White
You can run, but you can’t hide…
“… striking and innovative” – Nick Gevers, SF Site
First comes the Ruin.
Society crumbles.
Then comes the snow.
A handful of survivors flee to a Cornish mansion, seeking peace and safety. Instead, they find themselves under siege from the things now inhabiting the snowscape outside … fleeting, terrifying things seen only on the periphery.
And as the danger and horror builds, they come to learn that there are also enemies inside…
White is a gripping horror novella sure to delight fans of Stephen King and Simon Clark.
Praise for Tim Lebbon’s works:
“Beautifully written and mysterious.” – Richard Laymon
“Tim Lebbon displays the sort of cool irony and uncanny mood-making that drive the best ‘Twilight Zone’ stories.” – New York Times Book Review
“At the end, you are left with … an impression of a nightmare from which you have awakened and cannot totally shake.” – Dark Echo
“One of the most powerful new voices to come along in the genre … Lebbon’s work is infused with the contemporary realism of Stephen King and … the lyricism of Ray Bradbury.” — Fangoria
“Lebbon is a genuinely masterful writer … fresh ideas, shimmering prose, and often terrifying scenarios.” – Rue Morgue
“A masterpiece of traditional horror, graced with nuggets of sex and splatter. I really can’t praise it enough. It shot me to pieces.” – D.F. Lewis
“a terrific, very scary novella.” – Ellen Datlow
“With The Reach of Children, Lebbon has exceeded even his former astounding works.” – Horror World
“Lebbon has written one of the best and most emotionally convincing stories about death that I have ever read.” – Michael Marshall Smith
“Even if you haven’t lost a parent, or anyone truly close to you, REACH will give you a true sense of the kind of deep, unyielding sadness such an event brings. It’s a powerful book, and one that deserves to be read.” – Bookgasm
“For those who have not yet sampled Lebbon’s doom-laden tales of cosmic consequence, this is a fine place to start.” – Peter Crowther
“… striking and innovative” – Nick Gevers, SF Site