3-Works of science and the supernatural combine with fantasy and the female-led in these three misadventures for the male of the species. Read on, as we open with an eerie and chilling tale of female-led vengeance from the grave. It's 1932, and Julian Westerhuis, a cynical Londoner and womaniser, escapes retribution from an angry husband to visit a female cousin in the North Devon fishing village of Combe Lynton.
A village in which she, an investigator of the paranormal, has acquired keys to a house with a gruesome past. What they uncover between the two of them is a tale of tragic love and violent death that has led to the spirit of a beautiful Romany woman occupying the house in spectral form. A form burning with hatred for the married man who toyed with her affections. A married man who looks very much like Julian Westerhuis! Following this we have a tale of Victorian times as a doctor and scientist - obsessed with discovering and isolating the gene from which springs good and evil in an individual; develops a compound he believes will by-pass the less wholesome of the two traits.
And doing so while leaving its polar-positive intact. And achieves the direct opposite. Leaving only sadism and a desire to torment and control in the female housekeeper he chose to unknowingly be the first recipient of his concoction. The last of the triad takes us to late-nineteenth-century Paris as a carefree and financially secure Parisian bachelor takes lodgings with the widow of a man recently fished from the Seine and pronounced a suicide.
That widow being a buxom Parisian landlady fully intent on showing her new lodger the reasons behind her husband's departure. And in a commanding way that will ensure the once carefree man will soon come to understand why her former partner chose to terminate his association with existence! Inside you will find: "Forever Malign" by Theo Hopcraft; "The Shaming of Purbeck"; from Sandrine D'Honfleur"; and Sandrine Bessancort's "The Horla Revisited. Believable fantasy and female-led fiction for those readers with a desire to have a light shone on the more.
outré .corners of the imagination.
3-Works of science and the supernatural combine with fantasy and the female-led in these three misadventures for the male of the species. Read on, as we open with an eerie and chilling tale of female-led vengeance from the grave. It's 1932, and Julian Westerhuis, a cynical Londoner and womaniser, escapes retribution from an angry husband to visit a female cousin in the North Devon fishing village of Combe Lynton.
A village in which she, an investigator of the paranormal, has acquired keys to a house with a gruesome past. What they uncover between the two of them is a tale of tragic love and violent death that has led to the spirit of a beautiful Romany woman occupying the house in spectral form. A form burning with hatred for the married man who toyed with her affections. A married man who looks very much like Julian Westerhuis! Following this we have a tale of Victorian times as a doctor and scientist - obsessed with discovering and isolating the gene from which springs good and evil in an individual; develops a compound he believes will by-pass the less wholesome of the two traits.
And doing so while leaving its polar-positive intact. And achieves the direct opposite. Leaving only sadism and a desire to torment and control in the female housekeeper he chose to unknowingly be the first recipient of his concoction. The last of the triad takes us to late-nineteenth-century Paris as a carefree and financially secure Parisian bachelor takes lodgings with the widow of a man recently fished from the Seine and pronounced a suicide.
That widow being a buxom Parisian landlady fully intent on showing her new lodger the reasons behind her husband's departure. And in a commanding way that will ensure the once carefree man will soon come to understand why her former partner chose to terminate his association with existence! Inside you will find: "Forever Malign" by Theo Hopcraft; "The Shaming of Purbeck"; from Sandrine D'Honfleur"; and Sandrine Bessancort's "The Horla Revisited. Believable fantasy and female-led fiction for those readers with a desire to have a light shone on the more.
outré .corners of the imagination.