Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
American Chillers and its predecessor series Michigan Chillers are a series of horror novels for children written by author Christopher Wright under the pen name of Johnathan Rand. The original series began in February 2000, with each book taking place in major cities and places in Wright's home state of Michigan .
The Legend of Bigfoot; The Legend of Boggy Creek; The Legend of Sasquatch; Letters from the Big Man; Lissi und der wilde Kaiser; List of Finding Bigfoot episodes; Little Bigfoot (film) Love in the Time of Monsters
Each year, our team tests children's books of all types and genres with young readers for the annual Good Housekeeping Kids' Book Awards. Many newer picks on this list of the greatest children's ...
Christopher Wright, born November 24, 1964, in Pontiac, Michigan, is the author of dozens of horror fiction books for children and young adults. He writes under the pseudonyms Johnathan Rand [1] and Christopher Knight. Almost all of Wright's books (except American Chillers) take place in his home state of Michigan.
Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre is a fiction book by American author Max Brooks set in the Pacific Northwest. [2] It chronicles the story of a small, isolated community of technologically-dependent city dwellers who suddenly are cut off from the rest of the world after a volcanic eruption. [2]
The Others Of Edenwell, by Verity M. Holloway. The Others of Edenwell is a subtle book. Though it’s set in the shadow of the First World War, there is little bombast and few moments of overt ...
The Dooms Chapel Horror: 2015 Demons, ghoul [125] Dreadtime Stories: 2014 Ghoul [126] Dwellers: 2021 Sewer creature [127] Earth vs. the Spider: 1958 Giant spider [128] Eight Legged Freaks: 2002 Giant spiders [26] [129] Exists: 2014 Bigfoot [130] Extinction: 2014 Tyrannosaurus rex [131] The Fiancé: 2015 Bigfoot [132] The Flesh Eaters: 1964 ...
All the Fiends of Hell, by Adam L.G. Nevill. Adam Nevill’s stories are full of tight interiors, narrow minds, and entities who slip under a reader’s defenses. In All the Fiends of Hell, he’s ...