Jerome, Holly Gibney, Mercedes And Finders, Really Enjoyed


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The Mauritius Command Summary

The Mauritius Command Summary

The Mauritius Command

Published: 1977

Author: Patrick O'Brian

Book 4 of 21: Aubrey/Maturin Novels

Genres: Action, Adventure, British & Irish, Family Life, Fiction, Historical, Literary, Literature, Medical, Military, Saga, Sea, Suspense, Thriller, Travel


Check out the review of this book here:



Summary

Jack Aubrey and Sophia Williams are married and have twin daughters. They reside in Ashgrove Cottage on his half-pay, which is insufficient to support the household's other navy men. Sophia's mother has lost all of her money, including Sophia's share, and is now living with them. Cecelia, Sophia's little niece, lives with them as well.

Aubrey, as much as he adores Sophia, is eager to return to the sea. Stephen Maturin comes to call, and Aubrey's instructions are brought from the port Admiral soon after. He is assigned command of the HMS Boadicea, a 38-gun frigate.

He picks up orders and Mr. R T Farquhar, a political gentleman, in Plymouth. He's supposed to cruise to Cape Town, where a convoy of ships will gather. They encounter the French ship Hébé, which is escorting a seized merchant ship, not far from home. Both ships are captured by the Boadicea. Aubrey arranges for the rewards to be sent to Gibraltar.

The timely capture enables the ship to send messages home, get a French chef, and obtain the Hébé's English captives, all of whom are capable seamen. The extended cruise across the Atlantic allows Aubrey to train the crew of the Boadicea to his gunnery standards, as well as Maturin and Farquhar to formulate plans.

Aubrey meets Admiral Bertie upon his arrival, who confirms his title as Commodore and authorizes him to raise his broad pendant ('broad pennant' in certain versions). He is given official orders to disrupt French interests in the region, with the goal of capturing Mauritius and La Réunion in the end. Captain Corbett of Néréide, Lord Clonfert of the Otter, an Englishman with an Irish title, and Captain Pym of the Sirius are among the convoy's leaders.

With some of Aubrey's followers onboard, Corbett sailed from the West Indies post. After Aubrey switches men into Corbett's ship, Bonden, Killick, and others get aboard. Corbett is a good captain, but he's a flogger. Bertie informs Aubrey that Clonfert and Corbett are feuding.

Aubrey changes his pendant to the ancient 64-gun line ship HMS Raisonnable for the first 2,000 miles of the trip to the islands. The Caroline is captured; Corbett christens her HMS Bourbonnaise and sends her to Cape Town and England with messages. The remainder of the convoy makes its way back to Cape Town.

Aubrey returns aboard HMS Boadicea and sets sail after hearing that the French had captured several merchant ships. The convoy is trapped in a big cyclone and must return to Cape Town for repairs, where it receives its first letter in months. Due to the water damage to Sophia's letters, Aubrey is unable to comprehend her entire message.

After a landing by Army forces supported by sepoys under the British East India Company, all under the energetic and decisive Lieutenant Colonel Harry Keating, with ships of the convoy on both sides of the island, La Réunion capitulates nearly without loss. Maturin's propaganda and political gatherings help them along the way by explaining why the people should welcome the British with Farquhar as interim Governor. Mauritius proved to be more difficult.

Maturin is killed while boarding the HMS Néréide, which is part of the force dispatched to the Île de la Passe. He's badly hurt, so he keeps an eye on Clonfert while he recovers aboard. The action has been completed successfully. Maturin is assigned to Mauritius in order to continue his work. Captain Pym commands a small group of ships to land men on Mauritius to staff the fort.

Three French ships, Bellone, Minerve, and Victor, as well as two Indiamen, Ceylon and Windham, appear. They attack the fort and then sail into the harbor, catching the British off guard and deciding to attack. The battle lasts for days, with high fatalities, and two British ships eventually go aground.

Iphigenia and the fort at Île de la Passe are abandoned to be retaken by the French, while Sirius and Magicienne are burned to avoid their capture. Clonfert is gravely injured in the neck and head by a splinter, and Néréide is taken. Maturin is onboard a message ship that arrives at La Réunion to notify Aubrey of the losses and the unsuccessful attack on Port Southeast.

Boadicea sails through the night to inspect Île de la Passe for French control, and then pursues Manche and Vénus in a futile attempt to separate them. Aubrey feels his circumstances have altered after contacting Pullings, who has the guns of Windham onboard Emma. Captain Corbett then rejoins HMS Africaine at St Denis. Africaine battles with the Astrée and the French Iphigenie while chasing the French during the night.

The conflict goes horribly, and Corbett is slain in the middle of it after being wounded by his own downtrodden soldiers. When the Boadicea closes in on them, the French take the Africaine but dismast it; Astrée refuses to engage. The fleet arrives in La Réunion, joined by the Otter and Staunch, where the Commodore prioritizes the refurbishment of the Africaine.

Maturin and Bonden come from Mauritius with news that the HMS Bombay is near, engaged in combat with the French Vénus and Victor. The Boadicea has engaged the French ships. With the assistance of volunteers from the refitting HMS Africaine, Aubrey boards and takes Bombay and Vénus. During the combat, French Commodore Hamelin is killed. Once the surviving French ships have departed, Aubrey devises a strategy to end the battle, and his ships are ready to fight again when they return to Mauritius. Keating is also ready.

With numerous other British sails in view, the Emma approaches the Boadicea. Tom Pullings arrives with the Gazette, which announces Sophia's pregnancy. Aubrey is overjoyed by the news. He then reads Admiral Bertie's letter, in which he is instructed to accompany the fleet at Rodriguez, where he would be aboard the HMS Illustrious alongside General Abercrombie's forces. Based on Aubrey and Keating's initial strategy, the final assault is practically bloodless. After being offered honorable conditions, the French submit.

Clonfert has committed himself at the military hospital at Port Louis since the conflict, unable to face Jack Aubrey, whom he deems a competition. At Government House, a formal meal is held. Maturin, through Mr. Peters, spreads rumors about Aubrey's father gaining influence in London, which Bertie believes. The Admiral assigns Aubrey the task of transporting the dispatches of this victory to England aboard the Boadicea.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords:

Action, Aubrey And Maturin, Billy Boyd, British Navy, Character Development, Drama, Diana Villiers, Early 19th Century, High Seas, Historical Fiction, HMS Surprise, Indian Ocean, Jack And Stephen, Jack Aubrey, Jane Austen, Lucky Jack, Master And Commander, Maturin Series, Mauritius Command, Napoleonic Wars, Nautical Terms, Patrick O’Brian, Patrick Obrian, Patrick O Brian, Paul Bettany, Peter Weir, Post Captain, Royal Navy, Russell Crowe, Stephen Maturin, Years Ago


Rating: 95/100
Recommended: 95/100 Yes.

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Master and Commander (2003) (PG+):


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