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Books with title The Attic

  • The Attic

    Derek Prior, D.P. Prior, Theo Prior Design, Elizabeth Klett

    eBook (Homunculus, Dec. 9, 2015)
    It was the place they stored the junk no one wanted anymore: discarded toys, baby clothes, and ancient secrets from forgotten generations.But when contagion turns Wesley Harding’s world insane, and horror enters his home, the attic is the last place left to hide.At nine years old, he finds himself alone in the dark, amid heaped-up piles of the familiar and the unknown. Gunshots and howls punctuate the thunderstorm outside. Crashes and groans come from below. There isn’t much time, and Wesley must uncover the secrets of the attic, if he is to survive the night.
  • In The Attic

    Garry Rodgers

    eBook (DyingWords Digital & Print Media Canada, July 8, 2016)
    “I’m so terrified that psycho’s going to kill me!”Maria Dersch prophetically predicted her death at the savage hands of her ex-boyfriend, Billy Ray Shaughnessy, who hid in her attic for two and a half days with an ax before sneaking down in the dead of night, chopping Maria and her new lover to death.In The Attic is an intense, shocking, and unforgettable psychological crime thriller based on the horrific, true murder case Garry Rodgers investigated as an actual detective.It’s also told from the killer’s point of view through his lyrical, psychotic, and homicidal thoughts.In this lightning-paced, mind-twisting, psychological ride, you’re suspended in a six-day investigation and search for Billy Ray after Maria reported a violent, knife-point, sexual assault committed by him on a Friday afternoon.Over the weekend, police and friends made a frantic attempt to lock Billy Ray from the house and track him down to prevent escalation. They failed. He’d been in the attic the entire time.At 3 a.m., on Sunday morning and in the black of night, Billy Ray climbed down. He butchered Maria and her defenseless lover, committing unspeakable desecration to their bodies. Billy Ray aimlessly left the crime scene—a senseless scene sickening to the hardest of investigators—and was caught three days later, still caked with his victims’ blood.Billy Ray confessed, allowing a terrifying yet fascinating access to his psychopathic, anti-social mind—a mind diagnosed as one of the most outstanding cases of mental disorder a team of forensic psychiatrists ever saw.Here’s what readers of In The Attic are saying:“Aghast! This is one of the best written and easily the most horrifying suspense story I have read. The writing is so clear and so compelling that you are immediately drawn in. I. Could. Not. Put. This. Down.”“The author’s seamless POV transitions are genius. You’re given a disquieting look into the deeply disturbed, misogynistic psyche of a killer and the concern of a dedicated, seasoned police officer.”“As events unfolded, I found myself praying the victim would somehow survive, which is absurd, as you know going in, the story is about a double murder. Garry Rodgers’ writing is so fluid, he places you in the detective’s shoes without effort—you’re there, you’re experiencing scenes as they unfold. I’m not prone to nightmares by something I’ve read, but Garry Rodgers has succeeded where others left little, or no impact.”“Do not let the horrific and graphic nature of this novel dissuade you. This is a must-read for crime novel enthusiasts. I felt driven to finish this book in record time. True story, great writing, emotional investment. What more could you want from a title?""In my opinion, Garry Rodgers is slated to become one of the most outstanding crime writers of our time.””If you've ever read The Widow by Fiona Barton or The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins, my feeling while reading In The Attic was akin to my feelings while reading Widow and Train. I don't just think it's a great read, I think it's an important story—of mental illness, abuse, and how the limitations in social services can sometimes coalesce at the wrong moment, hurting all involved.”“It sounds like a cliché, but I couldn’t put it down. I was gripped from the first sentence, and was not so much reading as inhaling the story until it was done. I took a long, cathartic shower to get my head back in my own world, so I could write sensibly about my experience as a reader of this gripping story.””No awareness that I was reading a book, but more like I
  • The Attic

    Sierra Klein

    language (, Oct. 29, 2012)
    A short spooky tale of a haunted house!
  • The Attic

    T. S. Rue

    Paperback (HarperCollins, Sept. 1, 1993)
    Offered a special deal at the new Arcadia Inn, Tessa Gilbert and her three best friends hear blood-curdling screams coming from the attic and are murdered one by one. Original.
  • The Attic

    Jill Silander

    language (Woodspring Resource Centre, May 15, 2010)
    The Attic, Is the first book in a series of stories about Emma, her family, Holly her dog and her love of Ponies.
  • In the Attic

    Hiawyn Oram, Satoshi Kitamura

    Paperback (Andersen Press, May 1, 2012)
    A young boy takes an imaginative climb into an attic of infinite possibilities in this ode to a child's fantasy world from the team behind A Boy Wants a Dinosaur A small boy, bored with all his toys, suddenly notices a trapdoor in the ceiling that can be reached by climbing the ladder of his toy fire engine. Once up in the attic he finds a window that opens many other windows, entering a world where anything might happen, and he meets a very special friend.
    H
  • In the Attic

    Hiawyn Oram, Satoshi Kitamura

    Paperback (Henry Holt and Co. (BYR), Jan. 15, 1988)
    Climbing up the rickety ladder of his toy fire truck, a young boy emerges into a marvelous secret world in the attic of his house. Anything may happen, he discovers, as he explores this new world. He finds an old flying machine and sails through the air above mysterious cities. He stops to help a friendly spider weave its web, and in an open field bathed in moonlight, he meets a talking tiger. Your readers will recognize this imaginary realm, where a child can open windows to other worlds and anything is possible.
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  • In the attic

    Hiawyn Oram

    Hardcover (Holt, Rinehart and Winston, March 15, 1985)
    A child finds many interesting things to do and observe in the attic.
  • The Attic Term

    Antonia Forest

    Paperback (Puffin Books, )
    None
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  • In the Attic

    Hiawyn Oram

    Hardcover (Henry Holt & Co, March 1, 1985)
    A child finds many interesting things to do and observe in the attic.
    C
  • In the Attic

    Hiawyn Oram, Satoshi Kitamura

    Paperback (Red Fox, Feb. 15, 1986)
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  • In the Attic

    Hiawyn Oram

    Paperback (Andersen Press Ltd, May 6, 2004)
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