Showing posts with label Drama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drama. Show all posts

Phantoms Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Contemporary, Crime, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Rural, Science Fiction, Small Town, Suspense, Thriller

Phantoms

Published: March 1983
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Contemporary, Crime, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Rural, Science Fiction, Small Town, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jenny and Lisa Paige, two sisters, return to Jenny's homeland of Snowfield, California, a tiny ski resort community hidden in the Sierra Nevada Mountains where Jenny works as a doctor, only to discover that no one is alive. 

The few bodies they discover have been mangled or reflect some unusual way of death. Jenny eventually calls authorities from a neighboring town for assistance after becoming increasingly concerned about the community's unusual and scary predicament.

The girls and the authorities, commanded by Sheriff Bryce Hammond, might request assistance from the military Biological Investigations Unit. 

Only one clue as to what was causing the town's disappearances and fatalities was discovered by the police. 

A victim of whatever was attempting to murder him managed to write Timothy Flyte's name on a mirror just before he was slain. Flyte is a British professor who wrote The Ancient Enemy. His book records and describes the mass disappearances of individuals throughout history in various places of the world.

It is revealed that the settlement was constructed over the hibernation grounds of one such Enemy, an amoeboid shapeshifter. This Ancient Enemy feeds seldom, but when it does, the consequences are disastrous. 

The Enemy was said to have caused or facilitated the extinction of the dinosaurs, as well as many of the big enigmatic mass vanishings: Mayan civilization, Roanoke, ghost ships, and so on.

The monster absorbs other living forms to gain bulk and can perfectly imitate other animals. It can develop microscopic "probes" or "phantoms" that imitate eaten living forms and follow the commands of its "hive mind" to go out and hunt new victims; also, the monster absorbs the mental capacity of those it eats.

The nucleus, which is positioned in the core of its main body, is its single living organ. The cells of the monster have a chemical structure comparable to that of fossil fuels; when this is discovered, the scientists utilize oil-eating bacteria to destroy the Enemy's core or brain. Ananda Mohan Chakrabarty created the genetically modified bacteria in real life.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Ancient Enemy, Ben Affleck, Bob Weinstein, Edge Of Your Seat, Ever Read, Harvey Weinstein, Highly Recommend, Jenny And Lisa, Joanna Going, Joe Chappelle, Koontz Books, Liev Schreiber, Mass Disappearances, Miramax, Page Turner, Peter O'Toole, Rose McGowan, Years Ago


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Ghost Story Summary

Peter Straub, American, Drama, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literary, Literature, Suspense, Thriller

Ghost Story

Published: 1979
Author: Peter Straub
Genre: American, Drama, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literary, Literature, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The tale begins with a guy named Donald Wanderley traveling with a little girl whom he appears to have abducted. When Donald and the girl arrive in Panama City, Florida, the narrative travels back in time to the previous winter's events.

Four elderly men who are members of a clique called the Chowder Society live in the small upstate New York town of Milburn, which is indicated to be in Broome County east of Binghamton: John Jaffrey, a doctor; Lewis Benedikt, a retired entrepreneur; Sears James, an attorney; and Ricky Hawthorne, an attorney, and James' Partner

For the past 50 years, these closest friends have gathered, told each other tales, and been wonderful companions. 

However, their group used to be made up of five people. Jaffrey had hosted a party in honor of a visiting actress a year before, and their fifth member, Edward Wanderley, had perished in an upstairs bedroom amid the celebrations. He had a terrified expression on his face as if he had been scared to death.

Since that night, the friends have been troubled by dreadful dreams and have turned to recounting ghost stories to each other. 

Sears tells them a ghost story about when he was a young man during one of their gatherings. 

Before opting to go to law school, James worked as a teacher in a small town. He became obsessed with one of his students, Fenny Bate, a sluggish, mentally troubled young lad. 

Fenny and his sister were shunned by the town, and after some investigation, he discovers why. 

Gregory, the older brother of the two youngsters, was widely thought to have sexually abused his younger brother. 

Gregory was the guardian of his younger siblings because their mother had died and their father had abandoned the household. 

Gregory tumbled from the ladder and died one day while repairing the roof and someone thought they spotted the two young Bate children fleeing the scene. 

Sears tells his friends that over time, he began to see a scary young guy lingering around the school, and he finally came to believe it was Gregory Bate's ghost. 

Sears endeavored but failed, to free Fenny from the clutches of his deceased brother. Fenny died, and Sears departed the tiny town after finishing the school year.

After relaying his story, Sears and Ricky are summoned to the property of one of their clients, who has discovered some mangled sheep in his field. 

Later in the ride, Sears tells Ricky that the previous night's event was not made up, but had truly occurred to him when he was younger. 

Sears, like the rest of the Chowder Society, admits to being terrified. They decide to write to Edward's nephew, Donald Wanderley because Donald has authored an esoteric novel and they believe his research skills may be useful to them. However, before Donald arrives, Jaffrey commits suicide by jumping off a bridge.

Donald enters just as the funeral is wrapping up. The Society's three remaining members inform him that they want him to look into any conceivable options that he may find acceptable. 

Donald's brother David had died under unexplained circumstances some years before, prompting him to pen his horror thriller. 

Donald tells them the tale of what he believes happened. He'd gotten a teaching job at Berkeley because of the positive response to his first novel, and he'd started dating a lovely graduate student called Alma Mobley

He was inseparable from her at first, and there was a discussion of marriage. But, as time passed, he began to notice odd things about her and thought that there was something peculiar about Alma

She had a sinister drug-dealing acquaintance named Greg Benton who was the guardian of a mentally disabled younger brother, as well as even more sinister acquaintances who belonged to a cult associated with the Manson Family and claimed to be in regular contact with the spirit of a dead man named Tasker Martin who "approved" their relationship. 

Donald ceased seeing her as frequently, because his business faltered, and Alma suddenly disappeared one day. 

Upon further investigation, he learned that many of Alma's claims about her family history were false; for example, she claimed to be the daughter of a prominent New Orleans artist called Robert Mobley, who had two boys but no daughter. 

In fact, Robert Mobley had a bizarre experience similar to Donald's in which his son Shelby committed suicide after an affair with a mysterious younger girl named Amy Monckton while under the guardianship of a woman named Florence de Peyser, who employed a sinister man named Gregorio as her chauffeur. 

A few months later, David phoned to tell him that he and Alma had gotten engaged and that he wanted everything to be okay between Donald and his girlfriend. 

Donald tried to warn David about Alma, but it was too late, and David died shortly after.

Soon after, Lewis Benedikt is murdered in the forest, and Sears and Ricky decide it is time to tell Donald the most horrifying story the Chowder Society has ever heard—and it, too, is real. 

Eva Galli, a young woman, had migrated to the village fifty years before. She was in her early twenties, and all five of the young guys were head over heels in love with her, although completely platonic love. 

Eva came to see them one night in 1929, not long after Black Tuesday, but she wasn't herself. 

She made sexual approaches and made fun of them. Eva collapsed and injured her head as a result of the struggle. 

They planned to hide her body by placing it in a car and driving it into a deep pond, believing she was dead. 

But, at the last second, Eva's body vanished from the inside of the car, and a lynx watched them from the opposite bank.

Donald continues his investigation and swiftly concludes that they are dealing with a Manitou or some type of shape-shifting beast. 

He also believes Alma Mobley is Eva Galli, as well as Amy Monckton and the mystery young actress who was the guest of honor at his uncle's death party. 

He discovers some of his uncle's tape recordings and listens to bits that not even his uncle has heard yet, when she talks directly to him and the remaining Chowder Society, claiming to be a member of an ancient race of creatures and being old enough to recall the first humans in the nation.

Donald, Ricky, and Sears are joined in their fight by Peter Barnes, a young man whose mother was murdered by the servants of these creatures, formerly normal human people who have been given new life and powers. 

Sears is ambushed and killed in his car, and the survivors discover that the reanimated Gregory and Fenny are assisting Eva in her endeavors and that Gregory is identical to Greg Benton, the drug dealer Donald met in Berkeley, and Fenny was Greg Benton's disabled brother, and Gregory and Robert Mobley's New Orleans acquaintance Gregorio were also one and the same. 

Gregory informs them that Florence de Peyser assisted in his resurrection and that Eva is also obedient to the de Peyser lady. 

Gregory and Fenny assault Peter, Donald, and Ricky at a movie theater, but both are slain in the subsequent fight, causing Donald to learn that, despite their unearthly abilities, the monsters are not truly immortal. Eva is tracked down and defeated by the survivors, but she escapes in a new form.

Ricky, exhausted, departs Milburn for a lengthy vacation with his wife, as Peter prepares for college. Donald keeps an eye out for Eva's next appearance, which he believes will be the little girl from the beginning of the novel.

Eva appears in the shape of a small girl and seeks to manipulate Donald's psyche while in Florida. 

He is able to resist and kills her after she attempts to flee in the shape of a wasp. Donald then makes plans to travel to San Francisco in search of the de Peyser woman.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alice Krige, Burt Weissbourd, Character Development, Chowder Society, Douglas Green, Ever Read, Ever Written, Fred Astaire, Ghost Stories, Horror Novels, John Houseman, John Irvin, Melvyn Douglas, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., New York, Ralph Cohn, Salem Lot, Small Town, Thing That Ever


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Under the Dome Summary

Stephen King, Action, American, Classic, Contemporary, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Under the Dome

Published: 10, November 2009
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Action, American, Classic, Contemporary, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

On October 21, 2017, at 11:45 a.m., the little Maine village of Chester's Mill is abruptly and gruesomely cut off from the rest of the world by an invisible, semi-permeable barrier of unknown origin. 

The barrier's instant emergence causes a number of injuries and fatalities and also keeps former Army Captain Dale "Barbie" Barbara, who is attempting to escape Chester's Mill due to a local disagreement, inside the town.

When Police Chief Howard "Duke" Perkins goes too near to The Dome, his pacemaker explodes, killing him instantaneously. 

This effectively eliminates the final substantial challenge to James "Big Jim" Rennie, a used car dealer and the town's Second Selectman. 

Big Jim wields considerable authority in Chester's Mill and seizes the chance to utilize the barrier as part of a power play to grasp control of the town.

Big Jim chooses one of his buddies, the inept Peter Randolph, as the new head of police. He also begins filling the ranks of the Chester's Mill Police Department with suspects, including his son, Junior Rennie, and his associates. 

Junior suffers from frequent migraines caused by an as-yet-undiscovered brain tumor, which has also begun to affect his mental state; unbeknownst to Big Jim, Junior was in the process of beating and strangling a girl (Angie McCain) to death when the barrier appeared, and by the time Big Jim places him on the police force, Junior has killed another girl (Dodee Sanders).

Col. James O. Cox (who is stationed outside The Dome) telephones Julia Shumway, the editor of the local newspaper, and asks her to deliver a message to Barbie to contact him. 

Cox then requests that Barbie act as the government's agent in bringing down The Dome, as it has become known. 

Cox assigns him the duty of identifying The Dome's power source, which is thought to be someplace in town, drawing parallels to Barbie's Army specialty in locating enemy weapons plants. 

Cox may also predict the political repercussions of such a circumstance in a small community. 

Barbie is restored in the United States military and brevetted to the rank of Colonel as a result of a Presidential order. 

Barbie is also given a decree that gives him jurisdiction over the township. However, given the nature of small-town politics, this move is not well accepted by Big Jim and his gang of rogue police officers. 

Around this time, Duke's widow, Brenda Perkins, uncovers a file on her husband's computer that details Big Jim's money-laundering methods.

As Big Jim insinuates and orchestrates disquiet and dread among the townsfolk in order to consolidate his authority, Barbie, Julia, and a few other townspeople try to keep things from spinning out of hand. 

Barbie is framed and jailed for four murders after crossing Big Jim's path multiple times. He is suspected of murdering Reverend Lester Coggins, who laundered money for Big Jim's large-scale methamphetamine organization, as well as Duke's wife Brenda PerkinsAngie and Dodee

While Barbie is in jail, other inhabitants use a Geiger counter to locate the source of The Dome to an abandoned farm; the gadget they uncover in the center of the property's orchard is strongly suggested to be alien in origin. 

Big Jim's limitations get more stringent, and the police force becomes more brutal, energizing the town and finally causing several locals to break Barbie out of jail, murdering Junior seconds before he can murder Barbie.

The disorganized opposition retreats to the abandoned farm, where many individuals touch the weird object and see visions. 

They not only conclude that the device was installed by extraterrestrial "leatherheads" (so named because of their appearance), However, they are primarily teenagers who have built up The Dome as a form of entertainment, a kind of ant farm intended to catch sentient individuals and allow their captors to observe everything that occurs to them.

On an organized "Visitors Day," when people outside The Dome can meet with people inside, Big Jim sends Randolph and a detachment of police to retake control of his former methamphetamine operation from Phil "Chef" Bushey, who is preventing Big Jim from covering up the operation and hoarding the over 400 tanks of propane stored there (Chef wants it all, explaining, "I need it to cook"). 

Big Jim underestimates Chef's aptitude for self-defense and meth-induced paranoia; he and the now-ostracized head selectman Andy Sanders (whom Chef has introduced to meth usage) defend themselves and the meth lab with assault guns. 

Many people are murdered in the subsequent shootout, and Chef, who is fatally wounded, detonates a plastic explosive device he has planted in the meth lab. 

The resulting explosion, when mixed with the propane and meth-making ingredients, creates a poisonous firestorm large enough to incinerate the majority of the town.

On national broadcast, nearly a thousand of the town's population are promptly burnt, leaving just over 300 people alive, who progressively die off as the poisonous air hampers their breathing. 

The twenty-seven refugees in the abandoned farm, an orphaned farm child hiding in a potato cellar, and Big Jim and his informal aide-de-camp, Carter Thibodeau, in the town's fallout shelter, are among the survivors. 

Big Jim and Thibodeau eventually turn on each other due to the limited oxygen supply (and Big Jim's fear that Thibodeau will testify against him if they survive); Big Jim stabs and disembowels Thibodeau, only to die several hours later when hallucinations of the dead drive him outside into the toxic environment. 

Despite the Army's efforts to push clean air through The Dome's walls, the survivors in the barn begin to slowly asphyxiate.

Barbie and Julia approach the control gadget, pleading with their kidnappers to let them free. 

Julia contacts a solitary female leatherhead who is no longer accompanied by her pals and thus is not subject to peer pressure. 

Julia persuades the leatherhead to take pity on them by continuously expressing that they are actual sentient creatures with real "small lives," and by sharing a traumatic childhood event with the teenage extraterrestrial. 

The Dome slowly rises and then vanishes, enabling the toxic air to evaporate and eventually liberating what is left of Chester's Mill.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords
Big Jim, Character Development, Chester Mill, Human Nature, Jim Rennie, King At His Best, Lord Of The Flies, Many Characters, Mike Vogel, Much Better, Natalie Martinez, Page Turner, Rachelle Lefevre, Small Town


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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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It Summary

Stephen King, American, Coming Of Age, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Werewolf

It

Published: 15, September 1986
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Coming Of Age, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Werewolf

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The story is separated into two halves, each about 27 years apart. The first is from 1957 to 1958, while the second is from 1984 to 1985.

1957–1958
During a rainfall in Derry, Maine, a six-year-old child called Georgie Denbrough floats a paper boat across the streets until it is washed down a storm drain. 

Georgie comes upon a clown in the sewer who introduces himself as Pennywise the Dancing Clown

Pennywise tempts Georgie to reach into the drain and recover his boat, where the clown cuts off his arm and abandons him to die.

On the last day of school the following June, an overweight eleven-year-old kid called Ben Hanscom is bullied by a bully named Henry Bowers and his group, causing him to flee into the marshy wasteland known as the Barrens. 

Ben meets an asthmatic weirdo named Eddie Kaspbrak and Georgie's elder brother, "Stuttering Bill" Denbrough

The three lads subsequently become friends with fellow misfits Richie Tozier, Stanley "Stan" Uris, and Beverly Marsh, and call themselves "The Losers Club." 

As the summer progresses, the Losers face Pennywise in several terrible forms: a mummy on a frozen canal for Ben, a fountain of blood (that only children can see) from Beverly's sink, a rotting leper for Eddie, drowned corpses for Stan, and a horrible ghost of Georgie for Bill

Meanwhile, Bowers, who is becoming increasingly deranged and vicious, decides to focus his attention on his African-American neighbor Mike Hanlon and his father. 

Bowers murders Mike's dog and follows the scared child into the Barrens, where he helps the Losers in driving Bowers' group away in a rock fight, a humiliated Bowers swearing vengeance. 

After disclosing his personal brush with Pennywise in the shape of a flesh-eating bird, Mike joins the Losers Club

The Losers learn through Mike's history scrapbook that "It" is an ancient creature with a grip on the community. 

Following several encounters, the Losers build a homemade smoke hole that Richie and Mike use to imagine Its beginnings as an ancient extraterrestrial monster that arrived on Earth, commencing a cycle of feeding on youngsters for a year followed by a 27-year slumber.

Soon after, Eddie is taken to the hospital by Bowers and many of his friends, and Beverly watches one of the bullies, Patrick Hocksetter, being kidnapped by It in the guise of a swarm of flying leeches. 

The Losers uncover a letter from It in Patrick's blood, warning them that if they meddle, It would murder them. 

Ben fashions two silver slugs from a silver dollar in the hopes of wounding It, and the Losers enter an abandoned home where Eddie, Bill, and Richie had previously seen It to try to kill It

They wound It with silver when it is in the guise of a werewolf. It influences Bowers into slaying his abusive father and pursuing the Losers into the underground to kill them, where It kills two accompanying bullies, Victor "Vic" Criss and Reginald "Belch" Huggins, and Bowers becomes traumatized and stuck in the sewers.

Bill undertakes the "Ritual of Chüd" in the sewers in an effort to confront It in the Macroverse, the other dimension from which It comes, where he encounters the monster's counterpart Maturin, an ancient turtle who created the universe. 

Bill discovers that it can only be beaten via a fight of wills, and witnesses Its actual form, the "Deadlights," before defeating the monster with Maturin's assistance. 

The Losers are lost in the sewers after the battle, not knowing if they killed It or not until Beverly has sex with each of the lads to bring the gang back together. 

The losers then take a blood pledge to return to Derry if It reappears. Bowers is institutionalized after being implicated for the town's kid killings, having lost his mind by the time he washed out of the sewers into a neighboring river.


1984–1985
In July 1984, three teenagers savagely assault and hurl a young homosexual guy called Adrian Mellon from a bridge, where both a bully and Adrian's partner witness a clown appear. 

Adrian is discovered mangled, and the teens are apprehended and charged with his murder.

When a new spate of brutal child deaths occurs in Derry, an adult Mike Hanlon, now the town's librarian, contacts the six previous members of the Losers Club and reminds them of their childhood commitment to return if the crimes resume. 

Bill is now a wealthy horror writer living with his actress wife Audra; Beverly is a fashion designer married to an abusive guy called Tom Rogan; Eddie owns a limousine rental company and has married a hysterical codependent woman similar to his hypochondriac mother; Richie Tozier is a disc jockey; Stan Uris is a rich accountant, and Ben Hanscom is now slim and a successful but lonely architect. 

Prior to Mike's phone calls, the Losers had entirely forgotten about each other and the pain of their youth, burying the horror of their encounters with It

Except for Stan, who commits suicide in fear of encountering It again, all of the Losers agree to return to Derry.

The Losers gather for lunch, and Mike tells them that It wakes once every 27 years for 12–16 months at a time, feasting on youngsters before falling back asleep. 

The gang decides to put an end to It once and for all. Following Mike's advice, each participant explores different places of Derry in order to help retrieve their memories. 

Eddie, Richie, Beverly, and Ben are confronted with manifestations of It while investigating (Richie as a Paul Bunyan statue, Eddie as Belch Huggins and childhood acquaintances in leper and zombified forms, Ben as Dracula in the Derry Library, and Beverly as Hansel and Gretel's witch in her childhood house.). 

Bill locates "Silver," his boyhood bicycle, and delivers it to Mike's. Meanwhile, Audra, concerned about Bill, rushes to Derry; Tom comes, planning to murder Beverly; and Henry Bowers escapes from the mental institution with the assistance of It.

Henry approaches Mike in the library, but Mike manages to flee alive. It orders Henry to murder the other Losers, but Henry is killed when he attacks Eddie

It then appears to Tom and tells him to abduct Audra, transporting her to It's lair, where Audra becomes catatonic and Tom dies from shock. 

When Bill, Ben, Beverly, Richie, and Eddie find that Mike is approaching death, they understand they are about to face It again. 

They go into the sewers and utilize their collective might to "transfer energy" to a hospitalized Mike, who fights off an It-controlled nurse. 

When they get to Its lair, they discover that It has transformed into a massive spider. Through the Ritual of Chüd, Bill and Richie enter It's consciousness, but they become lost in It

Eddie injures It by putting his asthma medicine down Its throat, but It bites Eddie's arm off, killing him. 

It flees to care about its injuries, but Bill, Richie, and Ben pursue and discover that It has deposited eggs. 

Ben remains behind to destroy the eggs, as Bill and Richie make their way to their ultimate encounter with It

Bill fights his way inside Its body, locates and destroys Its heart. The party gathers to depart It's lair, and despite their best efforts to carry Audra and Eddie's corpses with them, they are forced to leave Eddie behind. 

They see that the wounds from their blood covenant have faded, signaling that their torment is finally done.

Simultaneously, the worst storm in Maine's history rolls over Derry, causing the downtown area to collapse. 

Mike comes to the conclusion that Derry has died. When the Losers return home, they eventually forget about It, Derry, and each other. 

Mike's recollection of the events of that summer, as well as any records he had previously written down, begins to vanish, much to his relief, and he contemplates starting a new life somewhere. 

Ben and Beverly depart as a couple, while Richie returns to California. Bill is the last to go from Derry. 

Before leaving, he takes Audra, who is still catatonic, on a ride on Silver, which wakes her from her coma, and they kiss.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

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Desperation Summary

Stephen King, Classic, Drama, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literary, Literature, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Desperation

Published: 24, September 1996
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Classic, Drama, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literary, Literature, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Peter and Mary Jackson are traveling peacefully on a barren Nevada roadway when the agitated Collie Entragian pulls them up and arrests them. 

They are transported to the police station of Desperation, a desolate tiny mining town, where Entragian murders Peter

The Carver family, whose daughter was also slain by Entragian; Johnny Marinville, a writer on a cross-country motorcycle journey to seek fresh work; and Tom Billingsley, the local veterinarian, are also kept hostage. 

Meanwhile, Johnny's aide Steve, who had been following him from afar, discovers Johnny's bike and goes in pursuit of him with Cynthia, a hitchhiker. 

Entragian takes Ellen Carver with him, and while he is gone, the deeply religious Carver's son, David, manages to liberate everyone and is hired as a spiritual leader by the party.            

They seek safety in an abandoned theater, where they are joined by mine employees Steve, Cynthia, and Audrey

They find they are the only ones who have survived a wave of destruction unleashed by an evil supernatural creature known as Tak

Tak was imprisoned in an abandoned mine shaft and has the ability to take control of humans, but this state soon degrades the host and forces it to shift hosts. 

Tak also has the ability to control desert animals such as coyotes, buzzards, spiders, and scorpions. 

Tak's cougar kills Billingsley, and Audrey, who is also under its spell, tries to murder David. She comes close to strangling him but is stopped by Steve and Johnny's intervention. Tak snatches Ellen's corpse and imprisons Mary.

The survivors consider leaving town, but David, who has awakened from a trance, informs them that God has other plans for them. 

Mary takes advantage of Ellen's increasing decline to flee her, and after Ellen dies, Tak assumes the form of a golden eagle. 

Tak escaped from a well, so the party gathers some ANFO to blow it up. Tak assaults David but murders his selfless father Ralph

Johnny saves the now-orphaned David from committing suicide by blowing up the well and locking Tak within. 

David, Mary, Steve, and Cynthia begin to flee Desperation. While in Mary's car, David discovers in his pocket the hall pass from his earlier "deal with God," complete with a note from Johnny.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Annabeth Gish, Charles Durning, Collie Entragian, Dark Tower, Edge Of My Seat, Good And Evil, Henry Thomas, Highly Recommend, Johnny Marinville, Kelly Van Horn, King At His Best, Mick Garris, Mining Town, Page Turner, Ron Perlman, Steven Weber, Tom Skerritt, Town Of Desperation


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Misery Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literary, Literature, Media Tie-In, Psychological, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Misery

Published: 8, June 1987
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literary, Literature, Media Tie-In, Psychological, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Paul Sheldon, an author of the best-selling Misery Chastain series of Victorian-era romance novels, has completed the series' last book, Misery's Child, in which Misery is murdered off. 

Paul gets drunk and drives his '74 Camaro to Los Angeles instead of flying back to New York City after finishing the manuscript for his new crime book, Fast Cars, which he believes will get significant literary praise and jumpstart his post-Misery career. 

In the small, isolated community of Sidewinder, Colorado, he is stranded in a snowstorm and wrecks his automobile.

When he wakes up, he discovers that he has been saved by Annie Wilkes, a local former nurse who is a die-hard Misery fan. 

Despite his shattered legs, she keeps Paul in her guest bedroom and nurses him herself with her clandestine supply of codeine-based medications. Paul becomes hooked to Novril, a drug Annie withholds from him in order to threaten and manipulate him. 

She starts reading Misery's Child, which was just released and coerces permission to read the Fast Cars manuscript, but she doesn't like the deeper subject matter or language. 

Annie's mental instability is quickly identified by Paul, who notes that she is prone to catatonic spells and has abrupt, unpredictable fury outbursts. 

When she discovers about Misery's death, she abandons Paul in her home for more than two days, denying him food, drink, and painkillers. During this period, Paul checks his legs to determine the extent of the damage and discovers that they were crushed and disfigured in the accident.

When Annie returns, she pushes a frail Paul to burn the Fast Cars book in exchange for painkillers. 

Annie sets up an office for Paul, complete with an antiquated Royal typewriter with a non-functional N-key, writing paper, and a wheelchair, in order to create a new Misery novel that would resurrect the character. 

Paul writes a new novel, Misery's Return while biding his time and comparing himself to Scheherazade

He enables Annie to read the work in progress and fill in the missing N's. The text contains fragments from Misery's Return, a horrifying scenario in which it is discovered that Misery was buried alive while unconscious, as Paul writes.

Paul uses his wheelchair to exit his room multiple times, hunting for more medications and touring the property. He finds a scrapbook full of newspaper clippings revealing Annie to be a serial killer; her victims include a neighboring family, her own father, and many elderly or critically injured patients and 11 infants while she worked as a head nurse, the last of whom resulted in her standing trial but acquittal in Denver. 

Annie announces that she has noticed Paul leaving his room and punishes him by chopping off his foot with an axe and cauterizing his ankle with a blowtorch, thus "hobbling" him. 

Months pass, and Annie slices off Paul's thumb with an electric knife when he complains that additional typewriter keys, including the "t" and "e," have broken and refuses to tell Annie how the story ends until he has written it.

Annie kills a state policeman by driving him over with her riding lawnmower when he comes to Annie's residence looking for Paul. The remains are hidden by Annie, but the trooper's disappearance catches the attention of police enforcement and the media. 

Annie moves Paul to the basement and makes it clear that she will not allow him to reside there. 

After finishing Misery's Return, Paul sets fire to a dummy copy of the text, which Annie tries to salvage. Paul tosses the typewriter at Annie and begins a furious struggle with her, exiting the room and locking the door with Annie still inside. 

When the police arrive in pursuit of the slain soldier, Paul hides and warns them. Annie is discovered dead in the barn, probably having escaped through a window on her way to murder Paul with a chainsaw.

Misery's Return is intended to be published when Paul returns to New York, and it becomes a worldwide bestseller owing to curiosity in the conditions in which it was written. 

The notion that Paul publish a factual account of his own experiences is met with resistance. 

He can walk with a prosthetic, but he still has flashbacks about Annie, painkiller withdrawal, drunkenness, and writer's block. 

Paul weeps both for his destroyed life and for the delight of being able to write again when he gets spontaneous inspiration to create a new novel.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Andrew Scheinman, Annie Wilkes, Car Accident, Edge Of Your Seat, Ever Read, Fast Cars, Frances Sternhagen, Highly Recommend, James Caan, Jeffrey Stott, Kathy Bates, King At His Best, King Book, Misery Chastain, Number One Fan, Paul Sheldon, Richard Farnsworth, Rob Reiner, Steve Nicolaides


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Mr. Mercedes Summary

Stephen King, Action, American, Crime, Drama, Fiction, Hard-Boiled, Horror, Media Tie-In, Murder, Mystery, Police Procedurals, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Mr. Mercedes

Published: 3, June 2014
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Action, American, Crime, Drama, Fiction, Hard-Boiled, Horror, Media Tie-In, Murder, Mystery, Police Procedurals, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller
Book 1 of 3: The Bill Hodges Trilogy

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

When a Mercedes slams into a crowd of jobless people waiting in line for a job fair, sixteen people are killed and many more are injured. Bill Hodges, a recently retired detective from the local police department who is enjoying his retirement, receives a letter from someone claiming to be the person in charge of the employment fair and calling himself as "Mr. Mercedes." 

Hodges is divorced, lonely, and unsatisfied with his life to the point of suicidal ideation. When Hodges retired, the incident had occurred at the end of his tenure and remained unresolved. 

Mr. Mercedes is aware of the facts surrounding the murder and refers to Olivia Trelawney, from whom he took the Mercedes.

Olivia committed herself shortly after the incident as a result of her remorse. Instead of handing the letter on to his former police colleague, Pete Huntley, Hodges becomes fascinated and begins to examine the matter.

Mr. Mercedes is revealed to be Brady Hartsfield, an emotionally unstable psychopath in his late twenties who lost his father when he was eight years old. At his mother's request, he killed his mentally challenged sibling when he was a little lad. He currently lives with his alcoholic mother, with whom he has an incestuous connection, and works at an electronics store and as an ice-cream vendor. This second employment allows him to study Hodges and his neighbors, including seventeen-year-old Jerome Robinson, who helps Hodges with modest tasks.

Hodges meets Olivia Trelawney's sister Janey while conducting research on the rich Olivia Trelawney, and she engages him to investigate Olivia's suicide and the theft of the Mercedes. 

Janey and Hodges start dating shortly after Hodges starts working for her. With the aid of brilliant, computer-savvy Jerome, Hodges discovers how Mr. Mercedes stole the automobile and then drove Olivia (whom he met through his employment at the electronics shop) to suicide by putting unsettling sound files on her computer that was rigged to go off at random intervals, exacerbating her guilt. When Olivia first heard these sounds, she mistook them for the ghosts of the Mercedes Massacre victims.

Hodges meets Janey's unsavory family, including Janey's emotionally disturbed niece Holly, at the burial of Janey and Olivia's recently deceased mother. 

