Download Free Books Nathaniel Full Version

Be Specific About Containing Books Nathaniel

Title:Nathaniel
Author:John Saul
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 343 pages
Published:July 1st 1984 by Bantam (first published January 1st 1984)
Categories:Horror. Fiction. Thriller. Mystery
Download Free Books Nathaniel  Full Version
Nathaniel Paperback | Pages: 343 pages
Rating: 3.84 | 5291 Users | 152 Reviews

Description Toward Books Nathaniel

For a hundred years, the people of Prairie Bend have whispered Nathaniel's name in wonder and fear. Some say he is a folktale, created to frighten children on cold winter nights. Some swear he is a terrifying spirit returned to avenge the past. But soon... very soon... some will learn that Nathaniel lives still--that he is darkly, horrifyingly real. Nathaniel--he is the voice that calls to young Michael Hall across the prairie night... the voice that draws the boy into the shadowy depths of the old, crumbling, forbidden barn... that chanting, compelling voice he will follow faithfully beyond the edge of terror.

Identify Books In Pursuance Of Nathaniel

Original Title: Nathaniel
ISBN: 0553262645 (ISBN13: 9780553262643)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Nathaniel, Michael Hall, Janet Hall, Amos Hall, Anna Hall, Laura Hall Shields, Ryan Shields
Setting: United States of America


Rating Containing Books Nathaniel
Ratings: 3.84 From 5291 Users | 152 Reviews

Evaluate Containing Books Nathaniel
Ok, so this may not be the literary equivalent of a 5-star novel but it was one of the most fun ghost stories I've read in a very long time. (I actually listened to it on cd, but whatever.) The book was originally published in 1984 and is very well-known and well-loved. I'd call it a "classic" as in classic ghost story. I really enjoyed it.

Typical John Saul....awesome book.

I saw something that night.John Saul is a very deceptive writer. The characters that people his stories are ordinary everyday folk doing ordinary everyday things. Even the horror elements are hardly apocalyptic or grotesque (or perhaps I havent read enough of his books yet). Instead, it creeps and crawls and worms its way into the readers consciousness. If there isnt overmuch character development, its because the characters come fully formed. These are the kind of people we all know, which

5 Stars all the WAY!!!! What can I say, I have always loved this man's writing...and i had always read them as they were published, and even knew him for a while when i lived in Seattle. So I think this book, his 7th published horror novel, is my all time favorite of his, well almost, it is hard to say. I will not go into the plot of this book, because this 342 page Ghost / Revenge Fest reads like a frigging 750 page horror Tome! Yes, it is that quick and tense, and visceral of a read....and a

Nathaniel by John Saul is, to put it lightly, very familiar territory for him and for anyone who has read several of his books. I seriously think that this book's largest problem, at least for me, is that I read it as my 27th Saul read. If I would have read it much earlier on I would have thought much more of it but the same elements keep turning up again and again. Yep, there is a suffering child in this one who is placed in a strange new home with strange new authority figures who are much

I believe John Saul has to grow on me. This is the first of his books I have read. There are others I will tackle but I hope they are not as under whelming as this one.I didn't hate this book but it didn't leave a good impression on me. The last couple of chapters didn't shed much light. The story was rushed at the end. If there is a sequel to this book I don't want to read it. I thought the character of Nathaniel could have been built up alot more. At times I thought he was Michael's age but if

Janet Hall's husband Mark dies in an accident while visiting his old hometown, Prairie Bend, (where his parents live). So Janet leaves their home in New York and goes to Prairie Bend with her son Michael for the funeral. (Janet can't understand why Mark visited Prairie Bend, he didn't tell her he was going there, and he hasn't seen or spoken to his parents for years.) Janet meets Mark's parents (Anna and Amos) who tell her Mark owned a farm. (This is a surprise to Janet since Mark never told her
Share:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

Labels

18th Century 19th Century 20th Century 21st Century Abuse Academic Adult Adult Fiction Adventure Africa African American Alcohol Alternate History Amazon American American History Amish Amish Fiction Angels Animals Anthologies Anthropology Apocalyptic Archaeology Art Art and Photography Art History Artificial Intelligence Asia Asian Literature Astrology Astronomy Audiobook Australia Autobiography Bande Dessinée Baseball Batman BDSM Beauty and The Beast Biblical Fiction Biography Biography Memoir Biology Book Club Books Brain Brazil British Literature Buisness Business Canada Category Romance Cats Chess Chick Lit Childrens China Christian Christian Fantasy Christian Fiction Christianity Christmas Church Civil War Classics Climbing Collections College Comedy Comic Book Comics Comics Manga Coming Of Age Comix Contemporary Contemporary Romance Counselling Crime Cultural Dark Dark Fantasy Dc Comics Death Demons Denmark Design Detective Doctor Who Download Books Dragons Drama Dystopia Economics Egypt Emergency Services English History Environment Epic Epic Fantasy Erotic Romance Erotica Esoterica Espionage Essays European History European Literature Fae Fairies Fairy Tale Retellings Fairy Tales Faith Family Fantasy Feminism Fiction Finance Finnish Literature Firefighters Folk Tales Food Food and Drink Football France Free Books French Literature French Revolution Futurism Games Gay Gender Gender Studies Georgian German Literature Germany Ghost Stories Ghosts GLBT Gothic Graphic Novels Graphic Novels Comics Greece Greek Mythology Hard Science Fiction Harlequin Health Heroic Fantasy High Fantasy High School Historical Historical Fantasy Historical Fiction Historical Romance History Hockey Holiday Holocaust Horror Horses How To Humanities Humor India Indian Literature Indonesian Literature Inspirational Islam Italian Literature Italy Japan Japanese Literature Jewish Journalism Judaica Judaism Juvenile Language Latin American Lds Leadership Lesbian Lesbian Fiction LGBT Literary Fiction Literature Love M M Romance Magic Magical Realism Management Manga Marvel Mathematics Media Tie In Medical Medieval Memoir Mental Health Mental Illness Middle Grade Military Military Fiction Military History Morocco Mountaineering Music Mystery Mystery Thriller Mythology Native Americans Nature Naval History Neuroscience New Adult New Age New York Nobel Prize Noir Nonfiction North American Hi... Northern Africa Novella Novels Nutrition Occult Outdoors Pakistan Paranormal Paranormal Romance Paranormal Urban Fantasy Parenting Personal Development Philosophy Photography Physics Picture Books Plays Poetry Poland Politics Portugal Portuguese Literature Post Apocalyptic Prayer Productivity Psychological Thriller Psychology Queer Read For School Realistic Fiction Reference Regency Relationships Religion Retellings Road Trip Robots Roman Romance Romanian Literature Romantic Suspense Russia Russian Literature Scandinavian Literature School Science Science Fiction Science Fiction Fantasy Scotland Self Help Sequential Art Shapeshifters Short Stories Singularity Soccer Social Sociology South Africa Southern Southern Africa Space Space Opera Spanish Literature Speculative Fiction Spirituality Sports Sports and Games Sports Romance Spy Thriller Star Wars Steampunk Superheroes Supernatural Survival Suspense Sweden Sword and Sorcery Taoism Technology Teen Theatre Theology Theory Thriller Time Travel Travel True Crime Tudor Period Unfinished Urban Fantasy Vampires War Weird Fiction Werewolves Westerns Wine Witches Womens Womens Fiction World War I World War II Writing X Men Young Adult Young Adult Contemporary Young Adult Paranormal Zombies

Blog Archive