Riding The Bullet: The Deluxe Special Edition Double
Product Description
A Stephen King ghost story in the grand tradition, Riding the Bullet is the ultimate warning about the dangers of hitchhiking.
A college student’s mother is dying in a Maine hospital. When he hitches a ride to see her, the driver is not who he appears to be. Soon the journey veers off into a dark landscape that could only be drawn by Stephen King.
Related posts:
- Riding the Bullet
- Stephen King’s Silver Bullet (1/11)
- Little Red Riding Hood, Cinderella, and Other Classic Fairy Tales of Charles Perrault
- “Mother” 8×10 Poem Double-matted In White /Dark Green And Enhanced With Original Watercolor Graphics.
- Lord Byron – WATCHBUDDY® DELUXE TWO-TONE THEME WATCH – Arabic Numbers – Black Leather Strap-Size-Children’s Size-Small
March 4th, 2010 at 2:45 pm
The Diary of Jack the Ripper, a positively captivating book, presents one of the most fascinating puzzles in crime history featuring one of the first serial killers, Jack the Ripper. Successfully paralleling the lives of James Maybrick and his suspected alias Jack the Ripper, Harrison creates the mystery and suspense of his true identity. The book includes all the goury, spine-tingling details of each murder and the intriguing, controversial diary. A definite page-turner, The Diary of Jack the Ripper is a chilling collection of information concerning the discovery, investigation, and debate concerning the diary and the identity of one of the most notorious murderers of all time.
Rating: 5 / 5
March 4th, 2010 at 3:27 pm
After wasting 40 minutes of my life messing around registering my Adobe for no readily apparent reason I then attempt to read the “book” (or short story as the case may be) which is when the fun starts… because of course unlike the Earth people who have been making eBooks for years this one has to have some stupid proprietary format and copy protection.
Hopeless.
Rating: 1 / 5
March 4th, 2010 at 5:55 pm
Stephen King published this book online some time ago with a “Please pay if you enjoy” proviso. As you can imagine, not a lucrative venture on his part. Over all, this story is pretty weak. It’s just a lashing out of sorts by Mr. King after he was nearly hit by a van whilst jogging (note: he bought the van and destroyed it by hammer and bat).
Rating: 3 / 5
March 4th, 2010 at 8:25 pm
I long for the old days before King was so big that the editors weren’t afraid to tell him the truth. Too long, too much repetition.
For a thrill ride to Hell and back read R. Douglas Weber’s Protocol-17 a cross-genre thriller that reminded me of the old King’s “Firestarter” and Koontz’s “Watchers.” Its gritty, gibbering, in your face suspense and horror. Also check out Doug Clegg and
Brian Keene.
Rating: 3 / 5
March 4th, 2010 at 10:52 pm
I didn’t read this but even I know it wasn’t “FREE” as both reviewers seem to think, but was offered on an honor system, asking that each person pay the exorbitant sum of four quarters which can usually be found in the pocket of a pair of dirty jeans or at the bottom of your purse. The reason it’s not “FREE” now, is that (BIG SURPRISE) no one paid a lousy buck but choose to believe it was “FREE”. Some may recognize this “FREE” policy from museums and even various charitable organizations and their t-shirts and book bags. The mistake was not making sure everyone paid first. So if you “got this book free”, don’t make so much noise about it; you’re part of the reason it “costs” 2$ today. For believing in human honesty, this book gets 5 stars from me.
Sincerely, Someone who pays for what she uses, even if it isn’t the best thing in the universe.
Rating: 5 / 5