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∎ [PDF] Free A Hollow Dream of Summer End Volume 1 Andrew Van Wey 9780984015726 Books

A Hollow Dream of Summer End Volume 1 Andrew Van Wey 9780984015726 Books



Download As PDF : A Hollow Dream of Summer End Volume 1 Andrew Van Wey 9780984015726 Books

Download PDF A Hollow Dream of Summer End Volume 1 Andrew Van Wey 9780984015726 Books

This is what nightmares are made of.

A Hollow Dream of Summer End Volume 1 Andrew Van Wey 9780984015726 Books

Let me start off by saying that I'm a big Andrew Van Wey fan, even though he hasn't written all that much, yet. I was hooked after reading Forsaken. It is one of my favorite horror novels. I immediately bought all of Mr. Van Wey's books. His writing is so mature, so developed, as if written by a much older and more experience writer. He reminds me so much of early Stephen King (when he was still writing horror). This short novella fits that statement very well, reminding me of "It," even though this is about 120 pages and "It" was 1400 pages. It is about three young boys I would say about 10 years old. The beginning is character development, which Van Wey does so well, much like King. Then they go up to the tree house and the horror begins. Even though it's about young boys, this book is definitely not a young reader's book, but a book for adults who don't mind seeing through the eyes of young boys. The ending took me by surprise. Let's say it's darker than King. But he gives you the choice of stopping at that ending or going on to Book Two. I already bought that, so I definitely will. My only disappointment is that there will be apparently a Book Three and a Book Four. I prefer stand-alone novels to series' that may go on and on. Of course, I'm going to have to read all of them. Andrew, please write another book like Forsaken! But for a short dark horror, this is great (and you can go on, if you want to.)

Product details

  • Series A Hollow Dream
  • Paperback 114 pages
  • Publisher Greywood Bay (February 18, 2014)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0984015728

Read A Hollow Dream of Summer End Volume 1 Andrew Van Wey 9780984015726 Books

Tags : A Hollow Dream of Summer's End (Volume 1) [Andrew Van Wey] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. This is no children's tale...</i> <div> This is what nightmares are made of.</i></div><div> </i></div><div><b></b></div><div><b>All suns must set.  All seasons must end.</b></div> <div></div><div>For three fifth-grade friends,Andrew Van Wey,A Hollow Dream of Summer's End (Volume 1),Greywood Bay,0984015728,Fiction - Horror,Fiction Horror,Horror & ghost stories,Horror - General
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A Hollow Dream of Summer End Volume 1 Andrew Van Wey 9780984015726 Books Reviews


I would give “A Hollow Dream of Summer's End (A Hollow Dream - Season One)” 3 stars as a decent story for maybe a young adult reader. It's “A Hollow Dream Eternal Autumn (A Hollow Dream - Season Two)” that really shines, which starts immediately where Season One leaves off.
I found Season Two to be a brilliantly told story set in a world that is vividly fleshed out. The author's imaginative take on death, the afterlife, ghosts and memories are unforgettable, and it's for that reason that I'm glad to have stumbled upon this 2-book series.
Being the first time I read anything by Andrew Van Wey, I must say I was pleasantly surprised. The first third or so of the book had me fooled. It seemed like an almost bucolic account of how 3 friends about to enter fifth grade spend their summer together and it was pleasant enough. That feeling of not a worry in the world, the adventures, the comradeship, the typical dialogues of 12 year olds, how their personal problems did not seem to matter because that summer was going to last forever. Or it should have.

Then the terror hits you massively, totally unexpected. I had glimpses of It, by Stephen King and Coraline by Neil Gaiman, but overall the book morphed itself into something unique and not any less terrifying. I honestly felt physically sick during some brilliantly written bits. There were a few typos, but I still highly recommend it to everyone. I had not felt this scared from reading a book in a long time. And the fact that it has a sequel has me very excited.

