Shatter the Bones (Logan McRae #7)
Book
Britain’s Next Big Stars… ‘You will raise money for the safe return of Alison and Jenny...
As Time Goes By
TV Show
Second Lieutenant Lionel Hardcastle (Geoffrey Palmer) and Middlesex Hospital nurse Jean Pargetter...
Sweet Thing
Book
Mia Kelly thinks she has it all figured out. She's an Ivy League graduate, a classically trained...
Oh, Baby! (Prescription: Romance!)
Book
Lena Shapiro. Successful surgeon. Dutiful daughter. She sacrificed her personal life to build her...
Adult Contemporary Romance
The Secret Child (DI Amy Winter #2)
Book
DI Amy Winter knows evil. She’s lived through it. Four-year-old Ellen is snatched by a stranger...
A Nearly Normal Family
Book
M.T. Edvardsson’s A Nearly Normal Family is a gripping legal thriller that forces the reader to...
thriller mystery legal thriller Sweden fiction A Nearly Normal Family
Dragon Kin (Once and Future Hearts Book 2)
Book
Will she become the cursed king’s fifth dead wife? In Lesser Britain, drought grips the land,...
adult fiction series historical fiction historical romance romance
Unlike Any Other by Ed Londergan
Book
The Story of An 18th Century Woman from A Prominent New England Family Who Went from A Life of...
Historical Fiction
Lyndsey Gollogly (2893 KP) rated A Tainted Soul in Books
Sep 1, 2023
Kindle
A Tainted Soul
By A.W. Rene
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sixteen-year-old Annaya Roth is fighting for her life to fit
in at yet another new school—and to escape the Dead.
Annaya and her mother, Samantha, just moved to the small
mountain town of Asherville. The people there are nice enough. They smile and
wave—but Annaya knows to not get too close.
Samantha is tired of running. She just wants to keep her
daughter safe. So, in one last desperate attempt to save Annaya—Samantha moves
them to the one place she never wanted to step foot in again.
This was certainly an interesting read and a little chaotic. It’s gruesome in parts and I really loved that the author wasn’t afraid to be graphic. A few time I felt down right sorry for this girl at 16 her life goes from one disaster to another. The dead really like her to know they are around.
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
Andy K (10821 KP) rated The Brood (1979) in Movies
Sep 22, 2019
After the murder, his father-in-law also arrives, the situation worsens as he attempts to visit his daughter while in therapy without success. Still grief stricken, he wants to confront the doctor or at least understand what is happening.
Here is where the story becomes very unusual. The brutality being dispatched to various individuals is being administered by disfigured "dwarves" or misshapen children which makes no sense to Frank or the police which asks more questions.
After learning additional details, Frank returns to his wife's benefactor for a final confrontation with her and the doctor to ensure the release of his kidnapped daughter.
Cronenberg's early body horror films still stand as some of the most provocative of the gene and this film is certainly no exception. The deformed assailants provide immediate unique intrigue in the film representing something you have never seen previously and it only gets worse.
The total brutality they complete upon their victims is worsened by the fact some of it is even performed in front of children who would obviously be scarred for years to come.
The final reveal of "The Brood" is so intense, bizarre and graphic it will still turn off, repulse or offend almost anyone who watches it. Only true fans of the macabre, strange and totally extreme will find this palpable.
The great Oliver Reed is especially intense in his performance as the unconventional doctor performing his ritualistic treatments which include offbeat role plays where he has conversations with his patents pretending to be other people.
I can only imagine the reaction this film had upon its release in 1979.