Bound to be Wrecked
Rose Rough
Publisher: Rose Rough
Summary
A young woman finds herself "all tied up" and gets totally wrecked by a group of rough alpha men...
Publisher: Rose Rough
A young woman finds herself "all tied up" and gets totally wrecked by a group of rough alpha men...
Gabriel-Ernest by Saki is a darkly humorous tale set in the English countryside. The story revolves around a mysterious, feral boy named Gabriel-Ernest who is discovered living in the woods. His presence coincides with a series of disappearances in the area, including that of a young child. The wealthy landowner, Van Cheele, is initially disturbed by the boy's wild nature but eventually succumbs to his aunt's insistence on adopting him. Despite his suspicions, Van Cheele remains oblivious to the true nature of Gabriel-Ernest, who may or may not be a supernatural creature.Show book
Katherine O'Flaherty was born on the 8th February 1850 in St Louis, Missouri to parents of French and Irish descent. At age 5, she was sent to the Sacred Heart Academy and, apart from a 2 year period at home when her father died, remained there until graduating in 1868. Whilst there she began writing and became an avid reader of almost anything that crossed her path. Kate married Oscar Chopin in 1870 and the couple moved to New Orleans, and later to the rural setting of Cloutierville, Louisiana to raise their 6 children. In 1882 her husband died leaving her in a deep trench of debt. Despite her best efforts to turn the businesses around they were sold, and she moved the family back to St Louis and the financial help of her mother. Sadly, her mother died within the year. Kate, now struggling with depression, pushed herself to write and gained a local reputation as a writer of short stories that captured the local color and vibrancy of her surroundings. By the early 1890’s her short stories were published nationally. With this widespread audience also came negative reviews, controversy, and cries of immorality as themes such as interracial relationships, the rights of women and other burning issues of the day were written about. Despite the criticism, which unnerved her, she continued to write though in the main her works, around 100 short stories and two novels, were not attributed with any literary worth. Kate Chopin died from a brain haemorrhage in St Louis Missouri on the 22nd of August 1904. She was 54. For much of the 20th Century her work was forgotten and out of print. It was only in early 1970’s, with the rise of feminism and the call for a more just society that she was given the status her works had long described and shone a literary light at. She is now safely revered as one of America’s great authors.Show book
Short stories have always been a sort of instant access into an author’s brain, their soul and heart. A few pages can lift our lives into locations, people and experiences with a sweep of landscape, narration, feelings and emotions that is difficult to achieve elsewhere. In this series we try to offer up tried and trusted ‘Top Tens’ across many different themes and authors. But any anthology will immediately throw up the questions – Why that story? Why that author? The theme itself will form the boundaries for our stories which range from well-known classics, newly told, to stories that modern times have overlooked but perfectly exemplify the theme. Throughout the volume our authors whether of instant recognition or new to you are all leviathans of literature. Some you may disagree with but they will get you thinking; about our choices and about those you would have made. If this volume takes you on a path to discover more of these miniature masterpieces then we have all gained something. A new century dawns, but old suffocating ideas live on. Society seems wary of change until it is forced upon it. But Europe’s authors seem to have no fear. They move in relentless pursuit with an energy that must at some near future point challenge everything. The World begins it short march to catastrophe. 1 - The Top 10 - The 1900's - The Europeans - An Introduction 2 - The Informer by Joseph Conrad 3 - Silence by Leonid Nikolaevich Andreyev 4 - Tomato Sauce by Hanns Heinz Ewers 5 - Putois by Anatole France 6 - The Devil's Horse by Ion Luca Caragiale 7 - How Treason Came to Russia by Rainer Maria Rilke 8 - The Duel by Nikolai Teleshov 9 - Cuchulain of Muirthemne. The Only Son of Aoife by Lady Augusta Gregory 10 - A Dry Spell by Eimar H Kvaran 11 - The Salvation of a Forsythe - Part 1 by John Galsworthy 12 - The Salvation of a Forsythe - Part 2 by John GalsworthyShow book
They’re feeding on you too. A father returns from serving in Vietnam with a strange and terrifying addiction; a man removes something horrifying from his fireplace, and becomes desperate to return it; and a right-wing news channel has its hooks in people in more ways than one. From department store Santas to ghost boyfriends and salamander-worshipping nuns, from the claustrophobia of the COVID-19 pandemic to small-town Chesapeake USA, Clay McLeod Chapman takes universal fears of parenthood, addiction and political divisions and makes them uniquely his own. Packed full of humanity, humour and, above all, relentless creeping dread, Acquired Taste is a timely descent into the mind of one of modern horror’s finest authors.Show book
"The Call of Cthulhu" is a Cthulhu Mythos story by H. P. Lovecraft, first published in the February 1928 issue of Weird Tales Magazine. "The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents." With these iconic words, Lovecraft opens The Call of Cthulhu, a cornerstone of twentieth-century horror and the defining tale of his vast Cthulhu Mythos. Presented as a series of interconnected documents and testimonies, the story follows a professor's descent into the tangled threads of a global mystery—a series of strange dreams, cult activity, and ancient carvings that all point to the same terrifying revelation: the Great Old One known as Cthulhu is real—and not entirely asleep.Show book
Award Winner at the 2023 Hear Now Palooza, sponsored by National Audio Theater Festivals. Wizards. Prisoners. Preachers. And robots! They stick out. They change the conversation. They challenge the traditional narrative. They are Outcasts—isolated, different, misunderstood. Being normal is nice. But being outcast is a real part of the human experience. Have you ever had the feeling of being alone in some way, of being on the outside looking in? If so, then the characters in these 18 short stories will move you--sometimes by their depravity, sometimes by their sorrow...and sometimes by their joy. Written by members of The Ohio Writers' Association, with audio book production by members of the Ohio Audiobook Narrators The Bear by Devon Ortega, narrated by Gretchen LaBuhn Tough Luck by Emily E. Jones, narrated by Angus Freathy Little Jimmy by Carnegie Euclid, narrated by Gretchen LaBuhn Man in the Box by Diane Callahan, narrated by Doug McDonald Treetown by David M. Simon, narrated by GaryLeo Smith The Suitor by Stella Ling, narrated by Beth Kesler The New Chastisement by Brian Luke, narrated by Gary Leo Smith Those Who Slip Through by Curtis A. Deeter, narrated by Gary LeoSmith Sensible Attire by D. Wayne Moore, narrated by Beth Kesler Good Friday by Krista Hilton, narrated by Angus Freathy The Fog of Fate by Brian R. Johnson & Elora Lyons, narrated by Angus Freathy Best If Used By by Mary McFarland, narrated by Becky White Wake Up, O Sleeper by Brad Pauquette, narrated by Gary Leo Smith Number 385712 by George Pallas, narrated by Doug McDonald Axman by Steven Kenneth Smith, narrated by Gary Leo Smith Parquet to the Past by Mike Sieminski, narrated by Angus Freathy A Tummy Rub for Gaffney by Stephen Kyo Kaczmarek, narrated by Doug McDonaldShow book