![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Instead, he finds things may have gone from bad to worse when he crashes his car, breaks his ankle, and is forced to take refuge at a medieval monastery now inhabited by the eccentric Charles Hogarth, known as "The Master of the Macabre." As Kent's ankle heals, Hogarth entertains him with fine food, brandy, and a series of gruesome stories connected with an odd assortment of old relics on display in a curio cabinet. Tayler Kent flees London in a blinding snowstorm, hoping to escape the ghosts that haunt his home. "This book is strange, thrilling and certainly macabre." - Yorkshire Evening Press "It is all very good reading for a windy night, alone in front of an open fireplace." - Winnipeg Tribune " Master of the Macabre is certainly macabre and provides just what you want, if you enjoy reading of 'ghosts and ghoulies, long leggity beasties and things that go bump in the night.'" The Star (Sheffield) "These tales of terror and violence are quite nightmarish in their exciting conception." - Glasgow Evening News Some of the strange stories are horrible and not for the squeamish." - Sydney Morning Herald Syn's creator cannot but write interestingly. ![]()
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