The Pond, Paul Tremblay
The Pond, Paul Tremblay
$0.00

The Pond
A Short Horror Story

Author: Paul Tremblay, Theresa DeLucci

Narrator: Ramon de Ocampo

Unabridged: 4 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tor Nightfire

Published: 02/11/2020

Categories: Fiction, Horror


Synopsis

"The Pond" is a short horror story by award-winning author Paul Temblay, one of 35 entries in the audio horror anthology Come Join Us by the Fire.

Childhood's end is dead as a wish that never came true...

Come Join Us by the Fire, edited by Theresa DeLucci, is an audio-only horror anthology of 35 short stories from Nightfire Books, a horror imprint of Tor Books. The collection showcases the breadth of talent writing in the horror genre today, with contributions from a wide range of bestselling genre luminaries including China Miéville, Chuck Wendig, Richard Kadrey, and Victor LaValle; Shirley Jackson Award winners Paul Tremblay, Priya Sharma, and Sam J. Miller; Nebula Award winners Brooke Bolander, Alyssa Wong, Kij Johnson; and many, many more.

About Paul Tremblay

Paul Tremblay is the author of No Sleep Till Wonderland and The Little Sleep. He has won acclaim for his short fiction and received two nominations for the 2007 Bram Stoker Award, and he lives in Massachusetts with his wife and two children.


Reviews

Goodreads review by karen

SPOOKTOBER DAY SEVENTEEN welcome to my spooktober audio advent calendar, where, each day during the month of spooktober, i will be celebrating by listening to a free audio short from nightfire's Come Join Us by the Fire series, and you can join ME by following the links. let's all be scared together!......more

Goodreads review by Marc D.

4/5 estrellas. Ay, no.......more

Goodreads review by Kay ☾

Short, quick, scary and to the point.......more

This was a perfectly adequate story with not frills but, no chills either. Tremblay can do better and this is seriously not the best representative of his horror fiction. This is a bland story, quite forgettable but not too bad, and while it does manage to insert a sense of foreboding, it doesn't le......more