Jardan

The Chill: A Novel by Scott Carson (English) Paperback Book

Description: The Chill by Scott Carson National Bestseller A supernatural force--set in motion a century ago--threatens to devastate New York City in this "terrific horror/suspense/disaster novel" that "grips from the first page" (Stephen King, #1 New York Times bestselling author).Far upstate, in New Yorks ancient forests, a drowned village lays beneath the dark, still waters of the Chilewaukee reservoir. Early in the 20th century, the town was destroyed for the greater good: bringing water to the millions living downstate. Or at least thats what the politicians from Manhattan insisted at the time. The local families, settled there since Americas founding, were forced from their land, but some didnt leave... Now, a century later, the repercussions of human arrogance are finally making themselves known. An inspector assigned to oversee the dam, dangerously neglected for decades, witnesses something inexplicable. It turns out that more than the village was left behind in the waters of the Chill when it was abandoned. A dark prophecy remained, too, and the time has come for it to be fulfilled--for sacrifices must be made. And as the dark waters begin to inexorably rise, the demand for a fresh sacrifice emerges from the deep... "A must read for fans of eerie, gripping storytelling" (Dean Koontz, #1 New York Times bestselling author), The Chill is "a creepy tale of supernatural terror" (Publishers Weekly, starred review). FORMAT Paperback LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Author Biography Scott Carson is the pseudonym of Michael Koryta, a New York Times bestselling author whose work has been translated into more than twenty languages, adapted into major motion pictures, and won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. A former private investigator and reporter, his writing has been praised by Stephen King, Michael Connelly, and Dean Koontz, among many others. Raised in Bloomington, Indiana, he now lives in Indiana and Maine. Review "Wow! This is one terrific horror/suspense/disaster novel. Characters you root for and a story that grips from the first page." Review Quote "Wow! This is one terrific horror/suspense/disaster novel. Characters you root for and a story that grips from the first page." Excerpt from Book Chapter 1 October 20, 2000 UPSTREAM 1 Molly packed a black silk bag that could be worn as a hood, because she did not want her eyes to open again until she was back in Galesburg. The bag was soft and lovely but it was also thick and dark, a stronger shield than the burlap sack or simple white pillowcase that shed considered. And a kinder shield than the black garbage bag. She put the silk bag inside her purse beside the spools of heavy saltwater fishing line and the long stainless steel hooks. The iron chains and padlock were already hidden on the bluff above the lake. The sight of the hooks quickened her pulse, but she didnt pause, simply folded the silk bag on top of them and closed the purse. She was a stoic woman and took pride in it. Unflappable , her father had called her once when she was a girl, and shed taken pride in that, too. That was back when the town was emptying out, fewer families left each day, and each night her father took to his chair on the front porch and sat with his shotgun across his lap, prepared for the looters. He was wary of them but not enraged by them. He insisted the real looters had come from the state, and that the dam across Cresap Creek was the real theft. The rest of this, he said, all rippled out from that first crime. Condemn a town and what did you expect to happen? Sin would flow downhill then, and the town would be left lawless and ungoverned after the ribbon-cutting was held. She didnt know if he slept at all those nights. In the mornings, he kept the gun in hand while he walked Molly to school. They would pass the ancient one-room wooden structure where hed been educated, and he would nod at it or gesture with the barrel of the 12-gauge and tell her how much better it had been back then. Less greed, he always said. Less greed and more principles. Back then, Galesburg was a community rather than a place. Then he would walk her to the top of the concrete steps in front of the new but already condemned brick school, watch her open the door, and give her a smile and wave, the shotgun held in his free hand. She would smile back, refusing to show fear, not even in the final days when she was the only pupil in the school, when she sat alone at her desk in the two-story brick building with all of its strange sounds. Or, stranger still, its absence of sounds. She was Molly Mathers, and she was unflappable. Stoic. Decades had passed since then, but her temperament hadnt changed. When she left her bedroom, she was tempted to pause and look in the mirror, to stare at her own image as if it were another person and offer that woman a farewell. That was overly dramatic, though. Unnecessary. She passed by the mirror, knowing that the only face she needed to see today was her granddaughters. Of course, that meant a stop by the school. Molly dreaded setting foot in the school, but it had to be done. She walked out of the bedroom, shut the door behind her, and went down the narrow hall with its antiquated floral wallpaper and then down the creaking stairs to the foyer. To her left was the dining room and, to her right, the library. A formal, stuffy room, a heightened version of the rest of the house, more museum than home. Shed always liked the walls lined with bookshelves, though. She passed through it now, crossing to the far wall, where a weathered wooden sign read THE GALESBURG SCHOOL. Her father had pried it off the original one-room schoolhouse before the building burned. Molly hooked her fingers under the molding of the shelf below the sign and pulled. The wall swung inward on oiled hinges, the only door in the house that was always silent. She could smell the smoke and dampness on the other side before she could see the room. She paused to let her eyes adjust to the darkness before stepping