You're all very welcome!
For horror fans looking for ideas: With the other coupons I got a couple of Graham Masterton and I'm trying out some from my wishlist. Haven't read them yet so I don't know if they are any good.
Conrad Williams
Decay Inevitable
Quote:
Product Description
Sean Redman is a failed policeman who cannot escape the job. Will Lacey is a husband who witnesses the birth of a monster. Cheke is a killing machine programmed to erase every trace of an experiment gone horribly wrong... These strands all come together in this dark and visceral fantasy. Decay Inevitable charts the badlands of horrifying dreams and demons, where a black market in unspeakable goods is discovered. A race is on to unearth the secrets of the soul... secrets woven into the fabric of death itself.
About the Author
Conrad Williams was born in Cheshire in 1969. He is the author of three novels, four novellas and a collection of his best short fiction. His most recent book, THE UNBLEMISHED, won the international Horror Guild Award for Best Novel. He is also a past recipient of the British Fantasy Award and the Littlewood Arc Prize.
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http://www.kobobooks.com/ebook/Decay...3ydlubrx6Q&r=3
He has some other books there also.
Phil Rickman
Curfew
Quote:
Every night for 400 years, a curfew bell has tolled from the church tower of Crybbe. Tradition is very important in this quiet, sombre town... It's something an outsider wouldn't understand. But is it merely superstitious ritual, or is it the sole defense against an ancient evil?
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http://www.kobobooks.com/ebook/Curfe...4rg/page1.html
For Ramsey Campbell fans, Charles L. Grant is supposed to have a similar style. He has a series of books based in a town called Oxrun, and the first one is available at Kobo.
The Hour of the Oxrun Dead
Quote:
Product Description
The Hour of the Oxrun Dead was a breakthrough novel for Charles L. Grant. It was the first of many books dealing with Oxrun Station, his invented, cursed locale that is probably only surpassed by Lovecraft’s Arkham and King’s Castle Rock in the minds of horror fans. First appearing in 1977, it helped usher in the golden age of horror fiction in the 1980s. Character-driven and emotionally wrenching, The Hour of the Oxrun Dead’s subtlety stands in sharp contrast to the “gore galore” style that would come to dominate horror fiction.
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http://www.kobobooks.com/ebook/The-H...9DA/page1.html