Black Pockets

And Other Dark Thoughts

Fiction & Literature, Horror, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Short Stories
Cover of the book Black Pockets by George Zebrowski, Open Road Media
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: George Zebrowski ISBN: 9781480494824
Publisher: Open Road Media Publication: April 1, 2014
Imprint: Open Road Media Language: English
Author: George Zebrowski
ISBN: 9781480494824
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication: April 1, 2014
Imprint: Open Road Media
Language: English

In this masterful collection of horror stories, George Zebrowski divides these nineteen tales into personal, political, and metaphysical terrors—stories to scare you individually, stories to frighten you as a social animal, and stories that should terrify the entire human race.

In “I Walked with Fidel,” a young man encounters a once politically powerful zombie; “Jumper” focuses on a young woman with a dark and troubled past, while in “The Coming of Christ the Joker,” the lighthearted banter of a celebrity TV talk show becomes something far more serious. “A Piano Full of Dead Spiders” is an eerie story of genius, its demands, and its delusions; in “Passing Nights,” the truth behind a recurring nightmare is revealed; “The Soft Terrible Music” depicts a man who must hide his past even from himself. And in the title story, the novella “Black Pockets,” Zebrowski asks: What happens to a man when his desire for revenge becomes all-consuming?

With an introduction by Howard Waldrop and an afterword by the author, George Zebrowski reveals himself in Black Pockets and Other Dark Thoughts as a writer who can play on our more disturbing emotions even as he impels us to deeper thoughts.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In this masterful collection of horror stories, George Zebrowski divides these nineteen tales into personal, political, and metaphysical terrors—stories to scare you individually, stories to frighten you as a social animal, and stories that should terrify the entire human race.

In “I Walked with Fidel,” a young man encounters a once politically powerful zombie; “Jumper” focuses on a young woman with a dark and troubled past, while in “The Coming of Christ the Joker,” the lighthearted banter of a celebrity TV talk show becomes something far more serious. “A Piano Full of Dead Spiders” is an eerie story of genius, its demands, and its delusions; in “Passing Nights,” the truth behind a recurring nightmare is revealed; “The Soft Terrible Music” depicts a man who must hide his past even from himself. And in the title story, the novella “Black Pockets,” Zebrowski asks: What happens to a man when his desire for revenge becomes all-consuming?

With an introduction by Howard Waldrop and an afterword by the author, George Zebrowski reveals himself in Black Pockets and Other Dark Thoughts as a writer who can play on our more disturbing emotions even as he impels us to deeper thoughts.

More books from Open Road Media

Cover of the book The Cannibals by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book The Case of the Vanishing Corpse by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book Harvest Home by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book The Meaning of Treason by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book On Being Human by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book The Liam Devlin Novels by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book The Man Who Could Not Shudder by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book The Ninja by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book Going Down Fast by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book Rivers and Mountains by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book Siren from the Sea by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book Black Narcissus by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book Snowfire by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book Saints and Madmen by George Zebrowski
Cover of the book No Witnesses by George Zebrowski
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy