Memorials
The Instant New York Times Bestseller (Oct 2024)
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- 84,99 zł
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- 84,99 zł
Publisher Description
Don't venture into the Appalachian woods after dark. Never leave the marked trail. And if you hear voices . . . Run.
1983: Three students from a small college embark on a week-long road trip to film a documentary on roadside memorials for their American Studies class. The project starts out as a fun adventure with long stretches of empty road and nightly campfires where they begin to open up with one another.
But as they venture deeper into the Appalachian backwoods, the atmosphere begins to darken. They notice more and more of the memorials feature a strange, unsettling symbol hinting at a sinister secret. Paranoia sets in when it appears they are being followed. Their vehicle is tampered with overnight and some of the locals appear to be anything but welcoming.
Before long, the students can't help but wonder if these roadside deaths were really random accidents...or is something terrifying at work here?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Bestseller Chizmar (Gwendy's Button Box, with Stephen King) wows in an immersive and über-creepy novel that pays subtle homage to horror classics ranging from the works of H.P. Lovecraft to The Blair Witch Project. In 1983, three students in an American Studies class at Pennsylvania's York College—Billy Anderson, Troy Carpenter, and Melody Wise—plan to make a documentary about roadside memorials in Pennsylvania's Appalachian region, an area where, as their professor warns, "if you look hard enough... you'll find the impossible." Chizmar gradually ratchets up a palpable feeling of unease through an accumulation of small unsettling moments. The classmates' vehicle passes a biker who's smiling through a face masked by blood. Troy begins to worry that someone is spying on them, a paranoia that's heightened when video shot by Billy reveals a stranger lurking in the shadows. The discovery that a cryptic symbol has been drawn on several of the memorials to accident victims increases the group's worries that they've stumbled into something dangerous—fears that prove all too justified. Chizmar pulls no punches on the way to a thoroughly satisfying finale, creating a literate horror novel that will remind some of T.E.D. Klein's The Ceremonies. It's a tour de force.