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This book is about a man named Nick, who is the ideal man. He's tall, dark, and deadly. When it comes to relationships, he doesn't ask for much. Just that she be truthful, loyal, and that her name be Valerie. He feels these are the only things necessary to have a love that is solid. Ladies, with every page, you'll start to question your own relationship. Is he the perfect man or is he deranged?
It takes days on a frigid mountainside, an elaborate hijacking of one of our own, and a race to the Canadian border, before Michael and I finally discover the truth about how far the ring of corruption is willing to chase us. Fortunately, the legacy of my mom is still alive and well in the hearts of the people that she had helped. Unfortunately, that help only extends to me—and not to Michael, Adam, or Rob. And as the end of our journey nears, it seems that the only option to live safely, is to disappear from the world we've known…and possibly even each other. *Contains Dark themes* Deranged (Beautiful Tyrants Book Four) is a dark college bully reverse harem romance intended for readers 18+. This book contains dark themes, including bullying, abuse, violence, suicide and sexual relationships that some readers might be uncomfortable with. These heroes are human with dark histories and actions that may make you hate them at times. But redemption is never a straight path. It's dark, twisted and comes at a steep price…
Four-college students on spring vacation visit the old mansion of one of their Great, Great ancestors but becomes victims of an insanely hostile predator.
An eye-opening, thought enticing saga, pre-dating the stars, the galaxy and existence as we've known it rest within the provocative contents of Deranged: Volume one. Infinite darkness surrounds an awake alert child. Hearing only his breath, echoing over the ebony of perpetual blackness covering sight and movement. Sitting and pondering where to move, where to look. This awake, child murmurs the word - "Light." The sludge of infinite shadows vanishes; the blinding white of this grand light cuts and rips the vast darkness away. Revealing this alert, childlike creature is not alone...Read the rest, you have the book...
An ex-homicide cop turned PI is on the trail of a murderous psychopath terrorizing Los Angeles in this crime thriller series debut. They call him the Skull Cracker Killer. He drugs his victims. Breaks open their skulls with a hammer and chisel. The rest is inhuman. Five years ago he terrorized New York City, claiming twelve victims before the killing stopped. Now he’s racking up victims on a fresh hunting ground. Where former LAPD homicide detective Morris Brick is working as a consultant on a serial-killer film. Where a desperate mayor pleads with Brick to take on the case. And where the only way he can stop the next wave of murders is by outsmarting a madman—before he strikes again, this time much too close to home . . . “Whether he’s writing as Dave Zeltserman or Jacob Stone, you can expect the best in suspense writing.” —Max Allan Collins “A fascinating and exciting blend of misdirection, topsy-turvy, and violence.” —Reed Farrel Coleman “A dark and different serial killer novel that will haunt the reader long after the book is closed.” —John Lutz “Los Angeles has seldom seen such grisly fun. It’s James Ellroy meets Alfred Hitchcock on the psychotic side of the street.” —Paul Levine “One of the most compelling, thrilling, and truth be told, at times look-away-from-page-frightening serial killer novels I've read in a long, long time.” —Vincent Zandri
Would You Rather...': Trippin' Edition continues in the series' tradition of pondering the most absurd and implausible questions imaginable. Perfect for road trips and parties, it's jam-packed with pop culture references and irreverent humor, and the thought-provoking questions make perfect ice-breakers -- the responses given can provide remarkable insights into the minds of others. This pocket-size book is also an entertaining way to kill time when riding in the subway or waiting for the dentist.
Contemporary studies have concluded that women are far less likely to kill than men and that when women do kill, they do so within the family. Debauched, Desperate, Deranged: Women Who Killed, London 1674-1913 examines the evolution of this pattern in the over 1400 trials in which women were prosecuted for homicide in London from the late seventeenth century until just before the First World War. Which deaths were considered homicides and in what circumstances women were culpable illustrates profound changes in the prevailing assumptions about women. The outcomes of trials and the portrayals of these women in the press illuminate changes in perceptions of women's status and their physical and mental limitations. Debauched, Desperate, Deranged breaks new ground in existing studies of gender and homicide, using a long time frame to discern which trends are brief anomalies and which represent significant change or continuity. Debauched, Desperate, Deranged is the first empirical, quantitatively as well as qualitatively based study of women and homicide from the seventeenth century to the twentieth. It presents new and significant conclusions on changing incidence of maternal homicides and the remarkable constancy of spousal homicides.
Ah, what would popular culture be without characters such as Lindsay Lohan and Mel Gibson, along with the pop culture--centrific media that covers them? For starters, Doug Bratton's The Deranged Stalker's Journal of Pop Culture Shock Therapy might not exist, and, well, that would be very sad indeed. Inside The Deranged Stalker's Journal of Pop Culture Shock Therapy, Bratton skewers pop culture icons ranging from Sesame Street's Bert and Ernie to Harry Potter. Fashioned as a mock-style journal whose author is just a little bit unstable, The Deranged Stalker's Journal of Pop Culture Shock Therapy lambasts the best--and worst--of popular culture, one cartoon panel at a time. From recent news headlines to celeb-inspired mockumentaries, Bratton offers a humorously skewed view of fame, popular culture, and American Idol-worship. So if you are one of the millions of people who often wonders what it would be like if a psychopath and his imaginary friend kept a journal of a funny-yet-obscure comic that will most likely never appear in your newspaper, this is certainly the book to read!
Reprint of the original, first published in 1836.