Showing posts with label Psychological. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psychological. Show all posts

Whispers Summary

Dean Koontz, Adult, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Parenting, psychological, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Whispers

Published: April 1980
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Adult, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Parenting, psychological, Serial Killer, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Hilary Thomas, a Los Angeles screenwriter, is attacked in her house by Bruno Frye, a mentally ill man whose Napa Valley winery she previously visited. 

Frye attempts to rape her, but she holds him at gunpoint and calls the cops. Detective Tony Clemenza assures her that Frye has a solid alibi because the cops contacted his house and he replied, demonstrating that he was nowhere near Los Angeles that night.

Frye comes the next day and assaults Hilary again, this time getting numerous knife wounds before fleeing. She contacts the police and meets with Clemenza again, who informs her that Frye's corpse has been discovered and brings her to the morgue to identify it.

Hilary is assaulted once more by a man who looks to be Frye. "Frye" flees just as Clemenza arrives, and Hilary informs him of what transpired. 

Frye's psychologist allows them to listen to a cassette recording of one of Frye's sessions after considerable research. Frye mentions identical twins being born with cauls on their faces and claims to have read somewhere that this was a demon's mark.

Frye has been murdering women he believes are possessed by the soul of his deceased mother, who mistreated him and threatened to return from the grave. He believes Hilary is his mother's most recent "host."

Hilary and Tony visit a retired madam who tells them that Leo, Frye's grandpa, took his daughter Katherine to be cared for when she became pregnant with him. 

Katherine gave birth to identical twin sons not long after Leo died. The twins were born with cauls on their faces, causing Katherine, who was mentally ill, to assume they were devils. She reared her sons as though they were one and the same person. They were both called Bruno, and they were both praised or punished for whatever they did.

Finally, Hilary and Clemenza return to Frye's house, where he assaults them again before being murdered in a fight with Clemenza.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Bruno Frye, Don Carmody, Douglas Jackson, Edge Of My Seat, Even Though, Ever Read, Filmrise, Great Book, Hilary Thomas, Jean Leclerc, John Dunning, Koontz Books, Main Characters, Second Time, Victoria Tennant, Well Written, Years Ago


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The Funhouse Summary

Dean Koontz, Owen West, American, Contemporary, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

The Funhouse

Published: 1980
Author: Dean Koontz (written as Owen West)
Genre: American, Contemporary, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Ellen, a young woman fed up with being dominated by her meek father and psychotically pious mother, falls in love with Conrad, a traveling carnival barker, in 1955. 

Despite her mother's protests, she joins the carnival and marries him. However, it rapidly becomes evident that Conrad is using Ellen to conceive the Antichrist, as she discovers he worships Satan

She finally gives birth to a horribly disfigured baby while stuck at the fair since she cannot return to her parents.

The demonic baby assaults Ellen one stormy night. She smashes it just as Conrad returns home. Enraged, he beats but does not kill her, threatening to track her down and murder her own children one day. Ellen bolts into the darkness.

Amy becomes pregnant by her boyfriend in 1980. He refuses to raise or pay for the child's abortion. She hurries home, crying, to her pious, alcoholic mother, who is subsequently revealed to be Ellen

Amy ultimately informs her mother she is pregnant, prompting her mother to hit her. She does, however, agree to pay for an abortion and accompany Amy to the doctor, but only to prevent Amy from "giving birth to the Antichrist."

Meanwhile, Amy's younger brother, Joey, is privately terrified of Ellen since she regularly enters his room late at night, drunkenly raving about how he may be a demon in disguise. He chooses to flee with a traveling fair that will be in town the following week.

Conrad's circus is discovered to be his. The other carnies try to convince the barker that he would never locate Ellen after years of looking, but he refuses to give up. 

That night, a young couple is enticed to the carnival's funhouse, where they are disemboweled and half-devoured by Gunther, Conrad's demonic, monstrous kid from his affair with Madame Zena, the carnival's fortune teller. Conrad intends to murder Ellen's children with the help of Gunther.

Amy goes to Liz's Diner, where her promiscuous best friend works. Liz declares her intention to flee to Las Vegas and work as a call lady. She invites Amy to join her the morning after they return from the carnival. 

During the day, Joey enters the fair and Conrad recognizes him as Ellen's child. Joey is terrified and lies when asked what his mother's name is. Conrad is upset, but he accepts his fate.

