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A collection of dark tales, including two novellas, The Haunting of Sam Cabot and The Holocaust Opera, plus seven short stories.
This volume is derived, in concept, from a conference held in honour of John Evans by the School of History and Archaeology and The Prehistoric Society at Cardiff University in March 2006. It brings together papers that address themes and landscapes on a variety of levels. They cover geographical, methodological and thematic areas that were of interest to, and had been studied by, John Evans. The volume is divided into five sections, which echo themes of importance in British prehistory. They include papers on aspects of environmental archaeology, experiments and philosophy; new research on the nature of woodland on the chalklands of southern England; coasts and islands; people, process and ...
The history of Little Cyprus in Marshall County, Kentucky is compiled in this unique, multi-generational account by two authors, the late Irene Nuckolls Moore and her son Cecil Moore. “The View from the Other Side of the Tracks,” is divided into two parts including a memoire detailing life in Little Cyprus written by Irene Nuckolls Moore before her death in 2008. Her son Cecil Moore expands on events and individuals his mother writes about with extensive genealogy of the families in North Marshall County, Kentucky and surrounding areas. “The View from the Other Side of the Tracks” documents original recipients of Jackson Purchase land grants in 1819 and chronicles significant inhabitants and events since that time period.
When Jerry arrives in Beijing, he discovers a strange world where strange nightmares and past occurances bode ill for his future.
There are places that hold evil, houses so vile, so tainted, that people refuse to live in them.Farnham House is one of those places. Once an inn, this majestic old New England manor house is back on the market, and the price is very reasonable. Sam Cabot is a man tired of moving. Now he wants nothing more than to live a quiet life in the country with his wife and young son. Little does he know that he will soon begin a long, slow descent into madness and that he will spend his summer living with dead things.
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