He’s been trapped in his home since he died. If he can’t outwit the demon holding him captive, he’ll never be free.

What's worse than being trapped alone in your house? Being trapped there after you die. Our ghost has exactly two problems: the demon that's keeping him prisoner, and his own stubborn determination to break free - even if it destroys what's left of his soul.

If you enjoy protagonists who are too stubborn to know when to quit (even after death), twists that'll keep you guessing, and battles where the stakes are literally eternal, then grab your copy of Ghost at Dusk. Just maybe don't read it alone in an empty house...

This is the first October I’ve been alone. I miss the sound of people. Footsteps. Plumbing running, shutting off. Whispers and coughs and throat clearing. Talking on the phone. Radio. TV. Enough to cover up the sound of emptiness. It’s worse in October. Lower light. Shorter days. And me, by myself. 


The world’s dumbest ghost.

Ghost at Dusk


The Story:

Here's the thing about being a teenage ghost: it's bad enough being stuck at fourteen forever, but Tim Lane's got bigger problems. Since his death on Halloween 1981, he's been locked in a desperate battle with the demon that killed him. Now that same demon is worming its way into his elderly father's mind, and Tim's finally had enough.

As he races to save his dad, Tim starts uncovering the truth about the night he died. But when a sixteen-year-old girl moves into the neighborhood and becomes fascinated with his story, she discovers something terrifying: Tim isn't the only one the demon has trapped.

Now Tim's facing the fight of his afterlife. Because saving everyone means confronting a demon who'll stop at nothing to keep its prisoners right where they are - and this time, Tim's got more to lose than just his soul.


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