The Untold

by William J. Grabowski


Formats

Softcover
$21.99
Softcover
$21.99

Book Details

Language :
Publication Date : 3/31/2004

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 222
ISBN : 9781413428520

About the Book

Karl Heimdall journeys from New Orleans to Allegheny View, New York, where stands the remote 1860s Victorian home from which his mother and father vanished eight months earlier. Karl no longer can tolerate the eerie mystery, nor his guilt over dismissing his father’s desperate-–and final-—telephone call wherein he declared the house and surrounding landscape haunted by an unknown force both vicious and incomprehensible.

Allegheny View soon proves, despite Karl’s skepticism, host to an otherworldly presence. Something is there . . . something dangerous; capable of tricking his mind and forming out of the elements nameless horrors summoned from the abyss of Karl’s subconscious.

So begins his struggle against not only the ruthlessly inhuman force that pulled his mother and father into oblivion, but that of his own emptiness. Looming over Karl’s search for meaning is the unbearable possibility of no new beginnings . . .

Meanwhile, Allegheny View is besieged by a paramilitary “black-operations” team bent on controlling the malign phenomenon. Worse, unknown to both Karl and the 12 members of Project Oz, Tactical-Commander James Reely is point-man for another, even more secret, global commission piggy-backing on the already covert channels of Oz. A conspiracy 50-years active, against not only American sovereignty, but that of the very fabric of reality itself.

If Reely’s plan succeeds, the hidden controllers will enslave us . . . and plunge humanity into a New World Order of insanity and darkness . . .


About the Author

William J. Grabowski is the author of 160 published works. From 1984 to 1989 he was book-reviewer and interviewer for the critically acclaimed Horror Show magazine, earning a nomination from Small Press Writers & Artists Organization as Best Nonfiction Writer. His Flowers on the Moon (1991) collection of early poems contains elements of horror, surrealism, and a sense of yearning melancholy. More recently Grabowski’s erotic fiction appeared on the Internet under his Anton Laveau pseudonym. Residing in Irwin, Pennsylvania, he spends his free time cooking fiery food and ducking black helicopters, and is writing his next novel.