inside. It was too dark in here despite the numerous lanterns that hung from hooks embedded in the center beam. In all directions of the room, in every corner, the walls were lined with old photographs. Mostly photographs, at least. Some of the oldest were sketches. She was aware of each photo or sketch, knew precisely where and when it had been taken. It had been years since shed allowed herself to study them closely, and she still knew them by heart. She saw her granddaughter beneath the lantern light. Gillian sat at the desk, facing the chalkboard. Once it had been Mollys desk. Gillian didnt notice her. She was immersed in a book. Brunette head down, blue eyes flicking left to right, nibbled fingernails--her one unbreakable bad habit--drumming off the empty inkwell at the front edge of the desk. Its emptiness was a tribute to Molly, symbolic of one of the few battles she had won with her own mother. Molly had promised she would attend to the lessons of the Galesburg School, but shed also insisted that her knowledge of the contemporary world wouldnt be denied. Respect the past but dont live in it. The Pentel gel pen that rested near Gillians hand was a monument to Mollys victory, relegating the old school desks inkwell to pointless status. Looking at the desk now, though, Molly wasnt so sure shed won. Yes, the inkwell had been rendered pointless, but still it was present. The past was always present. It lived in antiques and memories, war stories and warnings, but it was never gone. And never passive. Molly left the bookshelf door ajar, casting a thin beam of gray light into the schoolhouse, and walked to her granddaughters side. As she walked, she glanced at the ceiling uneasily. The worn poplar planks above were always dark with char marks. Back when Molly sat beneath them as a student, theyd dripped as they slowly dried out, the water coming down in fat, chilled drops. She remembered when her own mother had first hauled them up from beneath the lake, working in a johnboat and using a grappling hook. Molly had been sure the terrible old planks would dry out eventually. They never seemed to, though. Even now, after the driest summer and early autumn in years. Gillian turned a page in the book and read on. She still hadnt looked up. She was through the portal now, transported to a fictional world. Molly loved to watch her when she was like this. Loved to know that shed been carried away so completely. "Do you like this story?" Molly whispered. Gillian nodded without speaking. " Gill -ian , Gill like the ones on a fish," her granddaughter would say indignantly when anyone softened the G and called her Jillian. Her right hand crept toward her mouth, a fingernail aiming for the edge of her teeth, that nail-biting habit that she couldnt seem to outgrow. As if anticipating Mollys correction, she stilled her hand and used it to turn the page instead. The book was a battered paperback from Mollys own childhood, The House with the Clock in Its Walls by John Bellairs, a lovely story that her mother had proclaimed an endorsement of witchcraft. That statement was made shortly before the family took the old homemade tincture to ward off flu season. What was the tincture if not witchcraft? Molly asked. Tradition, her mother had said. Tradition and common sense. The world will forget them both until the world is reminded. Now take your medicine. Now the book rested in her granddaughters hands, beside the empty inkwell. The past was never passive. Beneath the book were the worksheets that Gillian was supposed to be focused on. Molly could see some of the questions--Galesburg history, with multiple choice options, filled with old names and dates, people and places long forgotten to the world outside of this room. Then there were the math and science assignments. The formulas were advanced for a student of Gillians age, asking a lot of her, yes, but Galesburg had unique demands. F = P x A Beneath the formula, Gillian had sketched a picture of water pressing up against a wall. Beside the sketch, shed written force on the dam = pressure of the water (x) area. Molly tapped the worksheet with her index finger. "Remember to think of this one as if youre swimming underwater," she said. "You know how your ears feel like theyre going to pop the deeper you go? Thats pressure. Its the weight of the water above you." "Okay," Gillian said, her attention still on the book. "Which means," Molly said patiently, determined to refresh this last lesson, "that the pressure increases when... Gillian? When does the pressure increase?" Gillian finally looked up from the book. "When the depth increases." "Excellent," Molly said, and leaned down and kissed the top of her granddaughters head. She wanted to linger, wanted to hold the touch, but knew she could not. She had rehearsed for this moment, had cried behind closed doors for years simply imagining this moment, and thanks to the pain of that preparation her eyes were dry now, and they would remain dry. So long the planning, and so difficult the action. "Ill be gone for a while," she whispered, giving Gillians left shoulder a squeeze. "The store?" Gillian asked without looking up. Who could blame her for not looking up? As far as she knew, Molly was running nothing more than a mundane errand on a mundane day, and meanwhile Gillian had a great story in front of her, albeit an imaginary one. Oh, how Molly wished her granddaughter might live forever in those imaginary stories. The real world waited, and the real world had sharp teeth Details ISBN1982104600 Author Scott Carson Short Title The Chill Language English Year 2021 ISBN-10 1982104600 ISBN-13 9781982104603 Format Paperback Subtitle A Novel Pages 464 Publication Date 2021-02-23 DEWEY 813.6 Audience General Publisher Simon & Schuster Imprint Simon & Schuster Place of Publication New York Country of Publication United States US Release Date 2021-02-23 We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. With fast shipping, low prices, friendly service and well over a million items - you're bound to find what you want, at a price you'll love! TheNile_Item_ID:131318103;

