Showing posts with label Shape Shifter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shape Shifter. Show all posts

Twilight Eyes Summary

Dean Koontz, American, Crime, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Thriller

Twilight Eyes

Published: 1987
Author: Dean Koontz
Genre: American, Crime, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Psychic, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Thriller

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Slim starts the novel by sneaking up on and murdering a "goblin or beast" on the fairgrounds of a local carnival. 

Goblins are genetically created super-predators that want murder and human agony and can shapeshift between human and bestial forms. They were created in an ancient, technologically advanced age of human civilization to torture and eventually slaughter humanity. 

Slim, Rya Raines (his wife), and Joel Tuck (Slim's friend and fellow carnie) are the only ones who can see them. These goblins are superhuman, exceedingly violent and genocidal, and can imitate human behavior. 

While they seem and act normally, they only experience unpleasant emotions such as dread and hatred. Their entire enjoyment comes from tormenting and murdering humanity.

Slim's claim to fame is his "Twilight Eyes," which allows him to get psychic, or prophetic, foretellings of the future. They also allow him to see past the goblins' human-like disguises. These eyes are so-called because they are purple, like the skyline at sunset.

Slim then goes on to join a circus (one of many he has strayed from) to sustain himself while killing goblins and escaping from his homicidal background (in which he killed an uncle by marriage that was a goblin responsible for the deaths of several family members). 

One of the "carnies'" important members is a young lady named Rya Raines, who swiftly becomes his girlfriend and confidante. As their relationship develops, Slim has numerous more run-ins with the goblins, revealing that his buddy Joel, and even Rya herself, can see the goblins and that each of them has suffered much as a result of the goblins' activities in the past. 

Rya had long established a deal with the goblins to report to them anytime she met someone who could see through their disguise in exchange for protection from their predations. He refuses to make the same agreement with them as she does.

This reality causes a schism between her and Slim, resulting in carnage. She subsequently comes to regret this, and after reconciling with Slim, she marries him. They decide to go on a quest to exterminate any and all species they may find.

They go on a personal mission to conduct a secret battle against the monsters in Yontsdown, Pennsylvania, the apparent hub of their harsh and violent form of society. They would learn and confront the final, terrible intentions the goblins had for the planet and all of humanity.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Ability To See, Highly Recommend, Joel Tuck, Koontz At His Best, Koontz Books, Second Half, Slim Mackenzie, Stephen King, Years Ago, Young Man


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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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Gwendy's Final Task Summary

Stephen King, Richard Chizmar, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Magic, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Suspense

Gwendy's Final Task

Published: 15, February 2022
Genre: Fiction, Horror, Literature, Magic, Shape Shifter, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller
Book 3 of 3: Gwendy's Button Box Trilogy

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The first two volumes follow Gwendy through her early years, from awkward youth to an increasingly competent adulthood that includes successful jobs in writing and politics. 

At the same time, her periodic care of the Button Box comes with its own set of challenges and duties. As the last volume begins, the world has altered and darkened significantly, as has Gwendy's job as protector.

In 2026, "Gwendy's Final Task" begins. The coronavirus is still there, and cautious elderly individuals continue to wear masks. International dangers have increased, as have domestic political conflicts. 

The Button Box has become increasingly unpredictable, as though mirroring the insecurity of the outside world. 

Gwendy, aged 64, is a Democratic senator from Maine who has two massive secrets. The first is the presence of the box, which has reappeared in her life for the last time. The second is that she may be in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease as a result of her long-term exposure to the box.

A fresh and unexpected component complicates matters even further. Powerful, inhuman forces have concentrated their attention on the Button Box — and on the black button that threatens all living creatures' survival. 

As the forces of chaos and conflict manifest, it becomes evident that the Gwendy narrative is part of a bigger, overarching fictional universe: King's Dark Tower

The forces striving to obtain the box are the same ones aiming to bring down the Tower, which keeps an unlimited number of potential universes together. Their survival is dependent on Gwendy and the effective execution of her final mission.

The goal at hand is to rid the world (all worlds) of the box she has spent her entire life guarding. To do so, she must go to the only location where the box may be securely discarded: outer space. 

Gwendy journeys to a freshly constructed international space station in a meticulously planned scenario, where her personal fate and the fate of the Button Box intertwine. 

She fights to finish the duty set to her more than 50 years ago, against a slew of opposing factors, the most powerful of which is her deteriorating mental skills.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Button Box, Final Task, Gwendy And The Button, Gwendys Final, King And Richard, Magic Feather, Political Views


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It Summary

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

It

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

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Bill undertakes the "Ritual of ChĂĽd" 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 ChĂĽd, 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 SkarsgĂĄrd, 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


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The Talisman Summary

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

The Talisman

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

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

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


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Cycle of the Werewolf Summary

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

Cycle of the Werewolf

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

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

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


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