Disclaimer I have received a free copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
The summer is coming to an end. Aiden, Brian, and Freddie, three fifth graders and best friends, are determined to make the most of it. On the final weekend before the start of school, the group of kids end up staying the weekend at Aiden's father's home; a massive house on a large wooded lot that just happens to have the coolest tree house three twelve year olds could possibly hope for. Built on a massive tree, the tree house is thirty feet in the air complete with working windows and a rope ladder! A child of divorce, Aiden isn't overly happy about spending the weekend with his father and his new, young girlfriend, but with the company of his rag tag group of buddies and access to the mother of all tree houses, it may just be the best weekend of the summer...until they start hearing the sounds. At first they pass it off as a bird...until they see IT. IT is determined to get them and they have no place to go, trapped three stories in the air, left to their own devices with no way to get down and seek shelter in Aiden's father's house. What will happen to the trio when they meet something straight out of nightmare and their friendship is taken to to limit?

Imagine if John Carpenter (director of The Thing re-make--a personal favorite of mine) had gotten his hands on Stand By Me. What would you get? You'd get A Hollow Dream of Summer's End. Stand By Me featured a group of friends, all from very different backgrounds, going on an adventure of sorts. The sense of innocence lost, relationships tested in a pressure cooker of stressful moments. Much like that, the three kids in Summer's End are different in their own ways. Aiden, athletic, quiet, uncomfortable as a child of divorce, torn between the past family he knew and making room for his father and his much younger girlfriend. Brian, fat, honest to a fault, stutterer. Freddie, short tempered, wisecracking extraordinaire who's really just putting on a tough face because he comes from a poor family. Then you have The Thing. A group of co-workers forced to face an insurmountable terrorizing horror in a frozen wasteland, cut off from help or civilization of any kind. It's claustrophobic, close quartered and tense. Trust no one.

Andrew Van Wey mashes those two genres together and produces a brutal and engaging read. Three friends pitted against a horrific monster, cut off from the only people around for miles who could possibly be of any help for them? It makes for a visceral and engaging read. This is no children's story. It's told through Aiden's perspective, but the author puts them through things most adults can't handle. The fact that it focuses on fifth graders makes it all the more brutal. It's very near uncomfortable at times. Bad things happening to relatively innocent kids is never easy to swallow, but that ups the horror factor splendidly. This book could very well give you the chills.

Summer's End is very well written, as you may expect being that it comes from the same mind that produced the wonderful Forsaken. The kids read like kids. They're into video games, they bust each other's chops, they're into 'the female anatomy' without even knowing much about it. Van Wey puts us into the shoes of very diverse and very real and identifiable children and puts them through hell, through the meat grinder. And there are a couple twists in this one. Very nice twists. Very chilling twists.

This novella is worth the time of any horror/dark fiction fan. Van Wey is an untapped resource in the world of macabre fiction and anybody looking for a good, twisted read, should have their sights trained right on him.

Fantastic.
This was a very short book, only 100 or so pages, which was why it was so frustrating that it took so long to get going. For the first quarter of the book, there was nothing but character backstory and setting description. The plot didn't actually begin until well after I was ready to give up on it. It ended up being an okay monster story, although to the end, the author insisted on interrupting the action to wax nostalgic about growing up a boy. Yes, yes, after reading plenty of Stephen King, we all know how great it was, boyhood adventure, coming of age, etc. But let's just get back to the story.
Let me start off by saying that I'm a big Andrew Van Wey fan, even though he hasn't written all that much, yet. I was hooked after reading Forsaken. It is one of my favorite horror novels. I immediately bought all of Mr. Van Wey's books. His writing is so mature, so developed, as if written by a much older and more experience writer. He reminds me so much of early Stephen King (when he was still writing horror). This short novella fits that statement very well, reminding me of "It," even though this is about 120 pages and "It" was 1400 pages. It is about three young boys I would say about 10 years old. The beginning is character development, which Van Wey does so well, much like King. Then they go up to the tree house and the horror begins. Even though it's about young boys, this book is definitely not a young reader's book, but a book for adults who don't mind seeing through the eyes of young boys. The ending took me by surprise. Let's say it's darker than King. But he gives you the choice of stopping at that ending or going on to Book Two. I already bought that, so I definitely will. My only disappointment is that there will be apparently a Book Three and a Book Four. I prefer stand-alone novels to series' that may go on and on. Of course, I'm going to have to read all of them. Andrew, please write another book like Forsaken! But for a short dark horror, this is great (and you can go on, if you want to.)
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