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Nocturnes

On sale

9th October 2010

Price: £8.99

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Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9781848949034

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Take his hand and follow him into the darkness . . . John Connolly, bestselling author of five brilliantly scary mystery novels, now turns his pen to the short story to give us a dozen chilling tales of the supernatural. In this macabre collection, echoing masters of the genre from M. R. James to Stephen King, Connolly delves into our darkest fears – lost lovers, missing children, subterranean creatures, and predatory demons.

Framing the collection are two substantial novellas: The Cancer Cowboy Rides charts the fatal progress of a modern-day grim reaper, while The Reflecting Eye is a haunted house tale with a twist and marks the return of private detective Charlie Parker, the troubled hero of Connolly’s crime novels.

Nocturnes is a masterly volume to be read with the lights on – menace has never been so seductive . . .

Reviews

<i>Time Out</i>
Connolly writes about darkness and viciousness with an urban intelligence that makes these stories at once terrifying and delightful.
<i>Radio Times</i>
John Connolly is a bestselling novelist of left-field, complex mysteries, with a proven love of the dark side ... if you like to be unsettled then you're in for a treat, as each of the tales twists the classic ghost story in a modern macabre way.
<i>The Times</i>
The Beeb has commissioned a couple of flesh-crawling extravaganzas. First the bestselling John Connolly (a man who, when he puts his mind to it, can keep you awake for weeks - believe me, I know) provides a chiller a day until Friday.
<i>Independent on Sunday</i>
Spookier than mere pastiche, meatier than pure pulp, Nocturnes hits exactly the right note in reinventing the golden age of ghost stories.
<i>The Times</i>
John Connolly's novels combine the supernatural with straightforward, if ingenious, crime, but his short stories come straight from the bowels of Hell. Enjoy.
Daily Mirror
Think Edgar Allan Poe's mysteries for the shorter stories, while Connolly's individuality shines through in longer tales.