Download Sea Tales: Stories to SERIOUSLY Creep You Out AudioBook Free
Let's face it. About 75 percent of the world is covered in normal water - and of that water practically 97 percent of it can be found in the ocean. Maritimers will let you know that there is a story for every wave that has ever before washed upon the shoreline. Listed below are seven of these. "At night and the Deep" offers an extremely haunting yarn of World Battle 2 convoy work and a sailor who made and maintained a terrible bargain. "Harry's Mermaid" presents you to a group of homeless men who capture something that could be a mermaid. If that doesn't let you know enough relating to this story just try to imagine what Steinbeck's Cannery Row would read like if it turned out written by Horsepower Lovecraft. "I Know Why the Waters of the ocean Taste of Sodium" is a tale of an Okinawa-based Japanese Air Drive suicide pilot and his come across with a sea monster - of types. "Finbar's Storyline" is a dark illusion story of the deeper currents that eddy and circulation within the profound quiet currents of your man's cold center. "THE GIRL Who Lost Her Tooth From Laughing Too Loudly at the ocean" is a calm little fable of salt normal water, tears, and regret. "Between You-Know-Who and the Deep Dark Blue" is a story of the previous bargain on the planet. This collection begins with a bargain and ends with a bargain. Sounds like a heck of your bargain to me. What individuals are saying about Steve Vernon's writing: "If Harlan Ellison, Richard Matheson and Robert Bloch had a three-way sex romp in a spa, and then a team of scientists arrived in and filtered out the normal water and mixed the leftover DNA into a test tube, the resulting genetic experiment would probably grow up into Steve Vernon." (<i>Bookgasm</i>) "Steve Vernon is something of an anomaly in the world of horror literature. He's one of the freshest new voices in the genre although his career has spanned two decades. Writing with a exceptional swagger and self-assurance, Steve Vernon can lead his readers through an entire gamut of emotions from outright dread and repulsion to pity and laughter." (<i>Cemetery Boogie</i>)