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  2. **Title: Looking for a Gripping Psychological Thriller? Check Out *DISQUIET*! 📚🖤** Hey r/thrillers and r/horrorlit communities! 🔍 Looking for a thrilling read to dive into? 📚 I’m excited to share my debut novel, *DISQUIET*, which has been getting rave reviews and 5⭐️ ratings on Amazon! 🎉 If psychological thrillers with a slasher twist are your thing, you won’t want to miss this one. *DISQUIET* follows Alfie Sayers, a new local celebrity, who is thrown into a night of terror after receiving a phone call that his friend's mother and girlfriend have been brutally murdered. As Alfie tries to make sense of the chaos, an unknown tormentor initiates mind games, pushing him to his limits. Will Alfie survive the night of horror, or will the tormentor claim more victims? For fans of intense, suspenseful plots and dark, edgy storytelling, this is a must-read. Get your copy now on Amazon—available in paperback, eBook, and Kindle Unlimited! 🖤🔪 **Links to Purchase:** - **UK 🇬🇧:** [https://amzn.eu/d/2SYv34T](https://amzn.eu/d/2SYv34T) - **USA 🇺🇸:** [https://a.co/d/2mx2sRr](https://a.co/d/2mx2sRr) - **Canada 🇨🇦:** [https://a.co/d/gblEY8R](https://a.co/d/gblEY8R) If you love psychological thrillers that keep you on the edge of your seat, I’d love for you to check it out. Happy reading! #PsychologicalThriller #DebutNovel #MustRead #BookRecommendation #BankHolidayReads Looking forward to hearing your thoughts and discussing the book with you all!
  3. **Title: Looking for a Gripping Psychological Thriller? Check Out *DISQUIET*! 📚🖤** Hey r/thrillers and r/horrorlit communities! 🔍 Looking for a thrilling read to dive into? 📚 I’m excited to share my debut novel, *DISQUIET*, which has been getting rave reviews and 5⭐️ ratings on Amazon! 🎉 If psychological thrillers with a slasher twist are your thing, you won’t want to miss this one. *DISQUIET* follows Alfie Sayers, a new local celebrity, who is thrown into a night of terror after receiving a phone call that his friend's mother and girlfriend have been brutally murdered. As Alfie tries to make sense of the chaos, an unknown tormentor initiates mind games, pushing him to his limits. Will Alfie survive the night of horror, or will the tormentor claim more victims? For fans of intense, suspenseful plots and dark, edgy storytelling, this is a must-read. Get your copy now on Amazon—available in paperback, eBook, and Kindle Unlimited! 🖤🔪 **Links to Purchase:** - **UK 🇬🇧:** https://amzn.eu/d/2SYv34T - **USA 🇺🇸:** https://a.co/d/2mx2sRr - **Canada 🇨🇦:** https://a.co/d/gblEY8R If you love psychological thrillers that keep you on the edge of your seat, I’d love for you to check it out. Happy reading! If you love psychological thrillers that keep you on the edge of your seat, I’d love for you to check it out. Happy reading! #PsychologicalThriller #DebutNovel #MustRead #BookRecommendation #BankHolidayReads Looking forward to hearing your thoughts and discussing the book with you all!
  4. Didn't German newly-weds get a copy of the book?
  5. Blood Dark (1935) Louis Guilloux The story of an academic philosopher who, ageing and unstimulated by his current status (both in work and life), spends his days in existential crisis contemplating thoughts of purpose and loss, waste and optimism, set against the backdrop of the last year of the First World war. Francoise Merlin (Cripure to everyone else, a nickname based on Kant's CRItique of PURE reason) is a man coming to terms with his end, in more ways than one, and his faltering crusade against his fellow man. He lives with his maid Maia (also his mistress) and his many yapping dogs. He pointlessly endeavours to educate young men about philosophy (in a mildly buffoonish manner) and loathes his academic nemesis Nabucet. He dabbles in nihilistic thought (especially since his wife left him) but clings to the innocent hope that there might be something behind it all. This is a magnificent book. The writing is wonderful and the characters (Cripure especially) are larger than life and the perfect axis around which to pivot such lofty considerations. It goes without saying that Guilloux has plenty to say about the futile waste of life consumed by the war as well as the cynicism of the time (while Celine comes to the distinct conclusion in Journey to the End of the Night that it's all for nothing, Guilloux has a remnant of hope still left within him). But they both agree that the war was an unnecessary trauma. The book reminded me a lot of Auto De Fe (printed the same year in 1935) and obviously Celine's Journey (1932) both in terms of subject matter and writing style. The prose here is superb, lyrical and mature, intelligent and rich, and wonderfully crafted. It is obviously a philosophical book but one which is subtle and focuses on the plot (the events of just one day) as well as the characters to explore those philosophical themes. By the final third, however, I did feel that it was dragging a little and could have been much shorter. There are characters, for example, such as Kaminsky and his friends who felt a little redundant, even somewhat out of sync with the overall story. But Guilloux wants to give a complete picture, a fully realised world, and he does this by emphasising the notion of showing, not telling, though I'm not sure it was entirely necessary. A lot of those threads never really go anywhere interesting (beyond fleshing out the small community and demonstrating the general feeling of people regarding the war and its immediate cultural consequences). The real star is Cripure and I craved returning to the chapters that involved him. At times, he is oafish and exaggerated (almost to Ignatius J Reilly levels of buffoonery) while at other times he is sombre and romantic, disturbed by his deformed feet, his broken heart, his drinking, and his desire for beauty to exist in a world that appears to have none. A great piece but probably longer than it needed to be. Highly recommended. 8/10
  6. As always, Stephen King is brilliant when it comes to vampire stories. All the characters are memorable, with their own backstories. The book itself is gripping and terrifying.
