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"The New Neighbor is a dizzying descent into a Byzantine maze of
psychological suspense. Carter Wilson proves once again why he is
one of the best most inventive thriller writers working today." -
S. A. Cosby, New York Times bestselling author of Razorblade Tears
and Blacktop Wasteland USA Today bestselling author Carter Wilson
returns with another chilling psychological thriller, for readers
of Megan Miranda and Alex Michaelides Aidan holds the winning
Powerball numbers. Is today the best day of his life... or the
worst? Aidan Marlowe is the superstitious type-he's been playing
the same lottery numbers for fifteen years, never hitting the
jackpot. Until now. On the day of his wife's funeral. Aidan
struggles to cope with these two sudden extremes: instant wealth
beyond his imagination, and the loss of the only woman he's ever
loved, the mother of his twin children. But the money gives him and
his kids options they didn't have before. They can leave everything
behind. They can start a new life in a new town. So they do. But a
huge new house and all the money in the world can't replace what
they've lost, and it's not long before Aidan realizes he's merely
trading old demons for new ones. Because someone is watching him
and his family very closely. Someone who knows exactly who they
are, where they've come from, and what they're trying to hide.
Someone who will stop at nothing to get what they want... "Carter
Wilson's writing is evocative and intense, his characters deeply
flawed yet relatable."-Julie Clark, New York Times bestselling
author of The Last Flight for The Dead Husband "A smashing story
about families and secrets and all the things you don't want to
know about the people closest to you. Read it!"-David Bell, USA
Today bestselling author for The Dead Husband More books by Carter
Wilson: The Dead Husband The Dead Girl in 2A Mister Tender's Girl
A 2019 Thriller Award Finalist! From USA Today bestselling author
Carter Wilson comes a chilling psychological thriller based on the
real Slenderman mysteries. He's not real, just a monster from a
story. But he can still hurt you, stab you, take you as his own...
When he calls to you in the night, how far are you willing to go
for Mister Tender? At fourteen, Alice Hill was viciously attacked
by two of her classmates and left to die. The teens claim she was a
sacrifice for a man called Mister Tender, but that could never be
true: Mister Tender doesn't exist. His sinister character is
pop-culture fiction, created by Alice's own father in a series of
popular graphic novels. Over a decade later, Alice has changed her
name and is trying to heal. But someone is watching her. They know
more about Alice than any stranger could: her scars, her fears, and
the bits of her she keeps locked away. She can try to escape her
past, but Mister Tender is never far behind. He will come with a
smile that seduces, and a dark whisper in her ear... A riveting
psychological thriller in the vein of Alex Marwood and inspired by
the Slender Man case, Mister Tender's Girl plunges you into a world
of haunting memories and the dark, unseen real, leaving you
guessing until the harrowing end. Carter Wilson's critically
acclaimed suspense novel is:Perfect for fans of Gillian Flynn and
Alex MarwoodA chilling book inspired by the Slenderman caseFor
readers who enjoy inspired by real-life mysteries and psychological
thrillers
In 1981, three fourteen-year-old boys witness a horrific murder in
the Oregon woods near their homes. Sucked into becoming accomplices
to the subsequent cover-up, they swear never to talk about what
happened. Thirty years later, Tommy Devereaux has become a
bestselling author, using writing as his therapy. Finally, he is
ready to tell the world what happened, even if he disguises the
killing as fiction. But his life is set to unravel when he is
approached by a woman who asks for his autograph, leaving behind a
note which reads: "You didn't even change my name." Tommy's worst
nightmare has come true. A figure from his past has returned,
threatening to divulge his darkest secret unless he agrees to do
everything she asks of him. Thus begins a deadly cat-and-mouse game
that can only end with one or both of their destructions.
From USA Today bestselling author Carter Wilson comes a
psychological thriller about forgotten strangers, dark pasts, and a
secret so big it just might destroy everything. They meet on a
plane, but nothing about this situation is coincidental... This
flight will take them somewhere they never expected to go Jack
Buchannan knows the woman sitting next to him on his business
flight to Denver-he just can't figure out how he knows her. Clara
Stowe isn't in Jake's line of work and didn't go to college with
him. They have nearly nothing in common apart from a deep and
shared certainty that they've met before. As their airplane
conversation deepens, both struggle to figure out what
circumstances could have possibly brought them together. Then, in a
revelation that sends Jake reeling, Clara admits she's traveling to
the Colorado mountains to kill herself, and she disappears into the
crowded airport immediately after landing. Though Clara is gone,
Jake is determined to track the girl in the city and figure out
their connection. The Dead Girl in 2A is the story of what happens
to Jake and Clara after they get off that plane, and the
manipulative figure, a two-dimensional man who has brought them
together decades after they first met. Intensely creepy,
beautifully written, and full of Carter Wilson's signature
whom-can-you-trust paranoia, this is a psychological thriller
unlike any you've read before. When two strangers discover they're
connected in ways they could never have imagined, what ensues is a
mind-bending race to the truth. This taut, riveting psychological
thriller from the award-winning and bestselling author Carter
Wilson will leave you reeling. Named one of the best mysteries and
thrillers of 2018, The Dead Girl in 2A is:Perfect for fans of Ruth
Ware and AJ FinnFor readers who enjoy who-can-you-trust mysteries
and psychological thrillers
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Terror at 5280' (Paperback)
Josh Schlossberg; Carter Wilson, Stephen Graham Jones
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R367
Discovery Miles 3 670
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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A well-informed portrait, part social critique, part memoir, of
sexual mores and homosexuality in provincial Mexico.
Products of the "imagination," such as novels, can be especially
useful tools for understanding how things work in societies far
removed from our own experience. Through the telling of a story, a
sound ethnographic novel conveys more than information. It involves
the reader in the dynamics of life in places where the rules for
action are very different from the rules the reader makes his own
decisions by. Some people believe ethnographic novels are
comparable to fieldnotes- the data themselves in their original,
unanalyzed form. Though I can see the reason for the analogy, the
author still disagree with it. Good fieldnotes record raw
experience. For the time being, the anthropologist squelches his
desire to interpret, and he writes down everything he can see or
remember. Good ethnographic fiction also presents experience raw,
without generalization. But in building the story, in selecting to
tell this because it is important and not to tell that because it
seems trivial, the novelist is analyzing his material. Between the
raw and the cooked, both ethnographies and ethnographic novels
belong in the processed pot. Anthropologists try to make explicit
and public both the method they have used to gather their material
and the means for analyzing it. Ordinarily, a novelist obscures his
analysis-the grounds for the choices he has made-and depends on the
interior logic of the story to make his tale seem "true" or
"believable." But Crazy February works with somewhat different
principles than the author would normally use in writing "fiction."
The book grew directly out of field experience. Wilson felt
strongly that it would stand or fall on its ethnographic
correctness. And so, faced with choices between what the author
would like to see in the story and what he thought would actually
happen to an Indian in the mountains of Chiapas, he consistently
chose "actuality." In a practical, day-to-day writing sense,
reality was the author's rod and my staff. And in the end he was
very happy when anthropologists with greater experience in the
Mayan area found the book essentially exact and, more important,
true to the spirit of the place he had written about.
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Discovery Miles 3 400
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