Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Monstrosity - Tales Of Transformation - cover

Monstrosity - Tales Of Transformation

Laura Diaz de Arce

Publisher: Next Chapter

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Dear reader,
 
When we were children, we dreamed of being heroes. We wanted to slay dragons and defeat the monsters that scared us.
 
As we grew older, we were forced to try and find our monsters. We had been told they would be easy to spot. Monsters had too much teeth, too much fur, too much size.
 
These were lies. We stopped wanting to be heroes. We started to want to be more, to be too much. We wanted, needed, more than the world could give us. We wanted more than what we were told we should be. We wanted to become monsters.
 
Dear reader,
 
I want three things for you as you read these stories. I hope you find a story that brings you joy. I hope you find a story that gives you some discomfort. Finally, I hope you find a story here that makes you too much, that makes you just a little bit monstrous.
 
May you be enthralled and entertained by my accounts of monsters... and may these stories help you wake up the monster inside.
 
This book contains graphic violence and is not suitable for readers under the age of 18.
Available since: 01/02/2022.
Print length: 186 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Two Blue Birds - cover

    Two Blue Birds

    D H Lawrence

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    'Two Blue Birds' tells the tale of the classic triangle of the man, the wife and the secretary, who struggle to work out what their relationships are with each other. Neither of the women seem to want the man sexually but the secretary offers devotion while the parasitic wife has more insight into the man and his work. All the relationships seem unhealthy, all three seem to want something different but are incapable of expressing what they desire.
    Show book
  • Enlargement - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    Enlargement - From their pens to...

    John Davys Beresford

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    John Davys Beresford was born on 17th March 1873.  His life was blighted by infantile paralysis which left him partially disabled. 
    After an education at Oundle school he trained to be an architect.  However, he quickly decided that his life was to be centred on a literary career.  His first offerings were in drama and as a journalist. 
    As well as being a book reviewer for the Manchester Guardian he contributed to New Statesman, The Spectator, Westminster Gazette, and the Theosophist magazine The Aryan Path.   
    His spiritual journey in early adulthood had claimed him as an agnostic, in defiance of his clergyman father.  This view he later abandoned in preference to describing himself as a Theosophist and a pacifist. 
    As well as many novels, many themed with spiritual and philosophical elements.  Beresford was also a gifted short story writer particularly across the science-fiction, horror and ghost genres. 
    All of these elements helped him to obtain a prominent place in Edwardian Literary London. 
    John Davys Beresford died on the 2nd February 1947. He was 73.
    Show book
  • Short stories - as life writes them - cover

    Short stories - as life writes them

    B. Mich. Grosch

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In this volume 32 short stories, as life itself writes them. They take the reader from Germany to Switzerland, to Cameroon - even as far away as India and even Tibet. Some cheerful, some sad, but all entertaining and thought-provoking. The author endeavours to use polished, elevated language and is far removed from today's unfortunately often used 'telegram style'. 
    Spoken by AI's Sonia Neural and Ryan Neural.
    Show book
  • The Bishop of Hell - An abusive man runs off with a married woman and tragedy ensues - cover

    The Bishop of Hell - An abusive...

    Marjorie Bowen

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Margaret Gabrielle Vere Campbell was born on 1st November 1885 on Hayling Island in Hampshire.  
     
    Her childhood was fraught with problems, her alcoholic father left early in her life and was later found dead on a London Street. Life thereafter was poverty with an uncaring mother. 
     
    However, her talents took her to the Slade School of Fine Art and later to study in Paris.  
     
    Her first fiction, written at a mere 16, was a violent medieval historical novel, ‘The Viper of Milan’. Initially rejected by several publishers it went on to become a best-seller  
     
    After this her prolific writings were the main financial support for the family.  Her literary output numbered over 150 volumes, mainly under the pseudonym of Marjorie Bowen but she also used the names Joseph Shearing, George R Preedy, John Winch, Robert Paye and Margaret Campbell.  Within this output she assigned the pseudonyms to the various genres she worked across, from Historical fiction to supernatural short stories.  
     
    Perhaps her best known work is the 1909 book ‘Black Magic’, a Gothic horror novel about a medieval witch. 
     
    Several of her works were also adapted into films.   
     
    She was married twice.  The first to Zefferino Emilio Constanza (they had two children), who died of tuberculosis, and then to Arthur L Long (and another two children) 
     
    Marjorie Bowen died on 23rd December 1952 at St Charles Hospital in North Kensington, London after suffering serious concussion from a fall in her bedroom.  She was 67.
    Show book
  • Day Ends Darkly The - A Musical Tale From the American West - A Rock Operatic Audiobook - cover

    Day Ends Darkly The - A Musical...

    Alfred C. Martino

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Day Ends Darkly, A Musical Tale From the American West -- a rock operatic audiobook -- tells the tale of an aged cowboy looking back on his life as one of the frontier's "rough men, doing rough men things," chased by Law men, outlaws and his own sins, through the badlands of the Wild West. Written by novelist Alfred C. Martino and narrated by rock vocalist Chris Whitby, featuring an opus composed by British music producer Luke Smith.
    Show book
  • Mother River - cover

    Mother River

    Can Xue

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Winner of the 2015 Best Translated Book Award 
     
     
     
    In Mother River, Can Xue, one of China's most daring and visionary writers, invites us into a surreal landscape where reality is as fluid as a river itself. This collection of thirteen stories weaves together vivid, dreamlike narratives that challenge our perceptions of time, identity, and existence. 
     
     
     
    Through her signature blend of the absurd and the profound, Can Xue explores the fragile boundaries between the known and unknown, between humanity and nature. In these tales, a man tries to chase down an elusive golden peacock, a woman communicates with mysterious, shifting forms of light,  and the river that runs through a small village seems to pulse with memories of its own. 
     
     
     
    Surreal, provocative, and unique, Mother River reinforces Can Xue's status as one of the most rewarding and complex writers working today—and a perennial favorite to win the Nobel Prize.
    Show book