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A businessman staying in a Scottish manor makes the mistake of deciding to spend the evening in the library. A group of unpopular teenage girls uses witchcraft to pursue their aims. A rich banking tycoon has forgotten his university days when he and his friends dared to imagine a world ruled by social justice and working class ideals. The estranged family of a deceased aristocrat bicker over their inheritance. A botanist’s love for his plants is unnaturally deep-rooted.
“Hoffman’s Creeper and Other Disturbing Tales” is the first short story collection from Cameron Trost. It plunges the reader into a world of mystery, suspense, obsession and greed. From the Scottish highlands and the jagged peaks of the Pyrénées to the streets of Brisbane and the Australian countryside, Cameron Trost provokes the reader by ensnaring recognisable characters in disturbingly plausible situations. His writing seeks to entertain while exploring the absurdities and peculiarities of society and the human mind.
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23 “disturbing” tales that I have been dipping into to relieve the actual horror of an abysmal history book. This type of tale is generally not my style of story, but I have to admit I have enjoyed the collection, especially the ones that had Brisbane as the location.
Kangaroo Point, has a man standing ready to jump off the cliff, was one that had me thinking.
Cathedral Man and the Rare Twelve Inch made me perish the thought of taking on a homeless man for one of his few worldly possessions. Was that meant to be Ziggy? Maybe not as Ziggy was in Toowong if I recall.
A fun read for me and recommended to those that like their short stories with a twist.