Conrad discovers Amy and Joey are Ellen's children after doing background checks on the town's people with the help of a private investigator. 

Madame Zena is terrified when he explains his intention to lure them to the funhouse and murder them. He strangles her to death when she refuses to aid him with his plot. 

Amy, Liz, and their dates, Buzz and Ritchie, visit the carnival that night. Joey flees home and goes to the carnival with the intention of escaping with it. 

He tracks down Conrad and expresses his attraction to him. Before tying him up, the barker brings him to the funhouse and admits that he knows he lied about his mother.

The party arrives and boards at the funhouse. Conrad cuts the power midway through the journey, leaving the four teenagers stranded. 

Gunther drags Richie away through a trap door before severing his head. The three others look for a way out. 

Amy equips herself with a knife she found in a showcase. Liz continues alone inside the funhouse before being discovered by Gunther and dismembered in the basement. Conrad comes and shoots Buzz to death with a handgun. He has Joey with him, who is restrained by a rope leash. Amy manages to conceal the knife. She dupes Conrad into thinking she's going to console Joey before stabbing him in the throat and stealing his revolver.

Amy and Joey discover the cellar and descend, where Gunther attacks. Amy shoots him, and he falls into the funhouse's machines and is ripped apart. Amy drags Joey out of the funhouse and into the early light once they discover the exit.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

AMC Plus Horror, Amy And Joey, Character Development, Derek Power, Derek Powers, Edge Of Your Seat, Funhouse Loose Ends, Good Read, Jack McDermott, Koontz Books, Largo Woodruff, Long Time, Miles Chapin, Odd Thomas, Owen West, Shawn Carson, Stephen King, Steven Bernhardt, Tobe Hooper, Years Later


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The Key To Midnight Summary

Dean Koontz, Leigh Nichols, Horror, Mystery, Psychological, Suspense, Thriller

The Key to Midnight

Published: 1979
Author: Dean Koontz (Written as Leigh Nichols)
Genre: Horror, Mystery, Psychological, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Lisa Chelgrin is the daughter of a US Senator. Her life has been wiped, and her genuine past has been blocked. Joanna Rand is her forced, fictitious new identity. 

Alex Hunter, a private investigator, is recruited to find Lisa, but he comes up empty-handed. Years later, while on vacation in Kyoto, Japan, he sees Lisa Chelgrin perform in a nightclub act. 

Her name has changed, and she is now an older woman working as a nightclub owner and performer. 

Nonetheless, the investigator is certain it is her. He requests his dead-case file, and his personally hired messenger is nearly assassinated while delivering it. Someone is keeping an eye on him and Lisa

At the same time, a figure known as The Doctor "Inamura" is attempting to circumvent Lisa's memory block, assuming that by eliminating a password or pass phrase, he would be able to access Lisa's genuine memories. 

However, when under hypnosis, Lisa can only repeat the words "tension, apprehension, and dissent have begun," rather than addressing The Doctor's queries concerning her actual background. 

Following the initial sequence of events, Lisa and Alex attempt to cope with their different pasts in order to live.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alex Hunter, Bad Guys, Edge Of Your Seat, Great Read, Joanna Rand, Koontz Books, Leigh Nichols, Odd Thomas, Page Turner, Twists And Turns, Years Ago


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Intensity Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Psychological, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Intensity

Published: Nov 1995 (UK) - Jan 1996 (US)
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Mystery, Psychological, Serial Killer, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Chyna Shepherd is a college student who is spending the holiday weekend with the family of her friend Laura Templeton

Chyna, who was beaten and abandoned as a youngster by her mother, discovers that the Templeton mansion delivers what she has longed for acceptance. This is violently ended when serial murderer Edgler Vess gets into the house in the middle of the night and murders all of the inhabitants save Laura and Chyna

Chyna flees after finding Laura has been bound and raped, vowing to return. Chyna walks upstairs after hearing Laura cry, planning to stab Vess with a knife. Vess murders Laura and takes her to his motor home before she can interfere. Chyna goes on board the motor home, unaware Laura is dead and discovers her friend's body. Vess drives away before she can flee.

Chyna hides in a back room, preparing to flee as soon as possible. When Vess comes to a halt at a petrol station, she gets out of the RV and hunts for a payphone. 

Chyna discreetly observes Vess boasting to the gas station workers that he is holding a little girl, Ariel, captive in his basement before killing them and driving away. 

