Showing posts with label Media Tie-In. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media Tie-In. Show all posts

Sole Survivor Summary

Dean Koontz, Assassination, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Occult, Psychological, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Sole Survivor

Published: 1997
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Assassination, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Occult, Psychological, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Joe Carpenter is the protagonist of the tale, having lost his wife and two kids in an aircraft disaster the previous year. Joe has never really recovered from their deaths, and on the one-year anniversary, he encounters a strange lady named Rose, who claims to be a survivor of the accident despite the fact that none were recorded. 

Rose says she'll tell Joe the truth, but not yet. Finally admitting that the crash narrative never made sense to him, Joe continues his search for information about what actually happened that night, learning that others may be interested in stopping him even if it meant sacrificing his life.

There have been a great number of suicides among the families of the accident victims, which leads Joe to believe that Rose is somehow convincing them to commit suicide by showing them an image of a cemetery. 

This leads him to a development involving his deceased daughter and a laboratory produced girl, CCY 21–21, with healing skills that resemble his daughter and want to live the life she was unable to enjoy. 

This girl has the ability to heal and provide hope to everybody she comes into contact with. Her sole flaw is that she cannot cure herself if she is injured.

Rose had been protecting this girl until her healing abilities and full potential evolved until Rose was shot by agents aiming to murder her and the kid. 

SSW-89-58, another experiment, has the ability to telepathically perceive and know things by gazing at photos of areas, as well as manipulating the minds of living organisms in that region. 

As it turns out, the plane accident was part of a plot to assassinate Rose since she had smuggled CCY 21–21 out of the complex. SSW-89-58 was obliged to take control of the pilot in order to murder everyone on board.

The plane crashed, but the girl and Rose managed to escape and are now on the run. Joe escapes with Nina and goes underground towards the end of the story (CCY 21-21). Rose was shot and perishes in the last storm.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Billy Zane, Christine Willes, Dan Joffre, Edge Of Your Seat, Fast Paced, Glenn Morshower, Gloria Reuben, Isabella Hofmann, Joe Carpenter, John C. McGinley, Koontz Books, Loved Ones, Main Character, Mitchell Kosterman, Page Turner, Plane Crash, Rachel Victoria, Susan Bain, Wally Dalton, Wife And Children


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Hideaway Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Psychic, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Hideaway

Published: 1992
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Psychic, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Following a car accident that leaves him clinically dead for more than 80 minutes, Hatch Harrison, a Southern California antique dealer, begins having weird dreams and visions that tie him to a psychotic killer known as "Vassago." 

The murderer thinks he is the human embodiment of one of Hell's demon princes, and that if he murders enough innocent people and sacrifices them to his Master, he will be allowed to return to the hereafter and rule at Satan's right hand. He also has an unusual disease that allows him to see in the dark while simultaneously making his eyes incredibly sensitive to light. 

Meanwhile, the catastrophe offers Hatch and his artist wife Lindsey a new lease on life as they battle to repair their marriage after their son died of cancer five years ago. 

Hatch continues to be plagued by visions, in some cases seeing through Vassago's eyes, while the couple attempts to adopt a small girl called Regina. To make matters worse, Vassago gradually learns about Hatch and his family in the same way, putting both Lindsay and Regina at risk.

Vassago's true identity is revealed to be Jeremy Nyebern; as a teenager, he brutally murdered his mother and sister before attempting suicide. 

Dr. Jonas Nyebern, Jeremy's father, who miraculously resuscitated Hatch, saved his life (thus facilitating the seemingly supernatural bond between the two men). 

Jeremy, like Hatch, was clinically dead for more than 30 minutes and thinks that during that time he went to Hell and was subsequently resurrected to serve Satan's work.

Vassago's visions lead him to abduct Regina and take her to his "hideaway" towards the end of the novel (an abandoned amusement park, where, as a boy, Jeremy committed his first murder). 

Hatch and Vassago fight there, and Hatch beats Vassago to death with a crucifix hooked to a flashlight, saving Regina and Lindsay

Hatch unexpectedly begins speaking in another voice and refers to himself as "Uriel" (whom Hatch subsequently discovers is an archangel described in the Bible), hinting that Vassago's ideas about his demonic origin and brief voyage to the afterlife were not wholly irrational after all. Uriel/Hatch informs Vassago/Jeremy that he will be sent to Hell as a slave rather than a prince.