Mr. Mercedes stands by as Janey drives Hodges' vehicle to the church steps after the funeral. As the automobile approaches Holly and Hodges, he uses his remote gadget to contact a mobile phone on the car seat to blow up the car with Janey inside. 

Janey is killed as a result of the explosion. Hodges is remorseful, but he is even more determined to solve the crime without the assistance of the cops. In the inquiry, Holly joins Hodges and Jerome.

Hartsfield murders his mother by inadvertently poisoning her with a poisoned cheeseburger he had cooked for Jerome's dog. 

He planned to kill himself by pretending the need for a wheelchair and using explosives stashed within the wheelchair at a large concert for young girls, with her decaying body in their house. 

Hartsfield's true identity is discovered and his computer hard drives are searched by Jerome, Hodges, and Holly

They determine that Hartsfield's target is at the concert and race to the venue to intercept him. 

Hodges had a heart attack and is unable to join Holly and Jerome in the concert, but encourages them to continue. 

Holly tracks down Hartsfield and slams him in the face numerous times. Holly tracks down Hartsfield and uses Hodges' "Happy Slapper," a sock stuffed with ball bearings, to give several hard punches to his skull. On the concert floor, Hartsfield is bleeding and unresponsive.

Hodges who had been rescued by concert personnel, Holly, and Jerome get together for a picnic to talk about the previous happenings. 

Hodges has heard that he will not face criminal charges as a result of his activities in the Hartsfield case. Instead they were given medals by the city as a thank you for their efforts. Hartsfield, meantime, emerges from his coma and requests to visit his mother.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bad Guy, Bill Hodges, Breeda Wool, Brendan Gleeson, Cat And Mouse, David E. Kelley, Harry Treadaway, Highly Recommend, Holland Taylor, Jack Bender, Jharrel Jerome, Justine Lupe, Kelly Lynch, King Novel, Looking Forward, Marty Bowen, Mary-Louise Parker, Page Turner, Really Enjoyed, Retired Cop, Retired Detective, Robert Stanton, Scott Lawrence, Twists And Turns, Well Written, Wyck Godfrey


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Thinner Summary

Stephen King, Richard Bachman, American, Classics, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Supernatural, Thriller

Thinner

Published: 19, November 1984
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classics, Drama, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

While driving across town with his wife Heidi giving him a massage, Billy Halleck, a wealthy, arrogant, and morbidly obese lawyer, is distracted and runs over and murders an old Romani woman. 

Billy exploits his contacts in the local police and criminal court to evade punishment and get himself acquitted. 

Outside the courts, the woman's father, Taduz Lemke, exacts vengeance by casting a curse on Billy, using the term "thinner," and Billy begins to lose weight fast, regardless of how much he eats. 

Billy contacts a number of specialists, all of whom fear cancer, but they are unable to pinpoint the source of his weight loss.

Billy later finds that the judge who ruled over his case has developed scales on his skin and that the police officer who lied on Billy's behalf has developed terrible acne. Both guys finally kill themselves. 

Billy, now malnourished, traces the Romani band north through the New England seacoast to Maine with the aid of private investigators and Richie "The Hammer" Ginelli, a former customer with links to organized crime. 

At their camp, he meets Lemke and attempts to persuade him to withdraw the curse, but Lemke refuses, insisting that Billy be brought to justice.

Billy is thrown out of the Romani camp, but not before Gina, Lemke's great-granddaughter, shoots him in the hand with a ball bearing. 

Richie responds by dispatching a mob doctor to cure Billy's hand before arriving in person to scare the Romani camp. 

Lemke agrees to meet with Billy when Richie finishes with the locals. Lemke takes a strawberry pie with him, which he tops with blood from Billy's injured hand. 

Unless Billy passes the curse on to someone else by persuading them to eat the pie, the weight loss will cease for a brief period and then restart. Billy is advised by Lemke to eat the pie himself so that he can die with dignity.

Billy goes home after discovering Richie's severed hand in his car and learning that he has been murdered, intending to offer the pie to Heidi, whom he has blamed for his situation. 

However, the next morning, he discovers that she and their daughter Linda had devoured the pie. He slices a piece for himself, realizing that they are both doomed so that he might join them in death.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alarming Rate, Billy Halleck, Even Though, Gypsy Curse, Gypsy Woman, Highly Recommend, Joe Mantegna, King At His Best, Lucinda Jenney, Main Character, Old Gypsy, Pen Name, Robert John Burke, Tom Holland, Weight Loss, Word Thinner


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