She feels obliged to pursue Vess and assist in the release of Ariel, seizing a clerk's automobile. Chyna passes Vess while driving through a state park and deliberately smashes into a redwood tree. 

Chyna climbs onto the motor home as Vess goes out to investigate. Vess, unknowing to Chyna, notices her. Fascinated, he chooses not to murder her right away in order to see what she would do. They eventually arrive at Vess's secluded home.

Vess observes Chyna exiting the motor home. When she enters the home, she discovers a catatonic Ariel trapped in a basement chamber. 

Vess tackles Chyna in the kitchen before she can release Ariel, striking her senseless and restraining her with a chain. For a while, he teases her, disclosing facts of his previous misdeeds. Obsessed with the "intensity" of every sensory or existential experience, Vess describes himself as a "homicidal adventurer" and has been killing since boyhood. 

He agrees to let Chyna live if she helps him torture Ariel out of her catatonia. Chyna manages to break free from the table to which she is bound and slams her chair into a wall when Vess goes to work. She frees Ariel from her confinement.

Vess has trained a gang of lethal Dobermann pinschers to defend his land and murder anyone who tries to enter or exit. Chyna sprays ammonia on the dogs while dressed in Vess's dog-training attire and makes it to the motor home with Ariel

Soon after, Chyna notices a police cruiser and pulls over to signal it, only to learn that the driver is Vess, the local sheriff. Chyna attacks his police car in the subsequent brawl, but he rolls clear and uses a shotgun to disable the motor home, forcing it to turn over. 

Chyna and Ariel flee the crash, but Vess follows and knocks Chyna to the ground while Ariel carries on, distracting Vess long enough for Chyna to grab a lighter from her pocket. She ignites Vess's gasoline-soaked footwear with it. 

She slides away to safety just as the puddle of gas encircling Vess catches fire. She turns and witnesses Vess burn to death after catching up with Ariel. A passing driver offers assistance. Chyna adopts Ariel and finds a lovely man a few months later.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alexandre Aja, Bad Guy, Chyna Shepard, Chyna Shepherd, Edge Of Your Seat, Edgler Foreman, Edgler Vess, Ever Read, Fast Paced, Fox Network, Hard To Put, John C. McGinley, Koontz Books, Molly Parker, Page Turner, Serial Killer, Tori Paul, Years Ago


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Fear Nothing Summary

Dean Koontz, Conspiracy, Contemporary, Espionage, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Medical, Occult, Psychological, Rural, Science Fiction, Small Town, Suspense, Technothrillers, Thriller

Fear Nothing

Published: 1998
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Conspiracy, Contemporary, Espionage, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Medical, Occult, Psychological, Rural, Science Fiction, Small Town, Suspense, Technothrillers, Thriller
Book 1 of 2: Moonlight Bay

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Fear Nothing follows Christopher Snow for 24 hours as he finds and seeks to uncover a strange and apparently eternal conspiracy centered on a military outpost dubbed Fort Wyvern. 

The story begins with Christopher Snow visiting his dying father in the hospital. The lights are deliberately muted as Snow walks across the hospital to his father's room to protect him in his state. His father's final words of wisdom were, "Chris, don't be afraid. Have no fear "…

As he walks out of the hospital, Christopher Snow unintentionally and serendipitously witnesses his father's body being swapped with that of a drifter. 

Following the persons transporting the body to the funeral home, Christopher is almost apprehended, and a manhunt is launched. Christopher is pursued to the outskirts of town, and only his mastery of the night terrain allows him to stay ahead of his pursuers.

When Christopher returns home, he discovers his father's revolver on his bed, as well as an urgent message on his answering machine to contact Angela Ferryman, a nurse, and longstanding family friend. 

Orson, the family dog, is digging holes in the garden, which is unusual for him. Christopher halts the pet and takes Orson with him to meet Angela, who tells a weird narrative about a night some years ago when she discovered a strange rhesus monkey in her house, a scary beast rescued by secretive military officials. Before anything further is disclosed, Angela is slain in another room, and Christopher barely escapes when unknown perpetrators set fire to the residence.

Christopher rides his bike (with Orson) to the home of his closest buddy Bobby Halloway, a surfer who lives in a cottage on the outskirts of town near the sea. 

Bobby advises Christopher to leave the mystery alone and go about his daily life after hearing Chris' narrative. 

The guys enjoy some meals and a few beverages together (including the dog). Sasha, Christopher's girlfriend, interrupts their lunch with a message from another of Christopher's friends. 

The message drives him and Orson racing into the darkness, where they are pursued by a swarm of mutant rhesus monkeys headed by a mysterious creature like a half-man, half-beast.

As Christopher meets with Roosevelt Frost, an ex-football star who now concentrates on a knack for communicating with animals, he has cautioned off his inquiry once more, but now feels determined to solve this riddle. 

Frost alluded to unusual, abnormally intelligent animals escaping from the military base, such as cats and dogs. 

Later, he suggests to Christopher that his dog, Orson, is most likely from the military base laboratories. He makes a cryptic remark about Christopher being shielded by his mother's inheritance.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Christopher Snow, Keith Szarabajka, Koontz Books, Moonlight Bay, Page Turner, Stephen King, Takes Place


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The Taking Summary

Dean Koontz, Action, Adventure, Fiction, Ghost, Gothic, Horror, Occult, Psychological, Romance, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

The Taking

Published: 2004
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Action, Adventure, Fiction, Ghost, Gothic, Horror, Occult, Psychological, Romance, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Molly Sloan awakens in the middle of the night in the midst of an unusually rapid heavy rainstorm. She leaves her husband Neil in bed, unable to sleep, and goes downstairs to work on a screenplay she is working on.

Coyotes from the adjacent woodland gather on her doorstep in huddles. She wonders what could have terrified such creatures into fleeing the safety of the deep forests and exposing themselves to human contact. 

She walks outdoors, disturbed, to stand among the wild beasts, and is terrified — not by the animals, but by the unusual, strangely glowing rain. She recognizes, instinctively, that the rain is dirty.

Molly and Neil scour the news for information once she returns home. They can only gather that the same phenomena are occurring all around the planet before all contact is lost. 

They decide to abandon their remote house, meeting with the people of a nearby little mountain town to prepare a resistance, despite the fact that they have no idea what they would be fighting against. 

The rain finally stops after ten hours of pouring. A heavy, gloomy fog has replaced it, obscuring everything and transforming trees and buildings into towering shadows. 

Molly and Neil are now in the local bar, where about 60 people have come with their pets and children. The occurrence is said to be the result of an extraterrestrial invasion.

Unusual sounds and lights are heard and observed. Strange fungi sprout in a local tavern's lavatory, and a terrifying fungus spreads on trees, lawns, buildings, and people alike. 

Huge things glide above the scared populace from time to time, and people feel as though they are entirely known by whatever or whoever fills these aerial ships - assuming the quiet, drifting objects are crafts of some type. 

Molly and Neil set off on a quest to rescue the town's youngsters, many of whom are trapped in their houses, accompanied by a stray dog named Virgil. Meanwhile, the tavern's patrons, divided into warring groups, battle the strange menace that has engulfed their town. 

Surprisingly, Virgil appears to be able to tell when and where particular youngsters are in danger. Later, it is discovered that other animals are directing rescue attempts to save other youngsters.

As they seek answers, the townsfolk come to the conclusion that they are under attack by extraterrestrial invaders who have arrived as an advanced group to reverse-terraform the Earth so that its changed atmosphere will support their alien body’s needs. 

However, while doing so, they will poison the planet's human inhabitants, who must die in order for the invaders to exist. 

Molly feels that the invaders are of the most malignant sort and that they seek nothing but devastation at all times. 

Even when they face the most horrifying and twisted animals on their quest, Molly and Neil are able to save 13 children with the assistance of Virgil and other animals after going through many tragedies. 

Molly is certain that the aliens permitted them to save the children in order to harvest them for some more heinous purpose; yet, a series of circumstances lead her to feel that there is still hope and that the children have been spared for a unique cause. 

After 36 hours of rain, mist, and darkness, a new rain falls, much to the satisfaction of the characters, and wipes away all the monsters, fungi, and sick alien presences on the planet.

Molly, Neil, and eight of the children they rescued had been living in a house for at least a year. Society has begun a sluggish process of restoration; the majority of survivors are children and those who saved them, as well as dogs and animals that assisted in the rescues. 

Molly is now a teacher, and Neil has returned to his church job. Most people don't talk about what happened, and the reasons for the aliens' departure are never mentioned. 

However, while the identity or origin of the invaders is never fully addressed, towards the conclusion of the novel, Molly discovers that the invaders were not aliens at all, but they had really lived through the biblical apocalypse and that the monsters were demons sent to Earth to exterminate mankind. 

Only a few would be saved, like on Noah's Ark, to rebuild a better world. Several facts in the story corroborate her opinion.

The novel concludes on a lighter note, with Molly resolving to write another book — this time for her soon-to-be-born son or daughter, rather than for publication. When Neil asks her what the book will be about, she responds, "Hope."


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Alien Invasion, Black Lake, Husband Neil, Koontz Books, Left Behind, Molly And Neil, Odd Thomas, Waste Of Time, Years Ago


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Brother Odd Summary




Dean Koontz, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Humor, Mystery, Psychic, Psychological, Shape Shifter, Thriller

Brother Odd

Published: 28, November 2006
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Humor, Mystery, Psychic, Psychological, Shape Shifter, Thriller
Book 3 of 7: Odd Thomas

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Seven months after Forever Odd, the story begins. Odd Thomas has been a visitor to St. Bartholomew's Abbey throughout this period, where he expects to find serenity and understanding. 

During his stay, he encounters a white-furred dog that helps him on his further travels.

Odd notices a shadow-like Bodach. This spells calamity for the abbey. One of the monks goes missing, and Odd is attacked by an unknown assailant. 

Odd hears an odd noise in a heavy snowfall while searching for the missing monk, and subsequently sees a complex, moving pattern of bones against a glass.

The abbey's other visitor, Rodion Romanovich, joins Odd in the garage to pick up the monks. 

Odd, skeptical of Romanovich, prepares to leave him at the abbey, but he escapes with one SUV full of monks before Odd can stop him. 

A bone creature flips Romanovich's SUV on the way there. Odd's confidant, Brother Knuckles, destroys the beast with the second plow, rescuing everyone. 

Back at the school, Odd and Romanovich discover that Jacob's father, The Neverwas, is John Heineman, a monk known as Brother John at the monastery and a former physicist who experimented with reality.

Later, Odd chooses to leave the monastery, but as he drives back to his hometown, psychic magnetism draws him out of the car, and the novel closes as he wanders down the highway toward the unknown. 

Elvis Presley, who occasionally aids Odd, ultimately crosses over after three escapades. Odd and the dog (who is now shown to be a spirit) go on together, only to be joined by the ghost of Frank Sinatra seconds later.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Another Great, Dead People, Great Read, Highly Recommend, Looking Forward, Pico Mundo, Sense Of Humor, Thomas Series, Young Man


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Forever Odd Summary

Dean Koontz, Action, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Humor, Psychic, Psychological, Psychology, Suspense, Thriller

Forever Odd 

Published: 2005
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: Action, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghost, Humor, Psychic, Psychological, Psychology, Suspense, Thriller
Book 2 of 7: Odd Thomas

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Odd Thomas suspects Danny's birth father, who was just released from jail, has kidnapped him after discovering his close friend Danny has been kidnapped and his stepfather brutally killed. 

Odd begins to explore as a result of this notion and is drawn down a water tunnel and into an abandoned hotel by his "psychic magnetism," Odd's ability to hunt out someone or what he is envisioning.

Odd discovers his friend tied up and strapped to a bomb inside. Danny tells Odd that his father did not kidnap him. 

Instead, Danny recalls calling a phone sex line and speaking with a woman named Datura because he was lonely as a result of a crippling bone illness. Danny had ultimately handed up the knowledge about Odd's "gift" after being captivated by her. When she realized this, she abducted Danny in order for Odd to disclose himself to her.

Odd walks away from Danny and discovers Datura in her room with two goons, Cheval Robert and Cheval Andre

She directs Odd to show her the ghosts. Odd reluctantly brings her to the hotel's casino, where he has previously seen numerous spirits and one poltergeist. 

When Datura offends a ghost, the angered poltergeist hurls things at them. Odd escapes Datura at this moment returns to Danny and deactivates the explosives. 

Odd goes to Datura's room and discovers a shotgun, which he used to assassinate Cheval Robert

Datura locates him using "reverse psychic magnetism," but while they are conversing, a mountain lion attacks her from behind. 

An enraged Cheval Andre pursues Odd through the hotel before Odd kills him in a sewer.

Odd dies in the sewer, and his soul pays three of his friends a visit. He resurrects, however, in front of the Blue Moon Café, with no memory of how he got there. 

He is initially upset by his survival, since his deepest desire is to be reunited with his soul-mate, Bronwen "Stormy" Llewellyn, in the hereafter. 

Odd follows Chief Porter to the hotel, where they return to get Danny from that dreadful location. 

Odd decides to work at a monastery high in the mountains for two months in order to find tranquility.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Dead People, Looking Forward, Main Character, Page Turner, Pico Mundo, Psychic Magnetism, Second Book, Story Line, Thomas Series


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Elevation Summary

Stephen King, Fiction, Literary, Literature, Mystery, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Elevation

Published: 10, October 2018
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Fiction, Literary, Literature, Mystery, Psychological, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Scott Carey in Stephen King's novella Elevation did not appear to be any unusual; he is the standard overweight American guy, but the scale revealed that he was shedding weight at an alarming rate. 

Scott confided in Bob Ellis, a friend, and retired doctor, about what was going on with him. Scott determined to make at least one thing right in his life because he didn't want to spend what was remained of his life being tested and seen as an anomaly. 

Scott's effort to befriend a lesbian couple in his area, whom he had unknowingly hurt, prompted a shift in his whole community.

When Bob initially grew concerned about his weight loss, Scott paid him a visit. His usual doctor examined him thoroughly and informed him that he was in wonderful health. 

Scott showed Bob that he weighed the same amount fully clothed as he did in only his underpants. 

According to the scale, he had been dropping weight on a regular basis, but he had never become any leaner. Scott said that he was terrified when he noticed that the clothes he was wearing looked to weigh nothing. 

Bob was at a loss for words when it came to Scott's questions. He advised that Scott inform his doctor about what was going on, but Scott refused since he did not want to be compelled to undertake medical tests.

Scott was happy when he returned home and was able to photograph his neighbors' dogs performing their business on his grass. 

He had contacted married lesbians Missy Donaldson and Deirdre McComb about their pets in the past, but Deirdre had assured him that the dog was not coming. 

Deirdre felt increasingly enraged when Scott approached her with the image. He had shown his case and won the war, she said. 

Scott tried to apologize, but Deirdre wouldn't let him. Missy subsequently came to Scott's house to apologize for Deirdre. She told him that she and Deirdre were likely to lose their business since the community refused them. Missy and Deirdre would have to make an effort to be polite to one another from then on.

Scott came close to winning the race because he weighed so little. Deirdre tripped when she turned to see Scott behind her. He stopped to help her up. She became aware of his state and stared at him in surprise, but he instructed her to run. 

There were images of Scott assisting Deirdre up and also of him seeming to hug both Deirdre and Missy at the finish line in that evening's online version of the paper. 

The townspeople's attitudes shifted as a result of Scott's demonstration of acceptance. Missy and Deirdre's restaurant was so popular that they had to recruit additional staff and expand their hours.

Scott got acquainted with Missy and Deirdre as well. Despite the fact that Deirdre won the race, Scott nevertheless cooked lunch for them. 

Scott told Missy and Deirdre about his weird condition in front of Bob and his wife, Myrna. Even though Scott knew he didn't have much time left, he and his new circle of pals ate together once a week.

Scott felt comfortable having people around the home the final week, so he asked Deirdre if she would assist him when the time came for him to go. Deirdre concurred. 

Scott summoned her one day after the scales recorded his weight as 2.1 pounds. He needed to be restrained in a wheelchair and harness so Deirdre could get him outdoors. 

Scott was able to fly into the night sky thanks to Deirdre's assistance. He was clutching a SkyLight, an expensive firework that he fired off as he drifted toward the stars far above the town.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Castle Rock, Character Development, Great Story, Highly Recommend, King Book, Lesbian Couple, Quick Read, Scott Carey, Short Story, Small Town, Steven King, Weight Loss


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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


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The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon Summary

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

The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon

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

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

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


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Rose Madder Summary

Stephen King, American, Classic, Fairy Tale, Fantasy, Fiction, Folk Tales, Ghost, Horror, Mythology, Psychic, Psychological, Thriller

Rose Madder

Published: June 1995
Author: Stephen King
Genre: American, Classic, Fairy Tale, Fantasy, Fiction, Folk Tales, Ghost, Horror, Mythology, Psychic, Psychological, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Norman Daniels, Rosie Daniels' husband, abuses her while she is four months pregnant in 1985, leading her to miscarry. 

Rosie contemplates leaving Norman, but she dismisses the notion because Norman is a police officer who is very good at locating people. 

He also has a violent temper and was recently accused of attacking and raping Wendy Yarrow, a black lady. He has become much more volatile as a result of the ensuing litigation and internal affairs inquiry.

Rosie is making the bed, nine years later. She notices a spot of blood on the sheet from her nose the night before when Norman struck her in the face for spilling an iced drink on him. 

Rosie knows she has been silently suffering Norman's abuse for fourteen years, and that if she continues to put up with it, he will ultimately murder her. 

Rosie boards a bus with their bank card in her hand. When Norman discovers Rosie has vanished, he vows to track her down and murder her.

Rosie comes in a Midwestern metropolis, befuddled and terrified. She encounters a man named Peter Slowik at the bus terminal, who directs her to a nearby women's shelter. 

She rapidly makes friends and, with the assistance of shelter director Anna Stevenson, obtains an apartment and work as a hotel maid. 

When Rosie attempts to sell her engagement ring and discovers it's virtually useless, she falls in love with a picture of a woman dressed in a rose madder gown. 

She exchanges her ring for the picture, which is unsigned. Bill Steiner, the charming gentleman who runs the pawnshop, approaches her and invites her out on a date. 

Rosie is terrified of starting a new relationship, yet she falls in love with Bill despite her fears.

Rosie notices that the artwork appears to shift from time to time. She is eventually able to pass through it. On the other side, she meets Dorcas, a lady who resembles Wendy Yarrow

She also notices the lady in the painting, whom she dubs "Rose Madder" because of her clothes and obvious insanity. 

Rose Madder asks Rosie to save her infant from a subterranean labyrinth inhabited by Erinyes, a blind, one-eyed bull who navigates by scent.

Dorcas walks Rosie to the temple grounds' edge. Dorcas is unable to enter the labyrinth since she is suffering from the same mystery ailment as her mistress, and Erinyes can smell her. 

Rosie is forced to strip nude and shred her nightgown into many sections before being separated from Dorcas. One has been bathed in Dorcas' blood and is tethered to a rock. 

Rosie enters the temple and saves the kid, escapes Erinyes, and returns the newborn to Rose Madder, who vows to compensate her. Rose returns to her normal life, putting the bizarre occurrence out of her mind.

Norman arrives in town, assaults several of Rosie's shelter friends, and then goes to Rosie's apartment. 

He assassinates a police officer assigned to protect her, acts like one of them in the patrol car, and encounters Rosie and Bill on their way back from the police station. 

He assaults them; almost choking Bill, but Rosie is able to fend him off because she believes she is wearing the golden arm circlet Rose Madder gave her. 

After hurting Norman, Rosie drags Bill to the apartment, where she notices the circlet on her table and realizes she has been battling Norman alone the entire time.

Rosie dupes Norman into following her and Bill into the painting, then brings him to Rose Madder, who murders him. 

Rosie returns to her reality with Rose Madder's orders to "remember the tree" and a magic elixir that induces memory loss. 

She contemplates taking it but ultimately decides to maintain her memories. She rationalizes that, while unpleasant, they are still a part of her and help shape who she is. Her experiences could even make her stronger in the long run, and she doesn't want to give that up. 

She then chooses to use the potion on her lover without his knowledge. She hesitates for a minute, concerned that it would poison him by excess because she has no clue how strong it is, but then thinks it's worth the risk because his negative memories will harm their relationship or possibly drive him to leave her. 

She drops a drop into his cup and the events of the past fade from his recollection. She then has a sexual encounter with him. The two later marry and have a daughter, and Rosie continues to drug Bill whenever he appears to regain his recollections of the magical world in the picture. 

The bottle eventually runs out, but the benefits appear to be permanent at that time, so Rosie no longer worries about it.

For a long after that, everything is OK for Rosie, but when she burns the picture in an attempt to break links with the past, she discovers that the violent rages that characterized both Norman and Rose Madder have begun to flare up within her. 

She recalls Rose Madder allowing her to take some seeds home with her, and as penance for the painting, she plants the seeds, along with Norman's police ring, in a secluded forest near her beloved lake. 

The seed develops into a gorgeous but lethal tree. She returns to the tree on a regular basis as it develops, allowing her to let go of her fury and go on with her life.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Abusive Husband, Dark Tower, Domestic Violence, Drop Of Blood, Edge Of Your Seat, Geralds Game, Husband Norman, New Life, Pawn Shop, Tower Series


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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


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