The Dark at the End of the Tunnel, by Taylor Grant
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The Dark at the End of the Tunnel, by Taylor Grant
Free PDF Ebook The Dark at the End of the Tunnel, by Taylor Grant
Offered for the first time in a collected format, this selection features ten gripping and darkly imaginative stories by Taylor Grant, a Bram Stoker Award ® nominated author and rising star in the suspense and horror genres.
Discover what happens when:
- A wealthy industrialist awakens after ten years in suspended animation, and finds out that the horrors of the past can never be left behind.
- A lonely man realizes that he’s gradually vanishing from existence, into a nightmarish limbo of his own making.
- An author stumbles upon an incomplete manuscript by his deceased father, and makes the grave mistake of trying to complete the story.
- A woman learns that the imaginary voices that haunt the delusional and criminally insane are, in fact, real.
This remarkable collection of short fiction exposes the terrors that hide beneath the surface of our ordinary world, behind people’s masks of normalcy, and lurking in the shadows at the farthest reaches of the universe.
“A master class in storytelling…one of the best collections of the last ten years." – Joe McKinney, Bram Stoker Award Winner, Dead City, The Dead Won't Die
“… so full of talent and commitment, that it is an inspiration.” – Dennis Etchison, Two-time World Fantasy Award Winner, The Dark Country
“A bold and unsettling new voice in suspense and horror.” – Scott Nicholson, Bestselling thriller author, The Red Church
"… a cornucopia of horror from a master of the genre!" – Tim Waggoner, Eat The Night, The Way of All Flesh
“…written with the precise-concise language of a poet. Each story has an almost perfect closure….” – Gene O’Neill, Bram Stoker Award Winner, The Cal Wild Chronicles, The Hitchhiking Effect
"Grant is a writer who never fails to engage. Frankly, his stories frighten me…” – Christopher Ransom, International Bestselling Author, The Birthing House, The Fading
“…beautifully crafted tales… a depth and humanity of which we all can relate.” – John Claude Smith, Riding the Centipede, Autumn in the Abyss
“As classic, elegant, deadly effective and efficient as a switchblade.” – John Palisano, Bram Stoker Award Finalist, Dust of the Dead, Nerves
“A master at balancing pure dread, raw untethered emotion, and brilliant characters.” – Robert S. Wilson, Bram Stoker Award nominated editor, author of Empire of Blood series.
“Grant picks away at your worst fears…the bogeyman finally has a name...” – David Owain Hughes, Walled In, White Walls and Straightjackets
The Dark at the End of the Tunnel, by Taylor Grant- Amazon Sales Rank: #1377884 in Books
- Published on: 2015-11-09
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 7.80" h x .50" w x 5.08" l, .52 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 236 pages
Review "Once in a while new work gets through that is so full of talent andcommitment, the two qualities I admire most, that it is an inspiration.And it's good to be inspired. The author of this book isn't kiddingaround. The stories are smart, filled with talent, and deserve to beread. So turn off the TV and start reading them. Now. Taylor Grant iskeeping the faith." - Dennis Etchison,Two-time World Fantasy Award Winner, The Dark Country "Taylor Grant is a bold, unsettling new voice in suspense and horror." - Scott Nicholson,Bestselling Thriller Author, The Red Church "The finest single author collection I've read this year. And one of the best to come out in the last ten years. In fact, I consider The Dark at the End of the Tunnel to be a masterclass in storytelling. Taylor Grant is a rare talent, and this collection is a great demonstration of the voices he has at his command. Highly recommended!" - Joe McKinney,Bram Stoker Award-winning author of Dead City and The Dead Won't Die "These stories strike hard as steel and silent as a shadow's whisper-a cornucopia of horror from a master of the genre!" - Tim Waggoner,author of Eat the Night and The Way of All Flesh "Asclassic, elegant and as deadly effective and efficient as aswitchblade, the stories here echo the timeless storytelling of TheTwilight Zone, E.C. Horror comics, and 1980s paperback kings, whilecarving up their own new brand. Grant's collection will leave you withplenty of scars to show off around the next late night campfire." - John Palisano,Bram Stoker Award Finalist, Dust of the Dead, Nerves
About the Author Taylor Grant is the founder of Taylor Your Health, an advocacy company that provides education programs to organizations, consumers, and companies to motivate people to feel better about their health and discover easy ways to live their healthiest life. Taylor Your Health has sold over 3 million self-published books and guides that inspire people to take charge of their health and their life.
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Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Where the hell has this author been hiding? By robbie m hyman It's not easy to find a horror story that's both an original, fun tale... and at the same time serves as a morality play that isn't the least bit heavy handed. Somehow, though, with "Dark at the End of the Tunnel," Taylor Grant has managed to write a book filled with them! Where the hell did this guy come from?Every entry in the "Dark" anthology works beautifully on its own merits as a short story, but also has a lot to say about some larger themes in life -- all without ever spending a moment making any of those larger themes feel like "A Very Important Lesson We Should Learn From." Grant is obviously too smart for that. And... a big bonus for the reader: He also trusts that we're too smart for that.Case in point: The Vood, one of my favorite stories here.We realize pretty early on in this story that we don't have a firm handle on even the most basic elements of the plot: The protagonist could be either good or bad. The plot might be unfolding exactly as we're reading it, or it might be a hallucination of one of the characters. And it could clearly end in many ways -- each one completely logical, depending. The story does have a surprise ending, yes, but that doesn't mean the reader is certain of one reality throughout the story right up until the end; to the contrary, we're constantly weighing the different possible realities and judging each new piece of evidence against those possibilities. This makes the story a lot of fun.But even as we're enjoying this great yarn unfold, we're also reading a Taylor Grant morality play -- without necessarily even realizing it until we're done. Every story in this collection is a great ride in its own right, but also filled with some of life's great truths.Not sure why Taylor Grant has been keeping his horror-writing talents a secret -- but I'm glad he's finally sharing them with us.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Review from The Horror Zine By Jeani Rector I first became aware of Taylor Grant in 2012 when he submitted a story titled “Masks” for The Horror Zine anthology A Feast of Frights. I remember thinking, “This story is a standout.” So imagine my pleasure when I opened his new fiction collection titled The Dark at the End of the Tunnel and realized that “Masks” is the first story in the book.“Masks” begins innocently enough, a regular guy shaving in the bathroom. He could be anyone. That’s the beauty of this story; it could be you or me who is frustrated with his wife, his job, and his life. But Taylor Grant performs a feat that I have only seen created this well with such writers as Ramsey Campbell and Bentley Little: a normal guy is suddenly thrust into abnormal circumstances, and there is no turning back. The twist in “Masks” is that the abnormality comes from within. The ending is a delicious surprise that I didn’t see coming.And that is hard to do, to surprise someone like me who sees horror stories every day as an editor of a horror magazine. Yet Taylor Grant did just that, not once but throughout this book.Which brings me to the second story. I want to spend some time discussing “The Silent Ones” because believe it or not, it is even better than “Masks.” In fact, “the Silent Ones” is my favorite story of the entire book. Trust me here, I am not exaggerating when I say this is one of the most effectively written stories I have ever read. I liken it to a cross between the passionate weirdness of Edgar Allan Poe to the “outside the box” of Stephen King. This one would make a wonderful film, except there would need to be really good special effects to capture the horrifying turn of events. I believe this story is brilliant, and more fiction like this could easily catapult Grant to best-seller fame.“The Silent Ones” is disturbing on a level that is unforgettable. All at the same time, emotions such as pity and understanding for the character, and alarm for what becomes of him are brought to the surface by Grant’s superb writing ability. How many of us sometimes feel alone and unnoticed in a world of 7 billion people? But it gets worse for this character…he disintegrates, literally, in a shocking manner. I cannot praise “The Silent Ones” enough for its extreme psychological terror.Now we move on to “The Infected.” Again Grant writes with such great character development that it feels personal. A man is grieving at his father’s death and rediscovers a footlocker that he hadn’t seen since he was eight. Of course it is a Pandora’s box, but Grant delivers demons that even poor Pandora didn’t see coming.There is a tantalizingly-named story “Whispers in the Trees, Screams in the Dark” that delivers a primeval fear of unseen things in the deep woods. This one is a masterpiece of suspense, delivering moment-by-moment events as they occur. Exciting stuff.Grant saved the book’s name-sake for last: “The Dark at the End of the Tunnel.” In this, a book of spells and a nameless demon takes us on dark adventures through time.Now I want to talk about Taylor Grant. Having worked with him on “Masks,” I know he is devoted to his craft and takes his time with everything he writes. It shows in the final products. But he is also a multi-talented individual, because besides authoring this truly outstanding fiction collection, Grant is also a screenwriter, actor, graphic novel writer, and filmmaker.I rarely gush about a particular writer, because I see so many good ones with what I do. However, I want to take this opportunity to gush about Taylor Grant.Give yourself a remarkable experience and buy The Dark at the End of the Tunnel. As an added attraction, it contains a foreword by the esteemed Gene O’Neill.The whole book is really good, but the standouts such as “The Silent Ones” will last with you probably forever. When Taylor Grant becomes a household name (and that is already starting), you will nod your head sagely and say “I knew about him before…”
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Stunning Debut Collection By Brian Fatah Steele Taylor Grant has given us a stunning debut collection with THE DARK AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL one that would be well-received by any horror fiction aficionado. He weaves tales with a strong voice, tackling subjects that he makes all his own. Flavors of madness permeate throughout his work, somehow alluring, somehow drawing you in.Grant defy dances around topics, from loneness rendering a person unable to interact with the material world in “The Silent Ones,” to a paralyzing fear of devouring monsters that live in the shadows as seen in “The Vood.” Vampires are reimagined in the far future with tragic consequences in “Gods and Devils,” while a young boy describes the horrors at home to his school counselor in “Show and Tell.” In my favorite story in the collection, “Intruders,” a psychic virus propagated by extra-dimensional entities manifests as violent schizophrenia, the first possible stage in an invasion. Five more excellent stories round out this collection, all equally impressive.With his background as a screenwriter, Grant brings a certain vitality to his words, these works jumping to life in your imagination. They are dark yet vivid, the characters and situations believable. Grant’s acclaim will only grow as more people read this collection and he releases more work.
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