Slippin' Into Darkness (eBook)
- Author: Norman Partridge
- Page Count: 285
- Pub. Date: July 14, 2011
- Status: E-Book
- ABOUT
- AUTHOR
- REVIEWS
"Slippin' Into Darkness is easily the most auspicious genre debut of the year. Part horror, part mystery and part blood-tipped satire, it signals the arrival of a major new talent... This is, quite simply, a five-star book."
— Stephen King
Slippin' Into Darkness
by Norman Partridge
About the eBook:
The
clock strikes midnight. It's April 8, 1994, and twenty-four hours of terror
begin in a town on the California coast:
12:03
A.M.: In a quiet cemetery, a man throws beer bottles at his lost love's tombstone.
Graveyard baseball is the name of the game. The pitcher hasn't thrown a baseball
or a bottle since he graduated high school in 1976, but his concentration is
perfect, his control unmatched... until someone disturbs the game, and the pitcher
explodes in a violent fury.
1:12
A.M.: A secretive photographer climbs the stairs of his basement studio. Shadows
drift across the cool green felt of a pool table in his living room. A young
woman waits for him in the darkness. She is naked, her skin ghost-white, and
her cold laughter stirs memories of a terrible night in 1976.
1:38
A.M.: A wealthy thirty-five-year-old woman leaves her young lover's apartment,
thinking of the husband she plans to divorce. Outside she meets a man from her
past... a man from 1976 with a camera in his hands and a twisted blackmail scheme
in his heart.
3:31
A.M.: A battered pick-up truck bashes through the gates of an abandoned drive-in
theater. Five members of the class of '76 project an old home movie that hides
bitter secrets from the past... secrets that will forever change the future.
So
begins Slippin' Into Darkness, a wild ride of terror combining the relentless
suspense of Thomas Harris, the moody atmosphere of Twin Peaks, and the
sad longing of a Bruce Springsteen ballad. But ultimately this book is Norman
Partridge, writing with the gloves off, taking horror and suspense in a direction
all his own.
Norman Partridge's fiction includes horror, suspense, and the fantastic — "sometimes all in one story" says his friend Joe Lansdale. Partridge's novels include the Jack Baddalach mysteries Saguaro Riptide and The Ten-Ounce Siesta, plus The Crow: Wicked Prayer, which was adapted for film. His novel Dark Harvest was chosen by Publishers Weekly as one of the 100 Best Books of 2006. Partridge's compact, thrill-a-minute style has been praised by Stephen King and Peter Straub, and his collections and stories have received both the Bram Stoker and IHG awards. You can find him on the web at www.normanpartridge.com and www.americanfrankenstein.blogspot.com.
"Slippin' Into Darkness is easily the most auspicious genre debut of the year. Part horror, part mystery and part blood-tipped satire, it signals the arrival of a major new talent... This is, quite simply, a five-star book."
—Stephen King
"Partridge writes with a rock beat-disco crossed with hard-slammin' punk-that gives the book a savage tempo in keeping with its horrific events."
—Booklist