January 20

Review: House of Fallen Trees by Gina Ranalli

Karen’s just starting to get her life back on track after the disappearance of her twin brother months ago. Until a strange voice on the phone tells her ″Two men have the carcass.″ When a man calls claiming to be her brother’s partner, both romantically and in a budding B&B in Fallen Trees, Washington Karen feels the overwhelming urge to travel to the small town in the middle of nowhere and retrace her brother’s last steps. But what she finds at the House of Fallen Trees is a classic creepy ghost tale that might have killed her brother.

House of Fallen Trees is a fast, compelling read. It’s dark, twisted and will have readers questioning Karen as much as the strange happenings the giant ship built in the middle of the woods. Creepy and fun it’s a stellar ghost tale in a thin market. A definite good choice for horror collections.

Contains: Sexual language, foul language


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Posted January 20, 2012 by Michele Lee in category "monsterlibrarian