  7. Hello and welcome to the forum. Thank you for reading the rules and please join in anywhere you like.
  8. ²Hi and thank you for letting me join this forum my name is Jackie. I buy things from auction and often come across old books I have recently found a book titled Adolf Hitler Mein Kampf dated 1939 not a book I would read personally I have tried to do a little research but because of the nature of the book I'm not finding much information rather than it's a rare book ? Could anybody please give me more information on the book I have. Thank you.
  9. I have and understood the rules. Jackie
  10. said she hasn't seen dear old colonel wink winks for 4 months, a day he helped her in with her Tesco shopping. 'Major Flowers actually ', opined Rosalyn. ''Everyone here only calls him Colonel wink winks since he's forever ogling anything female of all shapes and..' 'Not seen my dad...you haven't seen our black and white, Dingle the pussy, have you?' 'No I cannot say I have', and at that...
  11. on, I'll need a strong cup of tea by the time i get there.' 'I think I should accompany you, dear.' I offered. 'You'll need help controlling your father, the state he's in!' 'No, Johnny. You'll only antagonise him, you know how you are. I'll check how he is and then we can decide what to do.' But when Rosie arrived at the Majors, the door was locked and there was no answer to her knocking. She decided to see if his neighbour had seen anything. Miss Horlicks ...
  12. It is more of a YA but it's great that you find it interesting!
  13. Last week
  14. I just looked it up - it sounds good! Our group read at the moment has a ‘folklore and fairytale’ theme though, do you think it would fit?
  15. sally over, post haste, in order to ensure we are on the same page..oh daddy stop getting yourself in such a state..we sent black and white 😺 Dingle to see you also to keep you company..so if you're not going to admit what's going on then I am on my way over....and daddy..put the kettle.....
  16. Yes, this slow pace is Stephen King's trademark and makes his works unique and memorable.
  17. Hazy shade of winter - The Bangles/Simon and Garfunkel
  18. Sounds a very interesting read. I, too, enjoyed South Riding, although I read it a long time ago now. Have always meant to read Testament of Youth.
  19. The Saints of Salvation by Peter Hamilton “Human civilization is always regulated, Del. It’s how it maintains itself, the eternal balance between freedom and authority. We all live in the middle, obeying the rules for the common good.” I’ve actually finished a sci-fi trilogy: I think my first. Many of the characters from the first two are here as well, although inevitably a few are killed off. Hamilton leads a number of loose ends, so I suspect that he may revisit the world at a later date. Hamilton clearly enjoys playing around with ideas and concepts. He has done it with gender and in this one he does it with the nature of time with a number of clever ideas. He manages the two main storylines well and brings them together at the end. Quite a neat trick as they start out several thousand years apart. The whole novel spans twenty thousand years in all. There is lots of speculative technology and the book is full of passages like this: “The Signal transmitter vehicles were the best stealth technology Kruse Station could devise, combining human and Neána technology. The development team had utilized the concept employed by the Neána insertion ship to produce spheres four meters in diameter with a matte black body that was totally light absorbent. Internal heat sinks meant they maintained an ambient thermal profile, and their systems were shielded to prevent any electromagnetic emission. Instead of a gravitonic drive, they had an external layer of active molecular blocks, which meant the entire fuselage was a rocket motor with an exhaust of cold neutral atoms, which left only the faintest of traces. In theory, it should be no different from a gust of solar wind particles.” All perfectly clear! Seriously though, if you don’t like speculative fiction, avoid this. Hamilton also manages to give the antagonists (the Olyix) all the worst aspects of humanity. Which, of course, gives a good deal away about Hamilton himself as they are essentially religious fundamentalist fascists who are doing what they do for love and the good of everyone else, whether they like it or not. 8 out of 10 Starting Great Uncle Harry by Michael Palin
  20. ... who are you again?' 'It's Rosie, Daddy. Your daughter Rosie.' 'I have a daughter? Are you sure? I don't remember any daughter.' 'Dementia!' I said, 'I knew it was coming. He needs to go into a home. I hope you've got power of attorney, Rosie, it'll make things ..' 'Shush, Johnny!' Rosie glared at me. 'Of course you remember me, Daddy. I think I should ...
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