The Science of Monsters: Why Monsters Came to be and What Made Them So Terrifying
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Modern audiences do not find dragons frightening. Fascinating as mythical creatures, yes, but...
Mammoth Cave Curiosities: A Guide to Rockphobia, Dating, Saber-Toothed Cats, and Other Subterranean Marvels
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Sir Elton John, blind fish, the original Twinkie, President Ronald Reagan's Secret Service detail,...
The North Norfolk Coast: A Short Introduction
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The North Norfolk Coast is one of the UK's most beautiful natural coastlines. In this book, Anthony...
How to See, How to Draw: Keys to Realistic Drawing
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Imagine having the ability to draw any subject with precision, detail and expression. With Claudia's...
Walton Ford: Pancha Tantra
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This book features a natural selection: Ford's beautifully savage beasts and birds. Walton Ford's...
The Original Folk and Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm
Jack David Zipes, Wilhelm Grimm, Jacob Grimm and Andrea Dezso
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When Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm published their Children's and Household Tales in 1812, followed by a...
Cate Le Bon recommended Yr Atal Genhedlaeth by Gruff Rhys in Music (curated)
The Ultimate Guide to Smoking Meat, Fish, and Game: How to Make Everything from Delicious Meals to Tasty Treats
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In an easy to follow manner, writer-outdoorsman Monte Burch explains how to properly preserve meat...
Primal Nutrition: Paleolithic and Ancestral Diets for Optimal Health
Nora T. Gedgaudas, Ron Schmid and Sally Fallon Morell
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The human body's innate mechanisms for healing and immunity extend beyond the mending of cuts and...
Jesters_folly (230 KP) rated The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon in Books
Dec 29, 2020
Set in Mane (Like a lot of Kings works.) 'The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon' follows 9 year old Trisha McFarland as she gets lost in the wood whilst on a hike with her mother and brother. The story is more about coping with horror than an actual horror story as Trisha tries to find her way out of the woods whilst having to contend with the changing landscape, dead animals, hunger, thirst and exposure. Oh and there may or may not be something stalking her and that's the real extent of the horror, the 'not knowing' what's out there. There is no 'Dark man' or plague and no one has any shine, the story is just a little girl trying to find her way home. King mix's the real threats with those of Trisha's imagination , blurring the line so that, by the end the reader is not sure what really happened. Pushed to her limits Trisha is forced to dwell on the nature of god(s) and whether she should wait for a miracle or try to save her self .
Overall a good book that is slightly different to Kings other works and, at just over 200 pages (the copy I read) it's a refreshingly quick read