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A boy and his mother go out on a rainy night to collect animals for a nature center that releases its specimens to the wild after two weeks.
A freak rainstorm results in carnage... One Rainy Night is a spine-chilling horror novel from the highly acclaimed Richard Laymon, perfect for fans of Dean Koontz and Clive Barker. 'Laymon is unique. A phenomenon. A genius of the grisly and the grotesque' - Joe Citro, The Blood Review The strange black rain falls like a shroud on the small town of Bixby. It comes down in torrents, warm and unnatural. And as it falls, the town changes. One by one, the inhabitants fall prey to its horrifying effect. One by one, they become filled with hate and rage... and the need to kill. Formerly friendly neighbours turn to crazed maniacs. A stranger at a gas station shoves a nozzle down a customer's throat and pulls the trigger. A soaking-wet line of movie-goers smashes its way into the theatre to slaughter the people inside. A loving wife attacks her husband, still beating his head against the floor long after he's dead. As the rain falls, blood flows in the gutters - and terror runs through the streets. What readers are saying about One Rainy Night: 'The action does not stop for a second, dragging you brutally along at a breakneck pace. Do not start this book unless you have time to finish it NOW, you will not want to put it down!' 'Laymon throws in a collection of colourful characters that are brought to vivid life with their individual, loveable and instantly identifiable traits' 'The novel lasts for a total of 410 blood soaked pages, of which all 410 of these will keep your heart racing, as you sit there perched on the edge of your seat'
That day a rainy day with thunderstorm, heavy wind and ice stones rain, since evening it was raining, with lightening, thunderstorm even there no electricity and the rain was also not stopping which was making the weather more horrible. Far away from town there was a strange village, at the end of that village, there was a lonely place where there were four small rooms of government quarter where in one of the room a boy named abinash was sleeping, in that lonely room he was alone at that heavy rainy weather , outside the wolves were yelling sound were coming and also the sound of dogs barking were coming. By the way abhinash was was a very brave boy but he never went to that lonely place before and there alone in that rainy weather he was feeling weird. he was trying to get sleep but he was unable to sleep, suddenly he heard a strange sound of anklets he got scared, and then he stood up, and went to the window to hear that sound again. He was following that anklet sound but then the sound was getting far away. Then we went to his bed by thinking that it was his imagination, but again he hears that sound again, but this ti me he didn’t follow that sound instead he lied upon his bed. Suddenly a incident happened which was not in his mind, he heard a baby kid crying sound, but the strange thing is that there wasn’t any other house than that quarter. By this abinash was thinking that what was happening with him, in this heavy rain from where did the sound was coming even no kid was there, with whom he would ask these and who could answer this? Then he thought to get up and go outside to see what was happening? But he was shivering from this incident as he scared by this. For continue buy this eBook from google play.
Iris Greenfeder, ABD (All But Dissertation), feels the “buts” are taking over her life: all but published, all but a professor, all but married. Yet the sudden impulse to write a story about her mother, Katherine Morrissey, leads to a shot at literary success. The piece recounts an eerie Irish fairy tale her mother used to tell her at bedtime—and nestled inside it is the sad story of her death. It captures the attention of her mother’s former literary agent, who is convinced that Katherine wrote one final manuscript before her strange, untimely end in a fire thirty years ago. So Iris goes back to the remote Hotel Equinox in the Catskills, the place where she grew up, to write her mother’s biography and search for the missing manuscript—and there she unravels a haunting mystery, one that holds more secrets than she ever expected. . . .
A beautiful retelling of a beloved rabbinic tale
On a rainy night in Georgia, Ezekiel Neary lights a fire in the old hunting cabin in the mountains where he, his two brothers and father would come to get away from it. Healing from a gun shot wound, the post traumatic stress has left him less than fit for human company. Company was more than he bargained for when a naked pregnant woman in labor shows up on his doorstep.The roads are washed out and Aisha Miller has no choice but to run from her captor or risk bringing her child into the world in a dark cabin. Praying, she runs wildly through the woods, ending on a washed out road. The only glimmer of hope is a blue mailbox, partially rusted, halfway sticking out under the sparse moonlight.The lone cabin sits on a hill, with two large windows looking down on her as if to pity her circumstance. Half crawling, the contractions are one minute apart and she prays that the figure in the window will be a Godsend versus the nightmare she just escape.Join me as we head to Georgia for a new twist in the happily ever after of Ezekiel and Aisha.
Set in a small, rural town in the Finger Lakes region in New York, forensic photographer Moon McFadden is psychic and communicates with the dead to solve their murders. When the bodies of several women are discovered in remote fields, FBI profiler Stuart Bauer is called in to help Moon catch the serial killer. They know two things about the killer: he places his victims’ bodies in an open field on rainy nights to wash away the DNA, and he removes a particular body part from the victim. As they zero in on the killer, he abducts Moon. Only by confronting her deepest fears can she stop the killer before he claims his next victim—her. “A must-read for anyone looking for a hair-raising story that will keep you up at night!” —Lee Anderson, best-selling author of What Happened at Sisters Creek “The Rainy Night Stalker has been described as Medium meets Silence of the Lambs—a real page-turner!”
A young boy watches and listens as the Rain Train takes him on a ride past city lights, over rivers, and through tunnels one rainy night.