Price: 37.48 AUD

Location: Melbourne

End Time: 2025-02-04T00:20:12.000Z

Shipping Cost: 0 AUD

Product Images

The Chill: A Novel by Scott Carson (English) Paperback Book

Item Specifics

Restocking fee: No

Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

Returns Accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Format: Paperback

Language: English

ISBN-13: 9781982104603

Author: Scott Carson

Type: Does not apply

Book Title: The Chill

ISBN: 9781982104603

Recommended

The Big Chill (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) Vintage LP
The Big Chill (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) Vintage LP

$6.99

View Details
The Chill: A Novel - Mass Market Paperback By Carson, Scott - ACCEPTABLE
The Chill: A Novel - Mass Market Paperback By Carson, Scott - ACCEPTABLE

$4.19

View Details
Pine: The spine-chilling and prize-winning, atmospheric debut by Toon, Francine
Pine: The spine-chilling and prize-winning, atmospheric debut by Toon, Francine

$7.05

View Details
THE CHILL FACTOR AKA DEMON POSSESSED 1989 BLU-RAY ARROW VIDEO 2019 NEW SEALED
THE CHILL FACTOR AKA DEMON POSSESSED 1989 BLU-RAY ARROW VIDEO 2019 NEW SEALED

$15.00

View Details
Genuine MYM The Chill Pill Original Sleep Aid, Anxiety Device YELLOW
Genuine MYM The Chill Pill Original Sleep Aid, Anxiety Device YELLOW

$31.31

View Details
You Betrayed Me: A Chilling Novel of Gripping Psychological Suspense (The - GOOD
You Betrayed Me: A Chilling Novel of Gripping Psychological Suspense (The - GOOD

$3.66

View Details
The Big Chill (DVD, 1983, Widescreen)  *DISC ONLY* NO CASE NO TRACKING
The Big Chill (DVD, 1983, Widescreen) *DISC ONLY* NO CASE NO TRACKING

$4.00

View Details
Chill of Fear - Hardcover By Hooper, Kay - GOOD
Chill of Fear - Hardcover By Hooper, Kay - GOOD

$4.43

View Details
Sandaconda VMAX 090/198 - SWSH: Chilling Reign Ultra Rare - Pokémon TCG (NM)
Sandaconda VMAX 090/198 - SWSH: Chilling Reign Ultra Rare - Pokémon TCG (NM)

$1.85

View Details
The Dead Chill (The Sidney Becker - Paperback, by Berry Ms Linda - Very Good
The Dead Chill (The Sidney Becker - Paperback, by Berry Ms Linda - Very Good

$10.07

View Details