Following Vassago's defeat, the Harrison family strengthens their ties, with Regina now referring to her adoptive parents as Mom and Dad.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Abandoned Amusement, Agatha Dominik, Agatha Hanczakowski, Alfred Molina, Alicia Silverstone, Amusement Park, Back To Hell, Back To Life, Brett Leonard, Brought Back, Car Accident, Christine Lahti, Gimel Everett, Hatch And Lindsey, Hatch Harrison, Jeff Goldblum, Jeremy Sisto, Jerry A. Baerwitz, Jerry Baerwitz, Koontz Fan, Rae Dawn Chong, Tristar Pictures


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Lisey's Story Summary

Stephen King, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Occult, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Lisey's Story

Published: 24, October 2006
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Media Tie-In, Occult, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Lisey's Story tells the story of Lisey Landon, the widow of Scott Landon, a well-known and highly successful author. 

The novel recounts two stories: Lisey's present-day tale and the story of her late husband's life, as recounted by Lisey throughout the novel.

It's been two years since acclaimed novelist Scott Landon died, and his wife Lisey is still clearing up her husband's writing space. 

Many scholars have approached her in the last two years, expecting to unearth some piece of literature she may have overlooked, such as an unpublished manuscript. 

Lisey has sent each of them away in turn, stating that she is still working through the clean-up, but her lack of progress is more indicative of procrastination. 

Amanda, her mentally ill sister, spends a day with her, leafing through stacks of books and periodicals, marking any images in which Lisey appears or is referenced. 

Lisey starts reliving her past; beginning with the moment she stopped Scott from being fatally shot by an insane fan. 

She frequently pauses herself in the middle of reminiscing to avoid unearthing scary memories. 

Amanda suffers from catatonia after learning that her ex-husband has remarried and is relocating back to town. 

Lisey hears her sister speaking in Scott's voice before admitting Amanda to a facility, telling her that he has arranged a "bool" search with a prize at the end. 

One day, she receives a distressing phone call from a guy purporting to be Zack McCool, threatening that if Lisey does not pass over Scott's paperwork to a professor she had recently kicked out, he, Zack, will be obliged to punish her. 

His next move will be to place a menacing note and a dead cat in her mailbox. At this point, Lisey informs the authorities, who can only provide her with a patrol car stationed near her home until an emergency occurs elsewhere. 

Zack is unafraid, and he ultimately sneaks onto her property and mutilates her with a can opener.

Throughout the novel, Lisey is forced to confront some facts about her spouse that she had previously repressed and forgotten. 

She remembers Scott's past—how he came from a family with a history of horrible mental illness that manifested as either an uncontrollable homicidal mania or a deep catatonia, how he had a special gift, the ability to transport himself to another world, which he called "Boo'ya Moon," with its own unique dangers, how Scott Landon's brother Paul was killed by their father when, at thirteen, Paul succumbed to the family.

Lisey is able to draw Amanda out of her catatonia, transport Zack to the other side, and lead him to his gory end at the claws of a violent world-crossing beast that patrols the forest of Boo'ya Moon using her own repressed power to cross across.

The prize at the conclusion of the quest is a journal documenting Scott's final days with his family, concluding with Scott Landon's confession that he was compelled to kill his own father in order to spare him from the madness that had finally taken over.

Lisey is able to pack and give up Scott's belongings over the next week since she now feels he has moved on. 

Now Lisey struggles to stay anchored in this world, frequently slipping back to Boo'ya Moon in her dream and sometimes while awake. 

The novel concludes with her bidding farewell to Scott in the now-empty study.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bad Gunky, Bag Of Bones, Booya Moon, Clive Owen, Dark Tower, Highly Recommend, Julianne Moore, King Novel, Lisey And Scott, Liseys Story, Mare Winningham, Rose Madder, Scott Landon, Sister Amanda, Tower Series


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Gerald's Game Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literary, Literature, Media Tie-In, Political, Psychological, Suspense, Thriller

Gerald's Game

Published: May 1992
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literary, Literature, Media Tie-In, Political, Psychological, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Jessie Angela Mahout Burlingame and her successful and confrontational lawyer husband Gerald go from Portland to their isolated lake cottage near Kashwakamak Lake in western Maine for an unplanned love holiday. 

Handcuffing Jessie to bed for lovemaking, a recent addition to their marriage that both parties find exhilarating is the title game. 

However, after being shackled to bedposts, Jessie becomes hesitant and wants to be released, only to be disregarded by Gerald, who dismisses her complaints as part of their game. 

Jessie strikes out; kicking Gerald in the chest, after realizing her husband is acting ignorant in order to rape her. 

He had a deadly heart attack as a result of the shock. He passes away, leaving Jessie tied to her bed.

Jessie is initially shocked by her husband's death and fears being found semi-naked and handcuffed, but she soon realizes the situation is far direr: she and Gerald are unlikely to be noticed for several days, no one will think to look for them at the lake house, and all of the usual lake residents have left for the season. Jessie's life is in jeopardy if she does not manage to flee.

While Jessie furiously examines and dismisses plans, she hears whispers from The Goodwife or Goody Burlingame, a Traditionalist version of herself, who hinders her escape efforts by saying that everything would be great and that she should wait to be rescued; Punkin, a depiction of Jessie when she was ten years old. 

Jessie abandoned Ruth Neary, a college roommate, after a conversation that came perilously near to revealing Jessie's background, and Nora, Jessie's former psychotherapist, after Nora questioned Jessie's connection with her father. 

Following the guidance of these voices, Jessie understands that "Goody's" counsel to wait for rescue is based on a subconscious notion that she deserves to be imprisoned in this circumstance, even if it means death. 

When Jessie investigates the source of this self-destructive idea, she recalls a long-repressed memory of her father sexually abusing her when she was ten years old during a solar eclipse. 

Jessie's father duped her into believing she was guilty, leaving her with feelings of shame and remorse for the rest of her life. 

In the aftermath of the assault, Jessie recalls an unexplainable episode in which she had a brief telepathic connection with an unknown woman. 

Jessie's recollections prompt her to reflect on how unpleasant and controlling her marriage to Gerald was, causing her to believe she sacrificed her independence and fearlessness for the security of becoming Gerald's trophy wife.

When Jessie awakens from an imaginative battle with all of these people in a dark bedroom, she sees a tall, gaunt ghost that she initially misidentifies as the spirit of her long-dead father and calls "Space Cowboy" after a lyric from a Steve Miller song, "The Joker." 

The depiction depicts her holding a wicker basket filled with jewels and human bones. Unsure if the figure is a hallucination, Jessie rejects it, remarking loudly that it is just made of moonlight, which causes it to vanish. 

Her inner voices, on the other hand, believe the figure is genuine and will return to kill Jessie if she does not flee before the next night.

Jessie has a drink of water from a glass on the bedside table the next morning. Refreshed and encouraged by her own resourcefulness in obtaining the water, she renews her attempts to flee, first by attempting to break the headboard, then by attempting to slip off the bed and push it to the bureau where the keys are kept. 

Jessie smashes the water glass and slices her wrist with a sharp shard to lubricate her flesh enough to get her right hand free from the cuff. 

Inspired by her father's warning to her not to cut herself on the smoked glass panes they used as eclipse viewers during the eclipse. 

She is then able to get out of bed, reach for the keys, and release her other hand, only to pass out from blood loss. 

When she wakes up, it's nearly dark, and the Space Cowboy, who is now definitely real, has returned. 

Jessie tosses her wedding ring at his box of jewelry and bones, convinced that this is exactly what he desired all along. 

She approaches her car, still dizzy and weak from blood loss, and drives away, only to discover the Space Cowboy concealed in the back seat. Jessie is involved in a car accident and is knocked out.

Jessie is still recovering from her tragedy months later. An attorney at Gerald's legal office supports her in covering up the incident in order to shield herself and the law company from controversy, but Jessie believes this is another kind of burying her pain, just as she did years before with her childhood abuse. 

To set herself free, Jessie writes to the actual Ruth, whom she hasn't talked to in decades, outlining what happened at the lake home and following events. 

The "Space Cowboy" was Raymond Andrew Joubert, a serial murderer, and necrophile who had been living in and plundering lake cottages in the region. 

At Joubert's court appearance, Jessie approached him, and Joubert mocked her "made of moonlight" assertion, acknowledging that the encounter had occurred and prompting Jessie to spit in his face. 

Being able to address the guy who had formerly scared her helped her to confront the other manipulative men in her life, including her father and Gerald, freeing her of fear and helping her to cope with her past more honestly. 

She apologizes for abandoning Ruth, admitting that Ruth faced her with a truth she was unable to accept at the time, and hopes they may rekindle their relationship. 

Jessie is able to sleep without nightmares for the first time since her trauma at the lake home after writing the letter.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Chained To The Bed, Glass Of Water, Handcuffed To The Bed, Heart Attack, Jessie Burlingame, Main Character, Short Story, Space Cowboy, Voices In Her Head


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Cell Summary

Stephen King, Action, Adventure, Apocalyptic, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Suspense, Technothriller, Thriller, Zombie

Cell

Published: 24, January 2006
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Action, Adventure, Apocalyptic, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Suspense, Technothriller, Thriller, Zombie

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Clayton Riddell, a struggling Maine artist, has just landed a graphic novel deal in Boston when "The Pulse," a signal broadcast over the global cell phone network, transforms all cell phone users into mindless zombie-like killers. 

Clay is standing in Boston Common when the Pulse goes off, sparking havoc all around him. As the "phoners" attack each other and anybody in sight, civilization falls.

Clay is forced together with middle-aged Thomas McCourt and youngster Alice Maxwell during the mayhem; the three runs to Tom's suburban house while Boston burns. 

The next day, they discover that the "phoners" have begun scavenging for food and joining together. 

Clay remains adamant about returning to Maine and reuniting with his son, Johnny. Tom and Alice accompany him since they have no other options. 

They travel north by night over destroyed New England, encountering other survivors and gaining frightening information about the operations of the phoners, who continue to attack non-phoners on sight.

They arrive at the Gaiten Academy, a prep school with one remaining teacher, Charles Ardai, and one surviving student, Jordan, after crossing into New Hampshire. 

The couple shows the newcomers where the local phoners congregate at night: they crowd into the Academy's soccer field and "turn off" till dawn. 

The phoners have clearly formed a hive mind and are acquiring psychic skills. The five survivors resolve to kill the flock, which they achieve with the help of two propane tanks.

Clay attempts to persuade everyone to go, but the others hesitate to forsake the elderly Ardai

That night, all of the survivors have the same terrifying dream: they are in a stadium, surrounded by phoners when a disheveled man wearing a Harvard University hooded sweatshirt approaches and kills them. 

When the heroes awaken, they recount their terrifying dream experiences and refer to him as "the Raggedy Man." 

A new flock has encircled their home, and the "normies" are confronted by the flock's symbolic spokesman: the man in the Harvard sweatshirt. 

In retaliation, the flock murders other normals and tells the heroes to travel north to a location in Maine known as "Kashwak." 

The flock psychically drives Ardai to commit suicide in order to silence their biggest complaint. 

Clay and his friends bury him and head north, as Clay is still desperate to get home.

On the way, they discover that as "flock-killers," they have been psychically designated as untouchables, to be avoided by other normies. 

Alice is slain by a loutish couple of normies after a trifling argument on the road. The party buries her and travels to Clay's hometown of Kent Pond, where they find notes from Johnny revealing that Clay's estranged wife Sharon was transformed into a phoner, but their son lived for several days until being pushed by the phoners to travel to the ostensible cell phone-free Kashwak. 

Clay has another nightmare in which he discovers that the normie refugees were all exposed to the Pulse once they arrived. 

He is still determined to find his kid, but after encountering another group of flock-killers, Tom and Jordan decide to forego the phoners' planned ceremonial killings. 

Before splitting off, the party finds that Alice's killers were psychically driven to do a heinous suicide act in exchange for touching an untouchable.

Clay sets out on his own, but the others soon reappear, driving a small school bus; the phoners have used their ever-increasing psychic powers to force them to rejoin him. 

Ray Huizenga, a construction worker, is one of the flock-killers who secretly provides Clay a cell phone and a phone number, advising him to use them when the time is appropriate; Ray then kills himself. 

The group arrives at Kashwak, the site of a half-assembled county fair, where an increasing number of phoners are behaving erratically and breaking away from the flock. 

Jordan believes that the Pulse was produced by a computer program and that, while it is still transmitting into the battery-powered cell phone network, it has become contaminated by a computer worm, infecting newer phone users with a mutated Pulse. 

Nonetheless, an army of phoners is waiting for them, and Clay recognizes Sharon among them. 

The phoners confine the group to the fair's exhibition hall for the night; tomorrow is the ceremonial execution, which will be psychically broadcast to all phoners and remaining normies worldwide.

Clay notices Ray's unsaid plan as he awaits their morning execution: Ray had packed the back of the bus with explosives, connected a phone-triggered detonator to them, and then executed himself to prevent the phoners from telepathically detecting the explosives. 

Jordan drives the vehicle into the midst of the inert phoners after the group breaks a window for him to squeeze through. 

Clay is able to detonate the bomb and wipe out the Raggedy Man and his flock thanks to a jury-rigged cell phone patch set up by pre-Pulse fair workers.

The majority of the party travels to Canada, where the coming winter will annihilate the region's defenseless and leaderless phoners. 

Clay travels south in search of his son. He comes across Johnny, who has a "corrupted" Pulse; he has walked away from Kashwak and appears to know his father. 

However, Johnny is an unstable shell of his former self, so Clay decides to give Johnny another Pulse blast, hoping that the progressively garbled signal will balance itself out and reset his son's brain. 

Clay dials and places the mobile phone to Johnny's ear towards the end of the book.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Brian Witten, Cell Phone, Character Development, Clayton Riddell, Dark Tower, George Romero, Isabelle Fuhrman, Richard Saperstein, John Cusack, Living Dead, Main Characters, Michael Benaroya, Page Turner, Raggedy Man, Salems Lot, Samuel L. Jackson, Shara Kay, Tod Williams, Tower Series, Viacom


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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

Andy Bean, Andy Muschietti, Annette O'Toole, Back And Forth, Barbara Muschietti, Bill Hader, Bill Skarsgård, Chosen Jacobs, Dan Lin, Dark Tower, David Katzenberg, Dennis Christopher, Derry Maine, Finn Wolfhard, Harry Anderson, Highly Recommend, Isaiah Mustafa, Jack Dylan Grazer, Jackson Robert Scott, Jaeden Lieberher, James Mcavoy, James Ransone, Javier Botet, Jay Ryan, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Jess Weixler, Jessica Chastain, John Ritter, King At His Best, Losers Club, New Movie, Nicholas Hamilton, Olivia Hussey, Owen Teague, Richard Masur, Richard Thomas, Roy Lee, Seth Grahame-Smith, Sophia Lillis, Stephen Bogaert, Teach Grant, Tim Curry, Tim Reid, Tommy Lee Wallace, Town Of Derry, Warner Bros, Wyatt Oleff


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

The Tommyknockers Summary

Stephen King, Alien Invasion, Classic, Contemporary, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

The Tommyknockers

Published: 10, November 1987
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Alien Invasion, Classic, Contemporary, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Roberta "Bobbi" Anderson, a writer of Wild West-themed fiction, stumbles across a metal item that turns out to be a protrusion of a long-buried extraterrestrial spaceship while strolling in the woods near Haven, Maine. 

When the spaceship is revealed, it begins to spew an invisible gas into the atmosphere, gradually transforming people into beings who resemble the aliens that formerly inhabited the ship. 

The transition, or "becoming," gives them a restricted type of brilliance that allows them to be extremely imaginative while providing little philosophical or ethical understanding into their creations. 

The spaceship also prohibits individuals who are afflicted from leaving town, causes psychotic behavior in certain people, and leads to the loss of a small kid named David Brown, whose elder brother Hilly teleports him to the Havenites' planet Altair 4.

The protagonist of the novel is James Eric Gardener, a poet and Bobbi's acquaintance who goes by the moniker "Gard." Because of the steel plate in his head, a relic of a youthful skiing accident, he is largely resistant to the ship's affects. 

Gard is also an alcoholic who has a tendency to binge drink, resulting in violent outbursts and long blackouts. 

Gard watches Bobbi's health deteriorate and her sanity goes as she is nearly completely overtaken by the ecstasy of "being" one with the spaceship. 

Apart from his friendship with Bobbi, Gard believes he has little to live for and resolves to stay with her to attempt to slow down her decline. 

He sees the locals change, learns of Bobbi's dog Peter's torment and manipulation, and observes individuals getting killed or worse when they delve too deeply into the bizarre happenings.

Gard, Bobbi, and others have been working on uncovering the ship for several weeks. 

Gard intends to murder Bobbi after touring the spacecraft and returning to her house, as he can see she is no longer human. 

Bobbi uses a pistol to compel Gard to take a deadly dosage of Valium. He covers his consciousness while they converse, pulls out his own rifle, and shoots Bobbi

As Bobbi dies, she telepathically cries, alerting the locals, who come to her house, determined to murder Gard for fear of him harming the ship. 

In exchange for saving David Brown from Altair 4, Ev Hillman, David and Hilly's grandpa, assists Gard in escaping into the woods.

Gard boards the ship, almost dying from his fight with the villagers. He ignites the ship and telepathically propels it into space with his last ounce of power. 

This leads to the deaths of virtually all of the town's residents, but it also stops the ship's influence from spreading to the rest of the globe, which may be terrible. 

Agents from the FBI, CIA, and "The Shop" raid Haven shortly afterward and capture as many Havenites as possible (killing roughly a quarter of the survivors), as well as a handful of the changed individuals of Haven's gadgets.

David Brown is found safe in Hilly Brown's hospital room in the last pages.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bobbi Anderson, Body Snatchers, Character Development, Flying Saucer, Jim Gardener, Jimmy Smits, John Power, King At His Best, King Novel, Knocking On My Door, Marg Helgenberger, Salems Lot, Small Town


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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


- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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.
Help me grow into a global force: https://www.patreon.com/namsu
Support with crypto coins/tokens: https://cointr.ee/namsu
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -