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Tudor fantasy town8/2/2023 ![]() Children of the 1980s will enjoy the nostalgia.Īre we not men? We are-well, ask Bigfoot, as Brooks does in this delightful yarn, following on his bestseller World War Z (2006).Ī zombie apocalypse is one thing. Things takes a creepy turn when the symbols are twisted to fit someone’s not-so-innocent agenda.Ī swift, cleverly plotted debut novel that ably captures the insular, slightly sinister feel of a small village. The chalk markings the group works out to communicate tap into kids’ universal love for secret code and, of course, getting one over on their parents. The dynamics among the kids are similar, complete with Nicky’s flaming red hair, and Eddie’s first-person narration alternates between past and present, taking full advantage of chapter-ending cliffhangers. Readers will undoubtedly be reminded of the kids of Stand by Me and even IT. When he’s contacted by Mickey Cooper, who claims he knows who really killed that girl, it opens old wounds, and a body count follows. He still feels particularly bad about his part in the downfall of a teacher with albinism who was kind to him. ![]() In 2016, Eddie is a teacher who harbors a mild crush for his much younger boarder, Chloe, and isn’t eager to revisit the traumatic events of ’86. ![]() When Eddie finds the decapitated and dismembered body of a local girl in the woods, it stirs up terrible secrets and forbidden passions. He’s largely insulated from his mother’s work as an abortion provider and its accompanying risks, and it’s her income that keeps the household afloat, since his father’s freelance writing jobs are hit and miss. In 1986, 12-year-old Eddie Adams enjoys spending time with his group of friends: Fat Gav, Metal Mickey, Hoppo, and the lone girl in the group, Nicky. Murder, mayhem, and chalk figures in a sleepy English village.
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