![]() ![]() ![]() Keri Russell, Jesse Plemons and Jeremy T. In Antlers, a small-town Oregon teacher and her brother, the local sheriff, become entwined with a young student harboring a dangerous secret with frightening consequences. We’ll keep you posted as soon as we learn details on the at-home release, but for now the film is only playing in movie theaters. Whether you want to read it after seeing the movie or you’d prefer to whet your appetite for Scott Cooper’s grim horror movie before you actually get around to seeing it – no home video release date at this time – find it right here.Īntlers comes highly recommended by yours truly, a Wendigo-based horror tale with one hell of a monster and some scary good performances. “The Quiet Boy” was published in full over on the website Guernica in 2019, and it’s currently still available for reading on the site. “ If you’ve seen the movie and want to dive into the original source material, you’ll be happy to know that you can read it for free right now. ![]() Now playing in theaters, the Guillermo del Toro-produced, Scott Cooper-directed horror movie Antlerswas co-written by “Channel Zero” creator Nick Antosca, based on a short story Antosca wrote titled “The Quiet Boy. To mutilate, to desecrate, to inhale the agony of others.” Giving off an overpowering desire to perform acts of cruelty. ![]()
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![]() ![]() In this age of start-ups, Knight’s Nike is the gold standard, and its swoosh is one of the few icons instantly recognized in every corner of the world.īut Knight, the man behind the swoosh, has always been a mystery. ![]() Today, Nike’s annual sales top $30 billion. Selling the shoes from the trunk of his car in 1963, Knight grossed eight thousand dollars that first year. Phil Knight opens up in ways few CEOs are willing to do.”įresh out of business school, Phil Knight borrowed fifty dollars from his father and launched a company with one simple mission: import high-quality, low-cost running shoes from Japan. It’s a messy, perilous, and chaotic journey, riddled with mistakes, endless struggles, and sacrifice. In this instant and tenacious New York Times bestseller, Nike founder and board chairman Phil Knight “offers a rare and revealing look at the notoriously media-shy man behind the swoosh” ( Booklist, starred review), illuminating his company’s early days as an intrepid start-up and its evolution into one of the world’s most iconic, game-changing, and profitable brands.īill Gates named Shoe Dog one of his five favorite books of the year and called it “an amazing tale, a refreshingly honest reminder of what the path to business success really looks like. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Wiggs Dannyboy, who adds a bit of new-age theory to Robbins' usual flower-power rhetoric. and teaming up with a Timothy Learylike outlaw scientist, Dr. So ultimately, of course, these two plot-strands will link up-as Alobar time-travels up to the present, providing the evolutionary missing-link to "floral consciousness". Meanwhile, in the other main plot, we follow King Alobar-a Dark Ages hero-through his global wanderings: he eventually reaches India, meeting a widow named Kudra both of them are in flight from Death and both eventually, through the direct intervention of the decrepit god Pan, actually achieve immortality-even learning how to capture the immortality-essence in bottled-liquid form. ![]() ![]() In one of the two parallel plot-lines here, Robbins juggles the separate attempts of various parfumiers around the world to come up with a perfume (upon a jasmine base) that will outenchant any previous concoction: Madame Devalier in New Orleans is feverishly experimenting so is her adopted daughter Priscilla in Seattle and the megs-company LeFever is also hard at work in Paris. A round-Robbins on the themes of scent, so-called "floral consciousness," and immortality-skipping through time and space, but offering a little old-fashioned storytelling charm along with the usual cute/hip doodling. ![]() ![]() ![]() On the reservation, where we were forced close together, the clans dwindled. Whole families of Anishinabe lay ill and helpless in its breath. ![]() The outcome, however, was just as certain. This disease was different from the pox and fever, for it came on slowly. The consumption, it was called by young Father Damien, who came in that year to replace the priest who had succumbed to the same devastation as his flock. For those who survived the spotted sickness from the south and our long fight west to Dakota land, where we signed the treaty, and then a wind from the east, bringing exile in a storm of government papers, what descended from the north in 1914 seemed terrible, and unjust.īy then we thought disaster must surely have spent its force, that disease must have claimed all of the Anishinabe that the earth could hold and bury.īut along with the first bitter punishments of early winter a new sickness swept down. We were surprised that so many of us were left to die. We started dying before the snow, and, like the snow, we continued to fall. ![]() ![]() ![]() Claire must fight to hold onto her sanity and find out what really happened on the Aurora, before she and her crew meet the same ghastly fate. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. But a quick trip through the Aurora reveals something isn’t right. I received this book for free from the Publisher. A salvage claim like this could set Claire and her crew up for life. What they find at the other end of the signal is a shock: the Aurora, a famous luxury space-liner that vanished on its maiden tour of the solar system more than twenty years ago. With nothing to lose and no desire to return to Earth, Claire and her team decide to investigate. Barnes’ Dead Silence, a SF horror novel in which a woman and her crew board a decades-lost luxury cruiser and find the wreckage of a nightmare that hasn't yet ended.Ĭlaire Kovalik is days away from being unemployed-made obsolete-when her beacon repair crew picks up a strange distress signal. Not for the faint of heart." -AudioFile Magazine "Ezzo's dark tone and emotional connection terrify and comfort listeners in equal measure. "The audiobook read by Lauren Ezzo makes for compulsive, edge-of-seat listening." - Buzzfeed ![]() |