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Harold "Funny Bone" Fenimore is the class clown. Trouble is, while Bone gets all the laughs, his best friend Tony gets all the dates. But everything changes when Bone wanders down a back staircase at The Elemental and finds a secret room filled with teen partiers. When he steps inside, a beautiful girl comes on to him, and he's hooked. Soon, he can't live without The Room. But Bone's place of dreams is really a living tomb—a sorcerer's trap for souls. Unless Tony can make Bone see the truth, the door will close on his best friend for all eternity...
Dan has found the ideal location for his vampire horror movie. Despite the eerie legends, Dan begins filming at the ancient castle in the Scottish countryside. Then his pregnant wife starts carrying another fetus in her womb. Eventually, it becomes clear that little Darian is not going to be a normal baby.
A DIET TO DIE FOR Tricia Hall desperately wants to lose weight. But no matter how hard she tries, she can't stick to a diet. Then she meets Kiri, a foreign exchange student who tells her that she lost ninety pounds by taking special diet pills. Figuring she has nothing to lose, Tricia starts taking the pills... and the pounds begin to magically melt away. There's just one small problem. After Tricia drops the weight she wants to lose and stops taking the pills... the pounds keep melting away. Poor Tricia. She wanted to be gorgeous. Now she's going to be gorgeous. Drop dead gorgeous.
Fred escapes from boring summer days on his aunt's chicken farm by playing virtual reality games on his computer, but when parts of a game intrude into real life, it's almost too exciting, even for Fred.
From the author of Let's Pretend You're Dead. One year ago, Miami homicide detective Christopher Blaze was killed in a drug bust that went awry. But death far from ended his career. Now as a vampire, Chris stalks another of his kind, one caught up in the dangerous and vastly lucrative drug trade--where a drug lord's deadly crop has led to a vampire's savage harvest of blood.
Something is wrong with the Martins' baby, and only Marty seems to realize it. Can he convince his parents of the problem before it's too late?
At the age of 49, Ohio-born J. Herman Hardebeck had earned a gilt-edged reputation as a real estate developer in Kankakee. In the spring of 1891, to the north of Kankakee and south of Bourbonnais, lay a flat, mile-wide prairie. The land stretched eastward from a grove of Kankakee river timber, past the Illinois Central Railroad into the watershed of Soldier Creek. In May, Hardebeck signed agreements with Alvah Perry and Hiram Goodwin for the purchase of 340 acres of this property. He had taken options on additional tracts. Here Hardebeck would establish an industrial community first named North Kankakee and later renamed Bradley in honor of farm implement manufacturer David Bradley.